21 Colors in Japanese – What They Are and How to Say Them | FluentU Japanese Blog (2024)

21 Colors in Japanese – What They Are and How to Say Them | FluentU Japanese Blog (1)

By 21 Colors in Japanese – What They Are and How to Say Them | FluentU Japanese Blog (2)nickpowers Last updated:

If you want to bring some life and vigor into your everyday speech, knowing Japanese color words can help you do that.

Read on to learn how to name primary, secondary and basic colors as well as colors based on objects and foreign words. You’ll also learn how to use these words in Japanese.

Contents

  • Red — Aka — 赤 (あか)
  • Blue — Ao — 青 (あお)
  • Yellow — Kiiro — 黄色 (きいろ)
  • Purple — Murasaki — 紫 (むらさき)
  • Green — Midori — 緑 (みどり)
  • Orange — Orenjiiro — オレンジ色 (おれんじいろ)
  • White — Shiro — 白 (しろ)
  • Black — Kuro — 黒 (くろ)
  • Pink — Pinku — ピンク
  • Gray — Hai — 灰色 (はいいろ)
  • Brown — Cha — 茶色 (ちゃいろ)
  • Gold — Kin — 金 (きん)
  • Silver — Gin — 銀 (ぎん)
  • Multicolored — Tashoku — 多色の (たしょくの)
  • How to UseJapanese Color Words
  • And One More Thing...

Download: This blog post is available as a convenient and portable PDF that you can take anywhere. Click here to get a copy. (Download)

Red — Aka — (あか)

赤 is a noun (“the color red”), the adjective for red on the other hand is 赤い — akai — (あかい).

赤 is the most common word for “red,” encompassing a wide range of hues and shades, while — kurenai — (くれない) is a deep, ruddy red, like the leaves that fall in the autumn or dark pink pickled ginger, or 紅ショウガ — beni shouga— (べにしょうが).

More Vocabulary:

Autumn leaves, red and brown leaves – Kouyou – 紅葉 (こうよう)

Maroon — Maruun — マルーン (まるーん)

Shrimp or prawn Ebi – 海老 (えび) this color refers to ruddy, dark prawns, as opposed to bright pink shrimp.

Blue — Ao — (あお)

Another way of saying blue is 青い — aoi — (あおい).

Blue and green have an interesting history. Basically,緑 originally referred to a type of plant shoot, not a color. It was only after WWII that educational materials began labeling “green” as緑 and “blue” as青い. Before then,青い was used exclusively to mean anything on the blue-green spectrum.

The simplest distinction now is that non-living objects* that are entirely green (green books, green clothes, lime green cars) are緑, and anything else that is slightly blue, or alive (or organic), is青い.

E.g., “green apples” are 青林檎 — aoringo — (あおりんご) and “green peas” are 青豆 — aomame — (あおまめ).

*Japanese traffic lights are 青信号 — aoshingou — (あおしんごう), not 緑信号 — midorishingou — (みどりしんごう).

More Vocabulary:

Sky blue — Sorairo — 空色 (そらいろ)

Navy blue — Kon — (こん)

Bluish white, pale Aojiroi – 青白い (あおじろい)

Yellow — Kiiro — 黄色 (きいろ)

Other ways of saying yellow include 黄色い — kiiroi — (きいろい)、 黄色な — kīrona — (きいろな).

More Vocabulary:

To turn yellow with age (like paper or teeth) – Kibamu – 黄ばむ (きばむ)

Pale yellow, light yellow – Tanoushoku – 淡黄色 (たんおうしょく)

Greenish yellow – Ryokuoushoku – 緑黄色 (りょくおうしょく)

Chartreuse, pea green, yellow-green – Kimidori – 黄緑 (きみどり)

Egg yolks – Ranou – 卵黄 (らんおう)

Amber — Kohakuiro — 琥珀色 (こはくいろ)

Purple — Murasaki — (むらさき)

Another way of saying purple is パープル — pāpuru — (ぱーぷる).

More Vocabulary:

Lavender — Rabendaa — ラベンダー (らべんだー)

Ultraviolet rays – Shigaisen – 紫外線 (しがいせん)

Hydrangea – Ajisai – 紫陽花 (あじさい)

Mauve – Fujiiro – 藤色 (ふじいろ)

Green — Midori — (みどり)

緑 is a noun that you can use as an adjective by inserting the particle の (of) after the color. E.g., 緑の本 — midorinohon — (みどりの ほん — the green book).

More Vocabulary:

Japanese green tea – Ryokucha – 緑茶 (りょくちゃ)

Orange — Orenjiiro — オレンジ色 (おれんじいろ)

For example, both the color and the fruit “orange” are オレンジ — orenji — (おれんじ), obviously taken from English.

