ふだ
Meanings
Noun
1. ticket; token; check; receipt
2. label; tag
3. sign; card; plate
4. playing card
5. charm; talisman
6. slip of paper posted on shrine pillars by pilgrims
Pitch accent
Used in vocabulary (65 in total)
type of household amulet or talisman, issued by a Shinto shrine, hung in the house for protection
name plate; name tag; label
(interest) coupon
announcement flier (e.g. sale at a shop); raffle ticket; lottery ticket; hikifuda (type of playing cards numbered 1-6, used by the bank in tehonbiki); kurifuda
doorplate; nameplate; gate pass
one's hand (when playing cards); name tag; nameplate; wallet-sized (photo)
tagged (esp. with a price); notorious; infamous; double-dyed
trump card; ace up one's sleeve; secret weapon
hanafuda; flower cards; playing cards consisting of 12 suits of 4 cards, each suit representing a month indicated by a flower
red tag (esp. one attached to sold goods or discounted products); red label; swords (playing card suit in traditional Japanese gambling decks)
to label; to put a tag on
check (e.g. baggage claim); tag; token; tally; score
wooden tag
price tag; price label
counterfeit paper money
bulletin board; notice board; billboard; roadside sign; sign on a post, usu. wooden, esp. containing information about a sight, warning, congratulations, etc.
official bulletin board (esp. Edo period); highest bid; highest tender
numbered tag; numbered ticket
deck (of playing cards on table, face down, from which cards are drawn); stack; draw pile; tag verifying one has permission to take plants and trees from common land (Edo period)
temple which issues amulets
face card; court card; picture card (in utagaruta or iroha karuta)
cards in one's hand; one's hand
price tag; price label; tag displaying a base price which cannot be reduced by negotiation
wildcard (in hanafuda); storm card; gaji (term used in Hawaii); extra card (in hanafuda, kabufuda, etc.; sometimes depicting an ogre); joker; blank card
label; tag
cards with words or phrases written on them, used in Japanese karuta games
white label; white tag; white card (in karuta); blank card; honour awarded to samurai in Tosa
bid; tender
paper charm; talisman
pawn ticket
lottery ticket
child's identification tag
poster; notice; harifuda (type of playing cards numbered 1-6; used for playing tehonbiki)
wooden signboard with a peaked top (usu. with information about a historical place)
card to pick up (in card games); card that is picked up by players instead of read (in karuta); card printed with the second half of a poem (in karuta)
blue tag; blue card; blue ticket; batons (playing card suit in traditional Japanese gambling decks)
tag; label
1-point card; junk card; plain card
card that can be used to make a scoring combination
full house; sell-out; putting up a sign forbidding entry, passage, etc.
cards on the board; cards in the field
kurofuda; type of Japanese playing cards
tag; label
sign; placard
sign staked to a building's ridgepole at construction time stating the building's donor, builder, date, reason for construction, etc.
pip card; spot card
10-point card; tane; animal card
charm for shrine visitors
street corner bulletin board
votive tablet donated to a shrine or temple; (arch.) treasury or granary receipt statement
prize-winning ticket; winning lottery ticket
useless card (in karuta); worthless card; card only worth 1 point
kabufuda (type of playing cards); tag verifying merchant guild membership (Edo period)
suit (of cards)
local card game (esp. hanafuda)
mushifuda; stripped hanafuda deck consisting of 40 cards
draw pile; mekuri karuta (card game popular in the late Edo period)
draw pile; mekuri karuta (card game popular in the late Edo period)
card that can be counted as more than one type of card for scoring combinations (e.g. the sake cup card or the November suit)
tiles used in incense-guessing games
mefuda (type of playing cards)
November suit; rain suit
card used to pick up the remaining three cards of the same suit in the field
card used to pick up the remaining three cards of the same suit in the field
card (oft. featuring illustrations of sweets) used to represent money when gambling
Examples (1 in total)
He put a Closed sign on the front door of the store.