KanjiN310 min read2026-02-15

Stages of Life — Kanji for Birth, Growth & Beyond

生, 死, 老, 若, 育, 産, 婚, 葬 — from birth to the afterlife, 20 kanji that map the entire human journey.

There's a Japanese saying: 人生山あり谷あり — "life has mountains and valleys." From the first cry of 生 (birth) to the finality of 死 (death), Japanese kanji paint a vivid picture of the entire human journey. Master these 20 kanji and you'll see a complete life timeline — infancy, growth, prime years, marriage, aging, death, and even what comes after.

This article teaches you 20 kanji for the stages of life.

Core Kanji Table

Birth & Growth

KanjiOn'yomiKun'yomiMeaningCommon WordsNote
セイ (sei)・ショウ (shō)い(きる) (ikiru)・う(まれる) (umareru)life / live (せいかつ, daily life), (たんじょう, birth)Has the most readings — see special section below
イク (iku)そだ(つ) (sodatsu)raise / grow (きょういく, education), (いくじ, childcare) = childcare
サン (san)う(む) (umu)produce / give birth (しゅっさん, childbirth), (さんぎょう, industry) = childbirth
ジ (ji)・ニ (ni)child (formal) (ようじ, infant), (じどう, child) = child (formal)
ドウ (dō)わらべ (warabe)child (じどう, child), (どうわ, fairy tale) = fairy tale
ヨウ (yō)おさな(い) (osanai)young / infant (ようじ, infant), (ようちえん, kindergarten) = kindergarten

Youth & Prime

KanjiOn'yomiKun'yomiMeaningCommon WordsNote
ジャク (jaku)わか(い) (wakai)young (わかもの, young person), 若 (じゃっかん, some/slightly) = young person
ソウ (sō)vigorous / prime (そうだい, grand), (そうねん, prime of life) = prime years
セイ (sei)・ジョウ (jō)な(る) (naru)become / complete (せいじん, adult), (せいこう, success) = adult
サイ (sai)talent / age (てんさい, genius), (はたち, 20 years old) can also mean "years old" (= 歳)
ト (to)follower / on foot (せいと, student), (とほ, on foot) = student
テイ (tei)・ダイ (dai)おとうと (otōto)younger brother / apprentice (でし, disciple), (きょうだい, siblings) = disciple/apprentice

Milestones

KanjiOn'yomiKun'yomiMeaningCommon WordsNote
コン (kon)marriage婚 (けっこん, marriage), 婚 (こんやく, engagement)婚 = marriage
ロウ (rō)お(いる) (oiru)old / aged (ろうじん, elderly person), (ろうか, aging) = aging
スイ (sui)おとろ(える) (otoroeru)decline / weaken退 (すいたい, decline), (ろうすい, senility) = decline due to old age
寿ジュ (ju)ことぶき (kotobuki)longevity寿 (ちょうじゅ, long life), 寿 (じゅみょう, lifespan)寿 = a celebratory kanji

Death & Beyond

KanjiOn'yomiKun'yomiMeaningCommon WordsNote
シ (shi)し(ぬ) (shinu)death亡 (しぼう, death), (ひっし, desperate) = desperate effort (not "certain death")
ソウ (sō)ほうむ(る) (hōmuru)bury / funeral (そうしき, funeral), (そうぎ, funeral rites) = funeral ceremony
ボ (bo)はか (haka)grave / tomb (はか, grave), (ぼち, cemetery) = cemetery
レイ (rei)たま (tama)spirit / soul (れい, spirit), (ゆうれい, ghost) = ghost

生 — The Kanji with the Most Readings

生 is famously the kanji with the most readings in Japanese. Here are the most important ones:

ReadingExampleMeaning
い(きる)きるto live
う(まれる)まれるto be born
は(える)えるto grow (plants, hair)
なまビールdraft beer
セイ (せいかつ)daily life
ショウ (いっしょう)one's whole life
(きじ)fabric / dough
お(う)ち (おいたち)upbringing
う(む)to give birth / produce

Why so many readings? Because 生 covers "birth, living, growing, and raw/unprocessed" — Japanese assigned different kun'yomi and on'yomi for each nuance. Don't try to memorize them all at once. Learn them one word at a time and they'll stick naturally.

Life Milestone Vocabulary

Japanese culture is rich with ceremonies tied to life stages:

WordReadingMeaningNote
しちごさんShichi-Go-SanCelebration for children aged 3, 5, and 7 — held in November
せいじんしきComing-of-Age DayCeremony at 20 (now changed to 18) — held in January
けっこんしきweddingWedding ceremony
かんれきkanreki60th birthday — one full cycle of the zodiac
こきkoki70th birthday — from "reaching 70 is rare since antiquity"
寿べいじゅbeiju88th birthday — breaks into (eighty-eight)
そうしきfuneralFuneral ceremony
ほうじhojiBuddhist memorial service after death
おぼんObonAugust festival when ancestors' spirits return home
はかまいりgrave visitVisiting family graves to pay respects

A Japanese person's life rituals span from お宮参り (first shrine visit after birth) to 葬式 (funeral), weaving together both Shinto and Buddhist traditions.

Practice

Q1. How do you read 幼 in 幼稚園?

Show answer

よう. 幼稚園 (ようちえん) = kindergarten. The on'yomi of 幼 is ヨウ, and its kun'yomi is おさない (young, childish).

Q2. What does 必死 mean? How does it relate to 死?

Show answer

Desperate effort / giving it everything you've got. Literally "certain death," but in practice it means "trying as hard as humanly possible." Example: 必死に勉強する = to study desperately hard. Unlike what the kanji suggest, it's actually a positive, determined word.

Q3. How do you read 生 in 生ビール, and why?

Show answer

なま. 生ビール = draft beer (unpasteurized beer). The reading なま means "raw, unprocessed" — the same なま as in 生魚 (raw fish).

Q4. How old is 米寿, and why is it called "rice longevity"?

Show answer

88 years old. Break the kanji 米 apart: the top is 八, the middle is 十, the bottom is 八 — giving you 八十八 (eighty-eight). That's why the 88th birthday is called 米寿 (べいじゅ).

Q5. What life stages do 壮年 and 老衰 refer to?

Show answer

壮年 (そうねん) = prime of life, the period of peak physical and mental vigor. 老衰 (ろうすい) = senile decline, the gradual weakening of the body due to old age. Together they trace the arc: 壮 (vigorous) → 老 (old) → 衰 (declining).

Summary

  • Life-stage kanji span from 生・産 (birth) through 死・葬・墓・霊 (death and beyond), mapping the full human journey
  • 生 is the kanji with the most readings in Japanese — い(きる), う(まれる), なま, セイ, ショウ and more — learn them one word at a time
  • Japanese life rituals blend Shinto and Buddhist traditions — 七五三, 成人式, 還暦, お盆, 葬式
  • 必死 doesn't mean "certain death" — it means "giving it everything," a surprisingly positive word
  • This is the final article in the People series — congratulations on completing the journey from family to the stages of life!

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