Eight

September 12, 2009

by Nao

by Nao

hachi, yat-tsu, ya

At last, we have put all the numbers from one to ten. As I mentioned yesterday, there are two ways of counting.

The simple and practical: ichi, ni, san, shi, go, roku, nana, hachi, ku (kyū), jū.

More colloquial: hito-tsu, futa-tsu, mit-tsu, yot-tsu, itsu-tsu, mut-tsu, nana-tsu, yat-tsu, kokono-tsu, tō.

The Japanese yao yorozu means not only 8 million but also countless. Animism in Japan claims that there are myriads of gods and deities, saying yaoyorozu no kami.

A similar usage is yaoya or a grocery store. The yao means 800 and the ya means store.

  1. Draw the stroke on the left. By putting the tip of the brush along the left side of the stroke, you can make it look like a sharp edge. Make it narrower at the end.
  2. Draw the stroke on the right. You can make the hem-like ending by spreading the brush.

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