KanjiN410 min read2026-02-15

Measuring — Kanji for Size, Amount & Calculation

Starting from 量 (measure), learn 20 kanji for dimensions, quantities, and calculations: 量, 重, 長, 高, 深, 厚, 広, 多, 少, 全, 各, 毎, 倍, 率, 割, 算, 計, 測, 積, 総 — master the world of measurement in Japanese.

Japanese has a verb 「量る」(はかる) meaning "to measure." But here's the thing — Japanese doesn't use just one kanji for はかる. There's 量る for weight, 測る for length and temperature, and 計る for time. A single concept of "measuring" splits into three different kanji.

This precision tells you a lot about how Japanese treats measurement. In this article, we'll cover 20 kanji related to dimensions, quantities, and calculations — the final piece of the numbers series puzzle.

Core Kanji Table

Physical Dimensions

KanjiOn'yomiKun'yomiMeaningCommon WordsExample
リョウ (ryō)はか (haka)measure, quantityる (はかる, to measure), (ぶんりょう, amount)る — to weigh oneself
ジュウ (jū)・チョウ (chō)おも (omo)・かさ (kasa)・え (e)heavy, importantい (おもい, heavy), (じゅうよう, important)このい — this luggage is heavy
チョウ (chō)なが (naga)longい (ながい, long), さ (ながさ, length)髪がい — long hair
コウ (kō)たか (taka)high, expensiveい (たかい, high/expensive), (さいこう, the best)い — Mt. Fuji is tall
シン (shin)ふか (fuka)deepい (ふかい, deep), (しんや, late at night)い — the sea is deep
コウ (kō)あつ (atsu)thickい (あつい, thick), さ (あつさ, thickness) — a thick book
コウ (kō)ひろ (hiro)wide, spaciousい (ひろい, spacious), (ひろば, plaza)い — the park is spacious

Quantity

KanjiOn'yomiKun'yomiMeaningCommon WordsExample
タ (ta)おお (ō)many, muchい (おおい, many), (たぶん, probably)い — there are many people
ショウ (shō)すく (suku)・すこ (suko)few, littleない (すくない, few), し (すこし, a little)ない — there's little time
ゼン (zen)まった (matta)・すべ (sube)all, entire (ぜんぶ, everything), く (まったく, completely)べた — I ate everything
カク (kaku)おのおの (onoono)each (かくち, various places), (かくじ, each person)する — each person prepares on their own
マイ (mai)ごと (goto)every (まいにち, every day), (まいかい, every time)る — I run every morning

Math & Calculation

KanjiOn'yomiKun'yomiMeaningCommon WordsExample
バイ (bai)times (multiple) (にばい, double), (ばいぞう, doubling)値段がになった — the price doubled
リツ (ritsu)・ソツ (sotsu)ひき (hiki)rate, ratio (かくりつ, probability), (こうりつ, efficiency)は 80% — the pass rate is 80%
カツ (katsu)わ (wa)divide, proportion (わりあい, ratio), 割 (いちわり, 10%)き — 30% off
サン (san)calculate (けいさん, calculation), (さんすう, arithmetic)き — I like arithmetic
ケイ (kei)はか (haka)measure, plan (とけい, clock), (ごうけい, total)はいくらですか — what's the total?
ソク (soku)はか (haka)measure, surveyる (はかる, to measure), (そくてい, measurement)る — to measure the temperature
セキ (seki)つ (tsu)accumulate, area (めんせき, area), む (つむ, to pile up)きい — the area is large
ソウ (sō)total, overall (そうごう, comprehensive), (そうすう, total number)する — to judge comprehensively

割 — Japan's Unique Percentage System

割 (わり) is a distinctly Japanese unit of measurement where one 割 = 10%. You'll encounter this system constantly in daily life:

Discounts

Japanese discounts use 割引 (わりびき), and the logic works opposite to English "percent off" — well, actually it's the same as English, but opposite to how Chinese expresses discounts:

JapaneseMeaningWhat You Pay
10% off90% of the price
30% off70% of the price
half price50% of the price

So when you see 三割引き on a sale sign, you're getting 30% off. Straightforward once you know that 割 = 10%.