White — Shiro — (しろ)

More Vocabulary:

Blank paper, white paper — Hakushi — 白紙 (はくし)

White board, dry erase board — Hakuban — 白板 (はくばん)

Swan — Hakuchou — 白鳥 (はくちょう)

Egg whites — Ranpaku — 卵白 (らんぱく)

Ivory — Zougeiro — 象牙色 (ぞうげいろ)

Black — Kuro — (くろ)

More Vocabulary:

Pitch black, deep black — Makkuro 真っ黒 (まっくろ)

Dark, blackish— Kuroppoi — 黒っぽい (くろっぽい)

Blackboard, chalkboard — Kokuban — 黒板 (こくばん)

Black tea— Koucha — 紅茶 (こうちゃ)

Pink — Pinku — ピンク

More Vocabulary:

Pink — Momoiro — 桃色 (ももいろ)

Cherry blossom — Sakurairo — 桜色 (さくらいろ)

sakura (さくら) means “cherry blossom,” so this is the type of gentle pink you’d see in the early spring when cherry blossoms are in full bloom.

Gray — Hai — 灰色 (はいいろ)

Some words, like 灰色 (gray — haiiro — はいいろ) and 桃色 (pink — momoiro — ももいろ) come from the objects they describe: hai (はい) means “ash,” so 灰色 is the color of grayash, and momo (もも) is “peach,” and because Japanese peaches are pinkish-white, this color means the pale red pink.

More Vocabulary:

Gray hair — Hakuhatsu — 白髪 (はくはつ)

Brown — Cha — 茶色 (ちゃいろ)

cha —(ちゃ) means “tea,” and because most tea in Japan is brownish (even green tea is sometimes brown), “brown” is “tea color,” or 茶色 chairo.

These words are used for most things that are brown, with a few other options depending on the hue of brown to which you’re referring, but one exception that may throw you off is with skin color.

In Japan, “brown skin” is actually called “black skin,” meaning people with dark skin or tans are often referred to as “black.”

If you want to go get a suntan, you would say “I want to make my skin black.” ( 肌を黒くしたい。 / はだをくろくしたい。 )

fuji — (ふじ) means “wisteria,” like the lavender-budded trees that form the wisteria tunnel in f*ckuoka Prefecture.

Gold — Kin — (きん)

More Vocabulary:

Golden — Kiniro — 金色 (きんいろ)

Silver — Gin (ぎん)

More Vocabulary:

Silver — Giniro — 銀色 (ぎんいろ)

Multicolored — Tashoku 多色の (たしょくの)

More Vocabulary:

Varicolored — Irotoridori — 色とりどりの (いろとりどりの)

Colorful — Karafuru カラフルな (からふるな)

How to UseJapanese Color Words

Japanese color words can be い-adjectives, な-adjectives, の-adjectives (nouns turned into adjectives) or nouns. For example, “red” can either describe an object (“a red apple”) or act on its own as a noun (“red is my favorite color”).

Therefore, you can use the colors in the same way you would use any other noun or adjective.

Examples:

赤い花です。 ( あかいはなです。 )
It is a red flower.

花が赤いです。 ( はながあかいです。 )
The flower is red.

好きな色は赤です。 ( すきないろは あかです。 )
My preferred color is red.

赤が好きです。 ( あかがすきです。 )
I like red.

If you want to discover other interesting ways of using color words in Japanese, try watching authentic videos with the learning program FluentU.

FluentU takes authentic videos—like music videos, movie trailers, news and inspiring talks—and turns them into personalized language learning lessons.

You can try FluentU for free for 2 weeks. Check out the website or download the iOS app or Android app.

P.S. Click here to take advantage of our current sale! (Expires at the end of this month.)

With all these vibrant new Japanese words at your disposal, you can impress native speakers with your beautiful descriptions of nature!

Download: This blog post is available as a convenient and portable PDF that you can take anywhere. Click here to get a copy. (Download)

And One More Thing...

If you love learning Japanese with authentic materials, then I should also tell you more about FluentU.

FluentU naturally and gradually eases you into learning Japanese language and culture. You'll learn real Japanese as it's spoken in real life.

FluentU has a broad range of contemporary videos as you'll see below:

FluentU makes these native Japanese videos approachable through interactive transcripts. Tap on any word to look it up instantly.

All definitions have multiple examples, and they're written for Japanese learners like you. Tap to add words you'd like to review to a vocab list.

And FluentU has a learn mode which turns every video into a language learning lesson. You can always swipe left or right to see more examples.

The best part? FluentU keeps track of your vocabulary, and gives you extra practice with difficult words. It'll even remind you when it’s time to review what you’ve learned. You'll have a 100% personalized experience.

Start using the FluentU website on your computer or tablet or, better yet, download the FluentU app from the iTunes or Google Play store. Click here to take advantage of our current sale! (Expires at the end of this month.)

