数学
Meaning in Englishmathematics
Animated kanji stroke order
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Word context
What it means
Mathematics: the formal discipline concerned with quantity, structure, space, and change, using logic, abstraction, and symbolic systems to formulate definitions, theorems, and proofs; in Japanese usage it denotes both the academic field and the school subject covering arithmetic, algebra, geometry, calculus and related topics.
Main meanings
- As a school subject taught at elementary through university levels, covering progressively advanced topics and curricula.
- As a broad academic field that includes subfields such as pure mathematics, applied mathematics, and mathematical logic.
- As a professional skill set (mathematical ability or numerical reasoning) valued in jobs and research.
- As a modifier in compounds to indicate a mathematical approach or relation to mathematics in fields like statistics or computational science.
How to use it
Used in educational, academic, professional and everyday contexts: in schools and universities to name courses and departments; in research papers and conferences to denote the discipline; in job listings to request quantitative skills; and in casual conversation when referring to studying or being good/bad at math. Register ranges from neutral/formal (academic or institutional) to casual (talking about homework or ability).
Variants and close terms
- 算数 (sansuu) — arithmetic (basic numeracy, elementary school level)
- 数理 (suuri) — mathematical principles or mathematical sciences (emphasis on formal theory)
- 和算 (wasan) — traditional Japanese mathematics (historical practice)
Composition
- 数 (su): numeral, number; to count.
- 学 (gaku): study, learning, academic discipline.
- Together the characters form the compound that names the academic discipline focused on numbers and related abstract structures (the pairing of a numerical element and the concept of learning yields the written term for mathematics).
Origin
The written term appeared as a Sino-Japanese compound borrowed from Chinese scholarly vocabulary and became standardized in modern Japanese during the late 19th century (Meiji era) as Western mathematical concepts and curricula were translated and institutionalized; Japan also had an indigenous tradition of problem-solving mathematics (known as wasan) prior to that modernization.
Word class
noun (名詞)