ι¦–

JLPT N3

Neck, head

Readings

On’yomi: γ‚·γƒ₯ (shu)
Kun’yomi: くび (kubi)
くび - neck

Vocabulary

ι¦–
くび
neck
手首
てくび
wrist
ι¦–η›Έ
しゅしょう
prime minister
首都
しゅと
capital city
解雇首
かいこくび
dismissal

Example Sentences

ι¦–γŒη—›γ„γ§γ™γ€‚
くび が γ„γŸγ„ です。
My neck hurts.
手首を動かします。
てくび γ‚’ うごかします。
I move my wrist.
首相です。
しゅしょう です。
He is the prime minister.
ι¦–ιƒ½γ«θ‘ŒγγΎγ™γ€‚
しゅと に いきます。
I go to the capital.
θ§£ι›‡γ•γ‚ŒγΎγ™γ€‚
かいこ γ•γ‚ŒγΎγ™γ€‚
I am dismissed.

Cultural Note

🎎 ι¦– in Japanese culture extends beyond anatomy β€” it represents responsibility and status.
β€’ Expressions like γ€Œι¦–γ‚’εˆ‡γ‚‹γ€(to cut someone’s neck) mean β€œto dismiss someone” β€” a remnant of feudal-era imagery where losing one’s head symbolized disgrace.
β€’ γ€Œι¦–γ‚’ηͺγ£θΎΌγ‚€γ€(to stick one’s neck in) means to meddle or get involved.
β€’ The kanji also appears in positions of authority, like ι¦–η›Έ (Prime Minister) or 部首 (radical of a kanji, literally β€œsection head”).
Thus, ι¦– reflects both the physical head and the figurative leader or starting point β€” embodying direction, control, and prominence.