21 Colors in Japanese – What They Are and How to Say Them | FluentU Japanese Blog (2024)

FAQs

How do you say all the colors in Japanese? ›

Colors in Japanese – What They Are and How to Say Them
  1. Red — Aka — 赤 (あか)
  2. Blue — Ao — 青 (あお)
  3. Yellow — Kiiro — 黄色 (きいろ)
  4. Purple — Murasaki — 紫 (むらさき)
  5. Green — Midori — 緑 (みどり)
  6. Orange — Orenjiiro — オレンジ色 (おれんじいろ)
  7. White — Shiro — 白 (しろ)
  8. Black — Kuro — 黒 (くろ)
Oct 9, 2023

What are the Japanese color terms? ›

Ten of these conform closely to the corresponding English BCTs: kuro/black, shiro/white, hai/gray, aka/red, ki/yellow, midori/green, pink/pink, orange/orange, cha/brown, and murasaki/purple.

What are the 100 most common Japanese phrases with meanings? ›

FAQs
  • こんにちは (Konnichiwa) - Hello.
  • ありがとう (Arigatou) - Thank you.
  • すみません (Sumimasen) - Excuse me / I am sorry.
  • はい (Hai) - Yes.
  • いいえ (Iie) - No.
  • おはようございます (Ohayou gozaimasu) - Good morning.
  • こんばんは (Konbanwa) - Good evening.
  • さようなら (Sayonara) - Goodbye.

How to remember Japanese colors? ›

Try to remember the following 6 Japanese colors since they are true adjectives! (also known as i-adjectives):
  1. akai (red)
  2. aoi (blue)
  3. kiiroi (yellow)
  4. kuroi (black)
  5. shiroi (white)
  6. chairoi (brown)

What is the lucky color in Japan? ›

Red: Lucky Color in Japanese and Chinese Culture

Both cultures agree that red is among the luckiest. Red is one of the most dominant colors in Japanese culture. It is the symbolic color of the imperial nation, represented as a filled circle (to symbolize the sun) on the national flag.

What color is Kuro? ›

The color black, or kuro, is traditionally a masculine color in Japan. It has often been used for the samurai class, and is still used to this day for men's wedding attire and for the boys' festival Kodomo-no-hi.

How do you list colors in Japanese? ›

The Primary Colors
  1. Red – Aka – 赤
  2. Blue – Aoi – 青い
  3. Yellow – Kiiro – 黄色
  4. Orange – Orenji – オレンジ
  5. Green – Midori – 緑
  6. Purple – Murasakino – 紫の
  7. Red orange – Akai orenji – 赤いオレンジ
  8. Yellow orange – Ki orenji- 黄オレンジ
Jun 7, 2022

What is the most popular color in Japan? ›

In addition, blue is one of the lucky colors in Japan. Finally – current surveys indicate that blue is the most popular color of todays' Japan.

What are the original Japanese colors? ›

The Oldest Colors

The earliest written history of Japan, which was a mix of fact and mythology, mentions the four oldest color terms in the Japanese language: aka 赤 あか or red, kuro 黒 くろ or black, shiro 白 しろ or white, and ao 青 あお or blue.

What is the Japanese phrase 80% full? ›

Hara hachi bun me (腹八分目) (also spelled hara hachi bu, and sometimes misspelled hari hachi bu) is a Confucian teaching that instructs people to eat until they are 80 percent full. The Japanese phrase translates to "Eat until you are eight parts (out of ten) full", or "belly 80 percent full".

What are 5 words that originated in Japanese but are now used in English? ›

17 English Words That Come From Japanese
  • Minamoto no Yoritomo, the first shogun of the Kamakura shogunate (1179). Tycoon. ...
  • Honcho. Definition: a person who is in charge of other people : boss, big shot; also : hotshot. ...
  • Kudzu. ...
  • Skosh. ...
  • Ramen. ...
  • Futon. ...
  • Sudoku. ...
  • Rickshaw.
Dec 28, 2023

What is the Japanese color theory? ›

Japanese colour theory is based around natural elements, with the 5 main colours being blue (wood), red (fire), yellow (earth), white(metal) and black (water ).

What color makes you memorize faster? ›

In one study, students in British Columbia scored higher on memory tasks when completing them on a red background. But it depends on where you live, researchers say. In North America, for example, red is aligned with danger or stopping, which increases the natural response to red.

What is the trick to remember colors? ›

ROYGBIV is an acronym for the sequence of hues commonly described as making up a rainbow: red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, and violet. There are several mnemonics that can be used for remembering this color sequence, such as the name "Roy G. Biv" or sentences such as "Richard of York Gave Battle in Vain".

Is it pinku or momoiro? ›

Pink in Japanese (Pinku)

Pink is another color whose most commonly used name in modern Japan might feel pretty familiar to English speakers – pinku, written in katakana to denote a loanword. The traditional Japanese name for it is momo or momoiro (桃色, ももいろ), but that's less commonly used.

What is akai in Japanese? ›

Japanese Adjective akai - 赤い- red.

What color is Mizu? ›

Mizu, a color term for "light blue," translates to "water" and is unique to Japanese speakers.

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