無茶苦茶
Meaning in Englishconfused, jumbled, mixed up, unreasonable
Animated kanji stroke order
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Word context
What it means
無茶苦茶 means extremely, excessive, or chaotic; it describes things or situations that are wildly out of order or nonsensical. The term functions as a na-adjective and is commonly used with the copula だ (むちゃくちゃだ) or in adverbial form むちゃくちゃに to modify actions.
Main meanings
- absurd, nonsensical or illogical statements or ideas
- messy, disordered, chaotic physical conditions or scenes
- extremely, to a great extent when describing degree or quality
- colloquial emphasis expressing strong surprise or incredulity
How to use it
Used in casual conversation to describe things that are out of control or extreme; as a na-adjective after nouns or with だ, and as an adverb with むちゃくちゃに to modify actions; typically informal and not common in formal writing; used to describe people, events, plans, or statements that are wildly out of line.
Variants and close terms
- めちゃくちゃ (mecha-kucha) — extremely, very; casual synonym
- とんでもない (tondemonai) — outrageous, unbelievable; stronger nuance
- ぐちゃぐちゃ (guchagucha) — messy, sloppy; describes physical conditions
- ひどい (hidoi) — terrible; broader synonym
Composition
- 無 = nothing, none
- 茶 = tea
- 苦 = bitter, hardship
- 茶 = tea
- The组合 yields a fixed expression conveying extreme disorder or nonsensical behavior; it is not meant to be read as a literal 'no tea, bitter tea' composition.
Etymology
From the four-kanji compound 無茶苦茶, built from 無茶 and 苦茶. The first part conveys excess or recklessness; the second reinforces intensity; the result is a fixed idiom meaning extreme or nonsensical.
Word class
na-adjective (形容動詞)