Your search matched 190 words.
Search Terms: 子*
Dictionary results(showing 126-190 of 190 results)
noun
•
guardian Avalokitesvara of children and childbirth (bodhisattva)
See also:観音
expression
•
the parent is the best judge of the child(proverb)
Other readings:
子を見る事親に如かず【こをみることおやにしかず】
expression
•
he that has no child knows not what love is(proverb)
noun
•
konbu as a betrothal gift (representing fertility and having healthy children)
See also:昆布 (こんぶ)
Other readings:
幸運夫【こんぶ】
noun
1.
child (esp. a boy)
2.
viscount
See also:子爵
3.
founder of a school of thought (esp. Confucius), master(honorific language)
4.
masters and philosophers (categorization of Chinese classical literature)
See also:諸子百家
pronoun
5.
you(archaism)(of one's equals)
noun (suffix)
6.
-er (i.e. man who spends all his time doing...)
noun
•
noun
•
cervical cancer(medical term)
Other readings:
子宮頚癌【しきゅうけいがん】
noun
•
intrauterine fetal death (foetal), IUFD
noun
•
uterine rupture, hysterorrhexis, metrorrhexis(medical term)
na-adjective
•
seeming to be for a certain reason, seeming to indicate there are special circumstances, seeming to indicate there is more than meets the eye
Other readings:
仔細ありげ【しさいありげ】
expression
•
there is no problem, there is no need to go into details(archaism)
Other readings:
仔細に及ばず【しさいにおよばず】
noun
•
one's descendants, one's offspring, posterity(yojijukugo)
Other readings:
子々孫々【ししそんそん】
noun
•
generation after generation, (for) generations to come
Other readings:
子孫代代【しそんだいだい】
noun
•
Ascomycota, phylum comprising the sac fungi
Other readings:
子のう菌門【しのうきんもん】
suffix
•
honorific (or familiar) suffix used after a name(archaism, honorific language)
Other readings:
子【す】
noun
•
collecting herbs and pulling out young pine trees by the roots (annual event held on the first day of the Rat of the New Year)(obscure)
See also:子の日の遊び
Other readings:
子忌【ねいみ】
expression, noun
•
hour of the Rat (around midnight, 11pm to 1am, or 12 midnight to 2am)(archaism)
expression, noun
•
ne-no-hi-no-asobi, collecting herbs and pulling out young pine trees by the roots (annual event held on the first day of the Rat of the New Year)