牙
Tags
- Jōyō kanji
- Kanji considered of common use by the Japanese Ministry of Education #joyo
- 8th grade kanji
- Kanji learned in eight grade (junior high school) #grade-8
- 5 strokes
- Kanji with 5 strokes #strokes-5
Reading
- On'yomi
- ガゲ
- Kun'yomi
- きばは
- Chinese (pinyin)
- ya2
- Korean (hangul)
- 아
- Korean (romanized)
- a
- Vietnamese
- Nha
- Kantenji (braille kanji)
- ⠑⣾
Meaning
- tusk, fang, tusk radical (no. 92)
- croc, défense, radical défense d'ivoire (no. 92)
- colmillo
Stroke order
Components in kanji 牙
Extended information
Frequency 2067
KANJIDIC Project
259 "Modern Reader's Japanese-English Character Dictionary", by Andrew Nelson (now published as the "Classic" Nelson)
2848 "The New Nelson Japanese-English Character Dictionary", by John Haig
3531 "New Japanese-English Character Dictionary", by Jack Halpern
3435 "Remembering The Kanji" by James Heisig
1904 "Japanese Names", by P.G. O'Neill
0 "Daikanwajiten" by Morohashi
19909:7:605 "Kanji and Kana" by Spahn and Hadamitzky (2011 edition)
1548 "Japanese For Busy People" vols I-III, published by the AJLT. The codes are the
volume.chapter
0 Codes from Yves Maniette's "Les Kanjis dans la tete" French adaptation of Heisig
1923 "Remembering The Kanji, 6th Ed." by James Heisig
2053 "Kodansha Kanji Dictionary", (2nd Ed. of the NJECD) by Jack Halpern
4243 "Kanji Learners Dictionary" (Kodansha), 2nd edition (2013) by Jack Halpern
2891
Halpern's SKIP (System of Kanji Indexing by Patterns) code
4-4-1 The descriptor codes for The Kanji Dictionary (Tuttle1996) by Spahn and Hadamitzky
0a4.28 The "Four Corner" code for the kanji. This is a code invented by Wang Chen in 1928
7124.0
JIS X 0208-1997 - kuten coding
nn-nn
1-18-71 Decimal representation of the UTF16 character
29273