足 — Kanji Reference

足 (foot, leg): 7 strokes, JLPT N5. On: ソク. Kun: あし、た-りる.

Property Value
Meaning foot, leg
Strokes 7
JLPT Level N5
On-reading (音読み) ソク
Kun-reading (訓読み) あし、た-りる
Radical 足 (あしへん - ashi-hen) [U+8DB3]

Stroke Order

The kanji is written in 7 strokes, following the standard top-to-bottom, left-to-right rule.

  1. Stroke 1: The top vertical line (the "mouth" component top).
  2. Stroke 2: The top-left corner of the "mouth" (horizontal then vertical).
  3. Stroke 3: The bottom horizontal line of the "mouth".
  4. Stroke 4: The vertical line descending from the "mouth".
  5. Stroke 5: The left-slanting stroke (the "leg" kick).
  6. Stroke 6: The right-slanting stroke (the "foot" base).
  7. Stroke 7: The final horizontal stroke at the base.

Radical Analysis

The kanji is its own radical (足部). It depicts a leg and a foot. The top portion (口) represents the knee or the upper leg, while the bottom portion represents the lower leg and the foot planted on the ground. When used as a radical on the left side of other kanji (e.g., 路, 跳), it is called ashi-hen and almost always relates to movement, walking, or parts of the leg.

Mnemonic

Imagine a person standing on one leg. The top is their head, and the bottom strokes are their bent knee and the foot planted firmly on the ground. If you look closely, the shape looks like a person standing with a bent knee, ready to take a step forward.

On-readings (音読み) with Examples

ソク (soku)

Word Reading Romaji English
不足 ふそく fusoku insufficiency
満足 まんぞく manzoku satisfaction
足跡 そくせき sokuseki footprints
二足 にそく nisoku two pairs (of shoes/socks)

Kun-readings (訓読み) with Examples

あし (ashi)

Word Reading Romaji English
右足 みぎあし migiashi right foot
足元 あしもと ashimoto at one's feet

た-りる (ta-riru)

Word Reading Romaji English
足りる たりる tariru to be sufficient
足りない たりない tarinai to be lacking

JLPT N5 Words Using 足

Word Reading Romaji English JLPT
あし ashi foot/leg N5
足りる たりる tariru to be enough N5
右足 みぎあし migiashi right foot N5
左足 ひだりあし hidariashi left foot N5
足元 あしもと ashimoto at one's feet N4
不足 ふそく fusoku lack/shortage N4
満足 まんぞく manzoku satisfaction N4
遠足 えんそく ensoku excursion/trip N4
足す たす tasu to add N4
足首 あしくび ashikubi ankle N3

Example Sentences

Japanese Reading Romaji English
足が痛いです。 あしがいたいです。 Ashi ga itai desu. My foot/leg hurts.
お金が足りません。 おかねがたりません。 Okane ga tarimasen. I don't have enough money.
彼は満足しています。 かれはまんぞくしています。 Kare wa manzoku shite imasu. He is satisfied.
足元に気をつけて。 あしもとにきをつけて。 Ashimoto ni ki o tsukete. Watch your step.
睡眠が不足しています。 すいみんがふそくしています。 Suimin ga fusoku shite imasu. I am sleep-deprived.
明日は遠足です。 あしたはえんそくです。 Ashita wa ensoku desu. Tomorrow is a field trip.

Common Confusion Pairs

Kanji Reading Meaning How to distinguish
あし foot/leg Has a distinct "mouth" (口) at the top.
さだ-める fix/decide The top is 宀 (roof), not 口.
これ this/correct The bottom is 正, not the leg-kick shape.

Usage Frequency Note

is a high-frequency kanji used daily in both formal and informal contexts. It is essential for describing physical movement, body parts, and abstract concepts like "sufficiency" (足る) or "satisfaction" (満足). You will encounter it frequently in news, casual conversation, and signage.