KanjiN310 phút đọc2026-02-15

作ると壊す——創造與變化的漢字

作、造、建、破、壊、滅、変、改、治——20 個創造與破壞的漢字,搭配金繼哲學與對義動詞一起學。

There's a Japanese phrase: "scrap and build" (スクラップ&ビルド) — tear down the old, build something new. Creation and destruction seem like opposites, but they're two sides of the same coin.

This article teaches you 20 kanji related to making, building, destroying, losing, and repairing — from creation to annihilation, and back to renewal.

Core Kanji Table

Creation & Building

KanjiOn'yomiKun'yomiMeaningCommon WordsNote
サク (saku)つく (tsuku)makeる (つくる, to make), (さくひん, work/piece)Everyday "making" — cooking, crafting
ゾウ (zō)つく (tsuku)manufactureる (つくる, to build), (せいぞう, manufacturing)Large-scale: shipbuilding, factories
ケン (ken)た (ta)constructてる (たてる, to build), (けんせつ, construction)For buildings and structures
セツ (setsu)もう (mō)establishける (もうける, to set up), (せっけい, design)Design and infrastructure
ショク (shoku)う (u)plantえる (うえる, to plant), (しょくぶつ, plant)Creating life by planting
イク (iku)そだ (soda)raiseてる (そだてる, to raise), (きょういく, education)てる = nurture, cultivate
サン (san)う (u)produceむ (うむ, to give birth), (せいさん, production)む = give birth; = production

Destruction & Loss

KanjiOn'yomiKun'yomiMeaningCommon WordsNote
ハ (ha)やぶ (yabu)breakる (やぶる, to tear), (はかい, destruction)る = tear, break a record
カイ (kai)こわ (kowa)destroyす (こわす, to break), れる (こわれる, to be broken)す = break it; れる = it broke
ホウ (hō)くず (kuzu)collapseれる (くずれる, to crumble), (ほうかい, collapse)れ = landslide
トウ (tō)たお (tao)topple倒れる (たおれる, to fall over), 倒す (たおす, to knock down)倒れる = fall; 倒す = knock over
カツ (katsu)わ (wa)split割る (わる, to split), 割 (わりびき, discount) = discount!
メツ (metsu)ほろ (horo)perishびる (ほろびる, to perish), 亡 (めつぼう, extinction)亡 = fall of a civilization
ショウ (shō)き (ki)・け (ke)vanishえる (きえる, to vanish), す (けす, to erase)える = disappear; す = turn off/erase
シツ (shitsu)うしな (ushina)loseう (うしなう, to lose), (しっぱい, failure) = failure

Change & Repair

KanjiOn'yomiKun'yomiMeaningCommon WordsNote
ヘン (hen)か (ka)changeわる (かわる, to change), える (かえる, to change sth.)Intransitive/transitive pair
カン (kan)か (ka)exchangeえる (かえる, to replace), (こうかん, exchange)える = alter; える = swap
カイ (kai)あらた (arata)reformめる (あらためる, to revise), (かいぜん, improvement) = kaizen!
チョク (choku)なお (nao)・ただ (tada)fix / directす (なおす, to fix), (ちょくせつ, direct)す = repair things, correct errors
チ (chi)・ジ (ji)なお (nao)・おさ (osa)cure / governす (なおす, to cure), る (なおる, to heal)す = cure illness; す = fix objects

作る vs 造る vs 創る

All three are read "tsukuru," but they carry different nuances:

KanjiReadingContextExamples
つくるEveryday makingる (cook a meal), る (write an essay)
つくるLarge-scale building / brewingる (build a ship), る (brew sake)
つくるArtistic creationる (create a work of art), しいる (create a new world)

In daily conversation, 作る is the safe default. 造る emphasizes industrial scale. 創る carries a sense of originality and artistry.

Paired Opposites

Creation and destruction kanji naturally form contrasting pairs:

CreationDestructionMeaning
る (つくる) makeす (こわす) destroymake things ↔ break things
てる (たてる) build倒す (たおす) topplebuild a house ↔ knock it down
む (うむ) give birthびる (ほろびる) perishbirth ↔ extinction
てる (そだてる) raiseう (うしなう) losenurture ↔ lose
える (うえる) plantえる (きえる) vanishplant ↔ disappear

Also note the transitive/intransitive pairs:

Intransitive (happens naturally)Transitive (someone does it)Kanji
れる (こわれる) it brokeす (こわす) break it
える (きえる) it vanishedす (けす) erase it
わる (かわる) it changedえる (かえる) change it
る (なおる) it healedす (なおす) cure it
倒れる (たおれる) it fell倒す (たおす) knock it down

Kintsugi — The Japanese Philosophy of Breaking and Remaking

In Japanese culture, destruction is not the end — it's the beginning of rebirth.

Kintsugi (金継ぎ) is the perfect example: when a ceramic bowl breaks (壊れた), you don't throw it away. Instead, you mend the cracks with gold lacquer. The repaired object becomes more beautiful than the original — because the cracks become unique, one-of-a-kind patterns.

Related kanji chain: 壊れる (it broke) -> 直す (repair) -> 変わる (it changed) -> 新しく作る (make it anew)

This philosophy also shows up in kaizen (改善) thinking: continuously break the status quo (破る), improve (改める), and rebuild (建てる). The Toyota Production System is a classic example of this "destroy -> rebuild" cycle.

Even Japan's land itself repeats this cycle: 地震で崩れる (collapse from earthquakes) -> 建て直す (rebuild). Each reconstruction incorporates new wisdom.

Practice

Q1. 作る, 造る, and 創る are all read "tsukuru." How do they differ?

Show answer

作る = everyday making (cooking, writing). 造る = large-scale building/brewing (shipbuilding, sake brewing). 創る = artistic creation (creating works of art). Use 作る as the safe default in daily conversation.

Q2. What's the difference between 壊す and 壊れる?

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Transitive vs. intransitive. 壊す (こわす) = someone breaks it (transitive); 壊れる (こわれる) = it breaks on its own (intransitive). Example: 弟が花瓶を壊した (my brother broke the vase) vs. 花瓶が壊れた (the vase broke).

Q3. What do 変わる and 変える mean respectively?

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変わる (かわる) = intransitive, something changes on its own. Example: 季節が変わる (the season changes). 変える (かえる) = transitive, to actively change something. Example: 予定を変える (change the plans).

Q4. Both 直す and 治す are read "naosu." How do you tell them apart?

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直す = fix objects, correct errors. Example: 時計を直す (fix a watch). 治す = cure illness. Example: 風邪を治す (cure a cold). Broken things get 直す; sick people get 治す.

Q5. What is kintsugi? Which kanji are involved?

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Kintsugi (金継ぎ) is a traditional Japanese technique of repairing broken ceramics with gold lacquer. Related kanji: 壊れる (break) -> 直す (repair). The kintsugi philosophy: damage is not a defect — the repaired object becomes even more beautiful.

Summary

  • Three ways to write "tsukuru": 作る (everyday), 造る (industrial), 創る (artistic)
  • Memorize creation and destruction in pairs: 作る ↔ 壊す, 建てる ↔ 倒す, 産む ↔ 滅びる
  • Transitive/intransitive pairs throughout: 壊す/壊れる, 消す/消える, 変える/変わる
  • 直す vs. 治す: fix things with 直, cure illness with 治
  • Japanese kintsugi philosophy: 壊れても、直せば、もっと美しくなる (even if it breaks, if you fix it, it becomes even more beautiful)

This concludes all five articles in the actions series! You've now mastered 100 action-related kanji.

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