To Drink
September 14, 2009
no-mu, in
No-mu is the Japanese verb for “to drink”. My favorite sentence is no-mou, which means, “Let’s drink”. The suffixes mu and mou are okurigana.
Used as a part of compounds, in means to drink. Inryo is something to drink. Inshoku is drinking and eating. With a suffix meaning an industry, inshokugyo means the food industry. With a suffix meaning a store, inshokuten means cafes, restaurants, and taverns.
Drinking sake or any kinds of alcohol is inshu. Drunk driving is inshu unten.
Although this character is a twelve-stroke character, we draw this with thirteen strokes in kaisho style. The left part resembles yesterday’s character, shoku.
When you draw it with a pen, regard the seventh and the eighth strokes as one stroke, and just make an upward turn at the bottom.
- Begin the left part of the character. Draw the sweeping stroke from the top to the lower left.
- Draw the elongated dot from the top.
- Draw the small dot under the umbrella.
- Draw the right-angled hook.
- Draw the horizontal stroke inside the rectangle.
- Draw the horizontal stroke at the bottom of the rectangle.
- Draw the vertical line from where you start the fourth right-angled hook.
- Draw the stroke heading toward the dot below the rectangle. Make it narrower when you finish the stroke.
- Draw the elongated dot.
- Go back to the top and begin the right part of the character. Draw the sweeping stroke from the center top.
- Draw the hook. After changing the direction of the brush, make a sweeping stroke.
- Draw the sweeping stroke from just below the previous stroke.
- From the middle of the previous stroke, draw the sweeping stroke. Make a hem-like ending by spreading the brush.




