砂漠
Meaning in Englishdesert
Animated kanji stroke order
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Word context
What it means
砂漠 (sabaku) means 'desert'. It refers to large land areas characterized by very low precipitation, sparse or no vegetation, and surfaces dominated by sand, gravel, or rock; the term covers both sandy seas of dunes and hard, barren expanses and is used to identify ecological zones with extreme dryness and limited life.
Main meanings
- 1. A figurative sense for any place or situation that is barren, empty, or devoid of activity or resources.
- 2. In environmental science contexts, used to describe regions undergoing or at risk of extreme aridity and ecosystem collapse.
- 3. Literary or poetic usage to evoke isolation, vastness, or harshness of landscape or emotion.
How to use it
Common in geography, ecology, news reporting, and literature; appears in formal writing and scientific descriptions as the standard term for desert regions, and in everyday speech when describing literal deserts or using the word metaphorically to describe emptiness or lack of resources.
Variants and close terms
- 荒野 (こうや, kōya) — wilderness, open barren land
- 砂丘 (さきゅう, sakyū) — sand dune (specific landform within deserts)
- 不毛の地 (ふもうのち, fumō no chi) — barren land, infertile area (phrase)
- 森林 (しんりん, shinrin) — forest (antonym)
Composition
- 砂 (sa): 'sand' or granular particles; evokes the sandy element of the landscape.
- 漠 (baku): 'vast, desolate expanse' or 'wilderness'; conveys breadth and desolation.
- Combined, the characters create the image of a wide, sandy wasteland, yielding the meaning 'desert'.
Origin
The compound is a Sino-Japanese (kango) term formed from Chinese characters and became standardized in Japanese as modern geography and natural sciences adopted Western concepts of deserts during the late Edo to Meiji periods, aligning Japanese terminology with international geographic classification.
Word class
Noun (名詞)