義理
Meaning in Englishdebt of gratitude, obligation
Animated kanji stroke order
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Word context
What it means
義理 (giri) means a culturally specific sense of duty and obligatory reciprocity that shapes interpersonal actions in Japan. It describes acting out of convention, repayment, or social expectation rather than personal desire, often guiding behavior in families, workplaces, and public rituals and sometimes contrasting with private feelings.
Main meanings
- 1. Obligatory exchange or ceremonial courtesy, as seen in workplace gift-giving traditions like 義理チョコ (giri-choco).
- 2. A perfunctory or formal action done to fulfill social expectation rather than sincere emotion.
- 3. A relational marker used in compounds to indicate affinal or socially conferred links, for example 義理の父 (giri no chichi), meaning an in-law.
- 4. A basis for reciprocal obligation—an understood social debt that creates expectations of repayment or favor-returning.
How to use it
Found in both spoken and written Japanese across formal and casual registers, it labels behaviors or motives driven by social expectation—used when describing repayment of favors, mandatory holiday or workplace gifts, obligations to in-laws, or someone who keeps appearances; context determines tone, from neutral descriptions in business writing to mildly critical or ironic remarks in everyday conversation.
Variants and close terms
- 義務 (gimu) — duty, obligation (more legal/contractual)
- 恩義 (ongi) — gratitude/obligation stemming from a favor
- 責務 (sekinmu) — responsibility, formal duty
- 人情 (ninjō) — human feeling, often presented as an antonym emphasizing emotion over convention
- 本心 (honshin) — true feelings, used as an antonym to obligations done for show
Composition
- 義 — conveys moral correctness, righteousness, or what society deems proper.
- 理 — denotes principle, reason, or the ordering logic behind actions.
- Together the characters form a compound that frames socially prescribed conduct as grounded in principle: behaving according to accepted moral/communal reasoning rather than personal whim.
Origin
The concept traces to East Asian moral frameworks introduced to Japan with Confucian thought, gaining distinct social weight through medieval and early modern institutions; over centuries it became embedded in samurai honor codes, merchant etiquette, and family law, later manifesting in modern customs such as workplace reciprocity and ceremonial gift exchanges in the 19th–20th centuries.
Word class
noun (名詞)