Word
日差し
Meaning in Englishsunlight
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Word context
What it means
日差し (hizashi) means the sunlight that falls into or across a place; it refers to the visible rays, patches, or overall quality of light produced by the sun and felt as warmth or brightness.
Main meanings
- 1. Emphasis on direction or angle of light, as when distinct rays enter through a window or between leaves.
- 2. Focus on the quality or strength of solar light (soft, harsh, warm, weak) rather than just its source.
- 3. Figurative use to describe mood or atmosphere—sunlight as a symbol of hope, relief, or brightening circumstances.
- 4. Contrasted with technical terms for solar radiation in meteorology or engineering, where 日差し conveys everyday perceptual experience rather than measured irradiance.
How to use it
Used broadly in everyday Japanese to describe how sunlight appears or affects a scene; common in casual and neutral speech when talking about weather, interiors, clothing choices, photography, or atmosphere, and frequent in descriptive or literary contexts to set mood without formal or technical connotations.
Variants and close terms
- 日光 (nikkō) — sunlight (more general, often neutral or technical).
- 陽射し (hizashi) — sunlight (same reading, alternative kanji often with a warmer nuance).
- 太陽光 (taiyōkō) — solar light/solar radiation (technical).
- 日陰 (hikage) — shade (antonym).
- 日照 (nisshō) — sunshine/insolation (used in weather or legal contexts).
Composition
- 日 (hi / nichi): sun; day; the source of light.
- 差し (sashi, from sasu): an action meaning to shine, to insert, or to stretch; here it conveys light falling or being projected.
- Combined, the characters convey the idea of the sun's light being projected or falling into a place—hence the sense of sunlit patches or rays.
Word class
noun (名詞)
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