Karate Terminology in Japanese
Numbers:
Ichi - one
Ni - two
San - three
Shi* / yon - four
Go - five
Roku - six
Shichi* / nana - seven
Hachi - eight
Kyu - nine
Jyu - ten
*Note: ‘four’ and ‘seven’ both have two pronunciations. This is because the sound ‘shi’, which is found in both ‘shi’ (4) and ‘shichi’ (7), means “death” in Japanese, and thus has negative connotations.
Starting/ending the class:
Shugo - line up
Ki o tsuke - attention
Seiza - kneel
Mokuso - close your eyes
Mokuso yame - finish meditation open your eyes
Shomen ni - face front
Rei - bow
Sensei ni - face Sensei
Rei - bow
Otagai ni - face your partner
Rei - bow
“Onegai shimasu” - Please (teach me); OR “Arigato gozaimashita” - Thank you (for teaching me)
Tatte - stand up
Other useful terms:
Sensei - teacher
Senpai - senior
Yoi - ready
Kamae - combative posture
Hajime - begin
Yame - stop
Kihon - basic
Junbi-undo - preparatory exercises (warm ups)
Hojo-undo - supplementary exercises (training tools, body conditioning)
Kata - prescribed forms/patterns
Bunkai - application/analysis (of the techniques in the kata)
Migi - right
Hidari - left
Mae - front
Ushiro - back
Yoko - side
Kiai - shout/yell (with spirit)
Waza - technique
Mawatte - turn around
Hai - yes
Iie - no
Dan - black belt grade
Kyu - Colour belt grade
Gi / Do-gi - training uniform
Obi - belt