雑誌
Meaning in Englishmagazine, journal
Animated kanji stroke order
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Related sentences
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Word context
What it means
雑誌 (zasshi) means a magazine or periodical. It refers to a regularly issued publication—originally printed and now often digital—that collects articles, essays, photographs and features around topics or general interests and is distributed as individual issues or by subscription; it is typically less frequent and more thematic than a newspaper and less specialized in format than an academic journal.
Main meanings
- One: a single issue or edition considered as an item, used when identifying a particular release or volume of a periodical.
- Two: the magazine format or genre in media discussions, distinguishing it from newspapers, books, or journals.
- Three: in compounds it can shift nuance to denote a category of periodical, for example when paired with subject words to indicate a themed publication.
How to use it
Used across everyday and formal contexts to refer to printed or digital periodicals; people use it when buying, subscribing to, recommending or categorizing media, and it appears in compound terms naming genres like ファッション雑誌 (fasshon zasshi) for fashion magazines or in academic contexts as a marker for specialised periodicals; tone varies with context—casual when discussing reading habits and neutral to formal in publishing or research references.
Variants and close terms
- マガジン (magajin): loanword often used in product names or informal contexts to mean 'magazine'.
- 定期刊行物 (teiki kankōbutsu): 'periodical/publication'—more formal, legal or bibliographic term.
- 学術雑誌 (gakujutsu zasshi): 'academic journal'—a scholarly subtype of periodical.
- 新聞 (shinbun): 'newspaper'—related medium with different format and frequency (not a synonym).
Composition
- 雑: conveys 'miscellaneous' or 'mixed', indicating a variety of contents.
- 誌: means 'records' or 'writings', used for published written material.
- Together they form a compound that originally suggests 'miscellaneous writings/records', which naturally came to denote a periodical that collects assorted articles.
Origin
The modern concept behind 雑誌 (zasshi) entered Japan during the late Edo and Meiji periods as printing technology, rising literacy and Western-style publishing practices spread; by the late 19th century periodicals modeled on Western magazines began to appear, serving literary, informational and commercial roles and evolving into the diverse magazine industry present today.
Word class
noun (名詞)