Your search matched 518 words.
Search Terms: *身*
Dictionary results(showing 111-210 of 518 results)
noun
•
blow to a vital point of a person's body, striking techniques (judo)(martial arts)
Other readings:
中身【あてみ】
、当身【あてみ】[1]
Notes:
- irregular okurigana usage
expression
•
all that lives must eventually die(proverb)
Other readings:
生き身は死身【いきみはしにみ】[1]
Notes:
- irregular okurigana usage
noun
•
mind-made body, body as born out of a certain kind of intent or mindfulness(Buddhist term)
expression, noun
•
personal reasons, personal matters, personal affairs
expression, Ichidan verb
•
to become the focus of (attention, sympathy, hope, etc.)
noun
•
wretched life, life of misery
See also:憂き身をやつす (うきみをやつす)
Other readings:
うき身【うきみ】
、憂身【うきみ】[1]
Notes:
- irregular okurigana usage
expression, Godan-su verb
•
to be absorbed in, to devote oneself (to), to give oneself over (to)
Other readings:
憂き身を窶す【うきみをやつす】
expression
•
people don't know themselves as well as they know others, even if you know what will happen to others, you don't know what will happen to yourself, a fortune teller can't tell their own future(proverb)
noun
•
debt bondage (ritsuryo system), forced labor on failure to pay a debt
noun
•
nirmanakaya (response body, form taken by a buddha according to the capabilities of those who are to be saved)(Buddhist term)
See also:三身
expression
•
big heads have little wit(proverb)
Other readings:
大男総身に知恵が回りかね【おおおとこそうみにちえがまわりかね】
pronoun
1.
your body, your health, yourself(honorific language)(only relevant for おんみ)
2.
you(honorific language)
Other readings:
御身【おみ】
expression
•
people don't know themselves as well as they know others, even if you know what will happen to others, you don't know what will happen to yourself, a fortune teller can't tell their own future(proverb)
noun
•
vanishing from sight (usu. via magic, camouflage. etc.), disappearing, hiding
noun
1.
buddha-body within a practitioner (esoteric Buddhism)(Buddhist term)
2.
altruistic manifested form of Mahavairocana (New Shingon)
See also:本地身
noun
•
bodily injury, personal injury, actual bodily harm, mayhem(law term)
expression, Ichidan verb
•
to master something (through personal experience)
Other readings:
身体で覚える【からだでおぼえる】
、躯で覚える【からだでおぼえる】
expression
•
the body is honest, your body reveals what you really think (or want)(proverb, colloquialism)
Other readings:
身体は正直【からだはしょうじき】
expression, noun
•
body without organs (philosophical concept), BwO
expression
•
(with) only the clothes one happens to wear
Other readings:
着の身着の侭【きのみきのまま】
、着のみ着のまま【きのみきのまま】
、着の身着のまま【きのみきのまま】
noun
•
var. of fresh Japanese sweet made of white bean paste, egg yolk, sugar and rice granules
noun
•
Other readings:
黄身寿司【きみずし】
expression
•
what chances to one man may happen to all, what happens to one today may happen to another tomorrow, misfortunes can happen to anyone(proverb)
expression
•
it's hard to notice one's own faults, one does not notice one's own body odour(proverb)
Other readings:
臭い物身知らず【くさいものみしらず】
noun
•
meat of a fish (e.g. tuna) that is dark red with blood, usu. coming from the parts close to the spine
See also:血合い
expression
•
being able to live as an artist is no blessing(proverb)(twist on the proverb 芸は身を助ける)
See also:芸は身を助ける
Other readings:
芸が身を助けるほどの不仕合【げいがみをたすけるほどのふしあわせ】
けんぜんせいしんけんぜんしんたいやど
kenzennaruseishinhakenzennarushintainiyadoru
expression
•
a sound mind is in a sound body, mens sana in corpore sano(proverb)
expression
1.
sashimi garnish
2.
something of no significance, something that can easily be done without
Other readings:
刺し身のつま【さしみのつま】
、刺身の妻【さしみのつま】
、刺し身の妻【さしみのつま】
noun
•
sashimi knife
Other readings:
刺身庖丁【さしみぼうちょう】
、刺し身包丁【さしみぼうちょう】
noun
•
trikaya (three bodies of the Buddha)(Buddhist term)
Other readings:
三身【さんしん】
noun
•
treacherous friend, snake in one's bosom, treacherous insider(yojijukugo)
expression, noun
•
snake in one's bosom, treacherous friend(idiom )
noun
•
renouncing the flesh or the world, becoming a priest, risking one's life for others(Buddhist term)
expression
•
those who wish to rule the land must first cultivate their own characters, then manage their families, then govern their states; only then can they bring peace to the land(proverb)(from the Book of Rites)
noun
•
one's old school or university, alma mater, the school or university one attended
noun, no-adjective
•
(in) a humble position with a small stipend(yojijukugo)
noun, no-adjective
•
(top) half naked, naked above the waist
noun
•
women's volunteer corps, groups of young female workers organized on Japanese territory during WWII
noun
•
aureole (of a Buddhist statue; surrounding the body but not the head), aureola
noun
1.
fortune, property
2.
life circumstances, finances, housekeeping
3.
one's worth, one's merit, asset, strong point