Keyword
brush up
Info
FrequencyTop 2400-2500
TypeKyūjitai ?
KankenLevel 1
Simplified form𫝼
Readings
(70%)
ばち
(11%)
ぱつ
(10%)
はつ
(2%)
はっ
(2%)
(1%)
(1%)
Composed of
left hand
departure [old]
Used in vocabulary (38 in total)
to hit (e.g. to have a car hit someone); to run into; to reject; to deny; to eliminate; to exclude; to flip
opposition; rebellion; rebounding; recoiling; rally (e.g. in stock prices); recovery
plectrum; pick; drumstick for Japanese drums (e.g. taiko)
to send (something) flying; to splatter; to drive (something) off
to push aside; to brush or thrust aside; to remove; to get rid of
to splash; to raise (e.g. prices)
to reject; to repulse; to repel; to bounce back; to counterattack; to strike back
to push aside; to brush or thrust aside; to remove; to get rid of
to flatly refuse; to reject; to spurn
to push aside; to brush or thrust aside; to remove; to get rid of
to be struck by a car
water repellency
to flatly refuse; to reject; to spurn
spring; spring (in one's legs); bounce; springboard; impetus
(a) jump; splashes (usu. of mud); upward turn at the bottom (e.g. of a vertical stroke of a kanji or of a hairdo); close (e.g. of a theatrical performance); breakup
to reject; to spurn; to turn down; to refuse
to take a commission; to take a cut; to take a piece of the action; to take a kickback
the sound of the kana "n"
rebounding; recovery; repercussions; tomboy; rashness; incautiousness
provocation; stirring up; arousal; excitement; stimulation
to splash; to splatter
pick-guard (protective patch on a biwa, etc.)
plucked string instrument
water bucket suspended from a weighted rod
nasal sound change (generation of the mora 'n', primarily from verb stems ending in 'i')
to get a rakeoff; to get a kickback; to take a kickback
sound made by a plectrum
taking a cut (of someone else's money); taking a rake-off; pocketing a kickback; skimming (a percentage of the profits, proceeds, etc.)
trapdoor; trap door; flap door
bigeye tuna (edible fish, Thunnus obesus)
rejected goods
to get flunked in an examination
Edo-period hairstyle for the common man (the entire head shaved just above the ear, with the remainder tied up in the back)
pick-guard (protective patch on a shamisen, etc.)
pushing away food one does not want to eat with one's chopsticks (a breach of etiquette)
rejected goods; sorted-out goods; jettisoned cargo
engraving of lacquer-stained ivory (popular during the Tang Dynasty)
Javanese long pepper (Piper retrofractum)
Examples (1 in total)
He was nearly hit by the car while crossing the street.