Baseball Batting Averages

Japanese baseball expresses batting averages using 割・分・厘 (わり・ぶ・りん):

  • 三割 (さんわり) = .300
  • 三割二分五厘 (さんわりにぶごりん) = .325

If Shohei Ohtani's batting average is reported as 三割一分, that's .310 — you'll see this format in Japanese baseball news every day.

Everyday Expressions

  • 五分五分 (ごぶごぶ) = fifty-fifty, even odds
  • 腹八分目 (はらはちぶんめ) = eating until 80% full (a Japanese health proverb)

Adjective Pairs: The World of Opposites

A distinctive feature of these kanji is how many form antonym pairs as adjectives.

AdjectiveReadingMeaningAntonymReadingMeaning
ながいlongみじかいshort
たかいhigh/tallひくいlow/short
おおいmanyないすくないfew
ふかいdeepあさいshallow
あついthickうすいthin
ひろいwide/spaciousせまいnarrow/cramped

Watch out for a classic trap: 高い (たかい) also means "expensive," and 厚い (あつい, thick) sounds identical to 暑い (あつい, hot weather) and 熱い (あつい, hot to touch). These three あつい words are one of the most notorious pitfalls for Japanese learners.

Practice

Q1. Japanese has three kanji all read はかる, each used in different situations. When do you use 量る, 測る, and 計る?

Show answer

量る is for measuring weight (体重を量る, to weigh oneself). 測る is for measuring length, temperature, and other physical quantities (距離を測る, to measure distance). 計る is for measuring time (時間を計る, to time something). Same pronunciation, different kanji for different contexts — a hallmark of Japanese precision.

Q2. What does 三割引き mean, and how much do you actually pay?

Show answer

30% off — you pay 70% of the original price. 割引 means "discount" (literally "divide and pull away"). 三割引き = subtract three-tenths = pay seven-tenths of the original.

Q3. A Japanese baseball broadcast says a player's batting average is 三割二分五厘. What is this as a decimal?

Show answer

.325. 三割 = 0.300, 二分 = 0.020, 五厘 = 0.005, total = 0.325. The system 割・分・厘 represents the tenths, hundredths, and thousandths places respectively.

Q4. What do these three あつい words mean? 厚い, 暑い, 熱い

Show answer

厚い = thick (厚い本 = a thick book). 暑い = hot weather (今日は暑い = it's hot today). 熱い = hot to the touch (お茶が熱い = the tea is hot). All three are pronounced あつい — only context and kanji distinguish them.

Q5. What does 腹八分目 mean?

Show answer

Eat until you're 80% full. 腹 = stomach, 八分目 = the point of eight-tenths. This is a traditional Japanese health proverb advising you to stop eating before you're completely full — leave 20% room and your body will thank you.

Summary

  • Physical dimension kanji (量, 重, 長, 高, 深, 厚, 広) mostly become everyday adjectives, and each has an antonym pair
  • Quantity kanji (多, 少, 全, 各, 毎) are fundamental tools for describing things
  • Math and calculation kanji (倍, 率, 割, 算, 計, 測, 積, 総) are essential in academic and business contexts
  • is Japan's unique unit of proportion (one 割 = 10%), appearing in discounts, baseball stats, and everyday expressions
  • The three はかる (量る, 測る, 計る) and three あつい (厚い, 暑い, 熱い) are classic examples of Japanese homophones with different kanji

Congratulations on completing the entire numbers series! From basic numerals, dates and time, money and currency, to measurement and calculation — you now have the full picture of "numbers" in Japanese. Start looking for these kanji in your daily life, and you'll be surprised how often they appear.

Related Articles