Japanese Weather Words and Kanji: Seasons, Rain, and Natural Phenomena

Japanese has rich vocabulary for weather and natural phenomena, tied to its four-season culture. Learn the key kanji and expressions used in everyday weather talk.

Weather in Japanese daily life

Weather is one of the most common conversation topics in Japanese daily life — and the language has developed precise vocabulary for it, reflecting a culture deeply attentive to seasonal change. Japan's four distinct seasons (四季, shiki) are not just meteorological facts but cultural anchors: poetry, food, clothing, and festivals all change with the seasons.

Core weather kanji

天気 (tenki — weather): The most used weather word. 天 (heaven/sky) + 気 (air/spirit). 晴れ (hare — clear/sunny), 曇り (kumori — cloudy), 雨 (ame/u — rain), 雪 (yuki/setsu — snow), 風 (kaze/fuu — wind), 台風 (taifuu — typhoon), 雷 (kaminari/rai — thunder/lightning), 霧 (kiri — fog/mist). The kanji for rain (雨) is used as a radical in many weather-related characters: 雪 (snow), 雷 (thunder), 電 (electricity — originally lightning), 雲 (cloud).

梅雨 (tsuyu — literally "plum rain") is Japan's rainy season, typically lasting from early June to mid-July. The name comes from the fact that plums (梅) ripen during this wet period. Tsuyu is considered a distinct fifth season by many Japanese, sitting between spring and summer.

Seasonal weather expressions

Japanese has poetic vocabulary for seasonal weather that does not translate directly: 小春日和 (koharu-biyori — a warm, spring-like day in late autumn), 木枯らし (kogarashi — the first cold, dry wind of winter), 五月晴れ (satsuki-bare — clear skies in May, often used for any unexpectedly clear day), 夕立 (yuudachi — a sudden late-afternoon summer shower). These expressions appear in poetry, everyday speech, and weather forecasts.

Explore weather kanji

See the individual pages for wind, rain, snow, lightning, and more.

Japanese symbol for Rain →