Jisho

×

Words — 14 found

Noun
1. everyday life; daily life
Wikipedia definition
2. Everyday lifeEveryday life is what a person does, feels, and thinks ev... Read more
Details ▸
Noun, Suru verb, Transitive verb
1. care; looking after; help; assistance; aid
  • にほん日本
  • おや
  • 年をとる
  • つうれい通例
  • こども子供たち
  • せわ世話
  • になる
When parents get old in Japan, they are customarily looked after by their children.
Noun
2. trouble; bother
Noun, Suru verb, Transitive verb
3. good offices; recommendation; introduction
  • かれ
  • ともだち友達
  • しんせつ親切な
  • せわ世話
  • その
  • しょく
  • 就いた
He obtained the post through the good offices of a friend.
Noun
4. everyday life; everyday affairs; everyday language
Noun
5. sewamono (Edo-period drama about contemporary life)Abbreviation, See also 世話物
Details ▸
Noun
1. this world; earthly world; secular society
Noun
2. ordinary world; everyday life; workaday world
Details ▸
Noun
1. ukiyo-zōshi; Edo-period genre of literature depicting everyday life of the merchant classHistorical term
Wikipedia definition
2. Ukiyozōshiis the first major genre of popular Japanese fiction, wri... Read more
Other forms
浮世草紙 【うきよぞうし】
Details ▸
Noun
1. conversation on worldly affairs; chat about everyday life (business)Yojijukugo (four character compound)
Details ▸
Expressions (phrases, clauses, etc.), Noun
1. casting off the drudgery of everyday life and doing as one pleases; kicking backIdiomatic expression
Details ▸
Noun
1. dust; dirt
Noun
2. dreary world; petty affairs of everyday lifeOnly applies to じんあい
Other forms
塵埃 【ちりほこり】
Details ▸
Noun
1. ukiyo-e; ukiyoe; Edo-period woodblock printArt, aesthetics, Historical term
Wikipedia definition
2. Ukiyo-eUkiyo-e (浮世絵, literally "pictures of the floating world")... Read more
Details ▸
らくちゅうらくがい 洛中洛外図
Noun
1. views in and around Kyoto (style of folding screen depicting the scenery and scenes of everyday life in Kyoto; late Muromachi period to the Edo period)Historical term
Details ▸

Sentences — 2 found

  • jreibun/10554/1
    • めいじじだい明治時代
    • ちゅうき中期
    • に新しい時代の
    • わか和歌
    • を求める
    • わかかくしんうんどう和歌革新運動
    • が起こり、
    • かじん歌人
    • らは日常生活を題材として、
    • みずか自ら
    • の心情を直接的に
    • うた
    • 詠む
    • ようになった。
    In the mid-Meiji period (1868-1912), a movement for waka (a 31‐syllable Japanese poem) innovation began, which ushered in a new era of waka; waka poets began directly expressing their feelings in their waka, using everyday life as the subject matter. Jreibun
    Details ▸
More Sentences >