歯
Meaning in Englishtooth
Animated kanji stroke order
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Word context
What it means
歯 (ha) means the hard, calcified structures in the mouth used for biting and chewing; as a lexical item it refers both to individual teeth and to the concept of dentition and appears in everyday speech, medicine and writing when discussing oral health or physical teeth.
Main meanings
- Use in compound terms and professions related to dental care and technology, forming words for dentists, clinics and prosthetics.
- Metaphorical or idiomatic senses where 歯 signals capability, resistance, or a point of leverage in expressions that evaluate strength or influence.
- Technical usage in mechanical contexts as the equivalent of a 'tooth' on gears or comb-like structures in tools and machinery.
- As an anatomical reference in dental records and medical descriptions specifying position, condition, or treatment.
How to use it
Used in casual and formal contexts to name teeth, report pain, describe dental conditions, and form compound nouns (professions, equipment); common in medical documentation, everyday complaints about chewing or toothache, advertising for dental services, and idiomatic speech where it contributes to metaphors about strength or frustration without needing literal reference to oral anatomy.
Variants and close terms
- 歯牙 (shiga) — formal/legal term for teeth or dentition
- 歯茎 (haguki) — gums, related anatomical term
- 歯根 (shikon) — tooth root, technical/dental term
Composition
The character 歯 is derived from an older pictographic form (traditional: 齒) that visually represents multiple teeth and the jaw; the simplified form preserves the dense strokes suggesting a row of teeth and a base, communicating the idea of dental structure rather than being a phonetic compound.
Etymology
ha descends from an Old Japanese form reconstructed as *pa, undergoing a regular sound change where an initial /p/ softened to /ɸ/ and then to /h/ in most environments; the native word was later written with the Chinese character now read ha in modern Japanese.
Origin
Physical teeth are prehistoric in origin, but the social and cultural role of 歯 in Japan gained distinct visibility through historical practices: dental care records in classical texts, the cosmetic practice of お歯黒 (ohaguro) in medieval and early modern Japan, and the rapid modernization of dentistry after the Meiji period when Western techniques and clinics became widespread.
Word class
noun (名詞)