Kanji for poetry "詩"
詩
- Meaning
poetry
- Onyomi What is Onyomi?
Reading based on old Chinese pronunciation. - Kunyomi What is Kunyomi?
Reading based on Japanese to express the meaning of kanji.
There are some Kanji characters that need to be fed, such as “嬉しい”. - Strokes What is Strokes?
The stroke order is the order of writing kanji.
Created with the aim of unifying the stroke order as much as possible so as not to cause confusion in learning instruction. - Radical What is Radical?
Radical is a part of a kanji used to classify kanji.
In radical classification, at least one radical is assigned to all Kanji characters.
Sentences including 詩
She is quite a poet.
He has been writing poems since this morning.
This is the village where the poet was born.
I think he is something of a poet.
What do you think of her poem?
He is anything but a poet.
He is anything but a poet.
She wrote a lot of poems.
He is nothing but a poet.
This poem is too much for me.
Sentences from Japanese classical masterpieces
from "Kokoro", by Natsume Sōseki, original text:Shueisha Bunko, Shueisha
私は詩や書や煎茶を嗜なむ父の傍で育ったので、唐めいた趣味を小供のうちからもっていました。
from "Kokoro", by Natsume Sōseki, original text:Shueisha Bunko, Shueisha
纏まった詩だの歌だのを面白そうに吟ずるような手緩い事はできないのです。
from "Kokoro", by Natsume Sōseki, original text:Shueisha Bunko, Shueisha
from "Kokoro", by Natsume Sōseki, original text:Shueisha Bunko, Shueisha
私は詩や書や煎茶を嗜なむ父の傍で育ったので、唐めいた趣味を小供のうちからもっていました。
from "Kokoro", by Natsume Sōseki, original text:Shueisha Bunko, Shueisha
纏まった詩だの歌だのを面白そうに吟ずるような手緩い事はできないのです。
from "Kokoro", by Natsume Sōseki, original text:Shueisha Bunko, Shueisha