火
| Property |
Value |
| Meaning |
fire |
| Strokes |
4 |
| JLPT Level |
N5 |
| On-reading (音読み) |
カ |
| Kun-reading (訓読み) |
ひ、ほ |
| Radical |
火 (ひ) — U+706B |
Stroke Order
The stroke order for 火 follows the general rule of top-to-bottom and left-to-right, with a specific focus on balance:
- Stroke 1: A short, slightly curved vertical-ish stroke starting from the top center.
- Stroke 2: A left-slanting stroke (払 - harai) starting from the middle.
- Stroke 3: A right-slanting stroke (捺 - natsu) starting from the same point as stroke 2.
- Stroke 4: A final right-slanting stroke (捺 - natsu) that provides the "base" of the flame.
Note: Think of the first three strokes as the "body" of the flame and the final stroke as the flickering tip.
Radical Analysis
The kanji 火 is a pictograph (象形文字 - shōkei moji). It is also its own radical (部首: 火). The shape represents a person standing with their arms outstretched, with flames rising above their head. When used as a radical on the left side of a character, it changes form to 灬 (four dots), such as in 熱 (heat) or 燃 (burn).
Mnemonic
Imagine a person standing in the dark, waving their arms in a panic because their clothes have caught on fire. The top stroke is their head, the two middle strokes are their arms flailing, and the final stroke is the flame licking up from their side!
On-readings (音読み) with Examples
カ (Ka)
| Word |
Reading |
Romaji |
English |
| 火山 |
かざん |
kazan |
volcano |
| 火曜日 |
かようび |
kayōbi |
Tuesday |
| 火力 |
かりょく |
karyoku |
thermal power |
| 消火 |
しょうか |
shōka |
fire extinguishing |
Kun-readings (訓読み) with Examples
ひ (Hi)
| Word |
Reading |
Romaji |
English |
| 火 |
ひ |
hi |
fire |
| 花火 |
はなび |
hanabi |
fireworks |
| 火事 |
かじ |
kaji |
fire (conflagration) |
ほ (Ho)
| Word |
Reading |
Romaji |
English |
| 火照る |
ほてる |
hoteru |
to flush/glow |
| 火種 |
ほだね |
hodane |
spark/source of fire |
JLPT N5 Words Using 火
| Word |
Reading |
Romaji |
English |
JLPT |
| 火 |
ひ |
hi |
fire |
N5 |
| 火曜日 |
かようび |
kayōbi |
Tuesday |
N5 |
| 火事 |
かじ |
kaji |
fire (accident) |
N5 |
| 花火 |
はなび |
hanabi |
fireworks |
N5 |
| 火山 |
かざん |
kazan |
volcano |
N4 |
| 消火器 |
しょうかき |
shōkaki |
fire extinguisher |
N3 |
| 火災 |
かさい |
kasai |
conflagration |
N3 |
| 点火 |
てんか |
tenka |
ignition |
N2 |
Example Sentences
| Japanese |
Reading |
Romaji |
English |
| 火を消してください。 |
ひをけしてください。 |
Hi o keshite kudasai. |
Please put out the fire. |
| 今日は火曜日です。 |
きょうはかようびです。 |
Kyō wa kayōbi desu. |
Today is Tuesday. |
| 夏に花火を見ました。 |
なつにはなびをみました。 |
Natsu ni hanabi o mimashita. |
I saw fireworks in the summer. |
| 火山が噴火しました。 |
かざんがふんかしました。 |
Kazan ga funka shimashita. |
The volcano erupted. |
| 料理のために火を使う。 |
りょうりのためにひをつかう。 |
Ryōri no tame ni hi o tsukau. |
I use fire for cooking. |
| 火の用心が必要です。 |
ひのようじんがひつようです。 |
Hi no yōjin ga hitsuyō desu. |
We need to be careful with fire. |
Common Confusion Pairs
| Kanji |
Reading |
Meaning |
How to distinguish |
| 火 |
ひ / カ |
Fire |
Has a "person" shape with arms flailing. |
| 人 |
ひと / ジン |
Person |
Lacks the top stroke and the two side "flames." |
| 大 |
おお / ダイ |
Big |
Looks like a person with arms wide; lacks the "flame" strokes on the sides. |
Usage Frequency Note
火 is one of the most fundamental kanji in the Japanese language. It is used daily, appearing in everything from the days of the week to warnings about fire safety. It is highly common in both formal writing and casual speech.