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How do you say Japan in Japanese? Nihon or Nippon?

Japanese

For Kevin

Have you ever wondered why in Japan the country is called Nihon and Nippon? Or have you ever wondered why the Westerners call the country Japan? Where did these come from? Are there other alternatives to refer to the land of the rising sun?

In this article, we will understand why Japan has several names like Nihon and Nippon. Let's see how these names came about, some curiosities and how to say Japan in several languages. Below is a summary of the article:

How do you say Japan in Japanese?

As the title of the article and its introduction suggest, Japan in Japanese is nihon or nippon [日本], both written the same way. Throughout the article, you will understand a little better about the meaning and origin of this name.

If you want to call Japan Japan in Japanese, you can say jyapan [ジャポン], equivalent to the English Japan. Japan officially uses this version in English on official documents displayed internationally and also on ports.

There are other ways to transcribe Japan from different languages into Japanese using katakana. The closest from Portuguese and Spanish we have is japon [ジャポン], although it is rarely known by the Japanese.

How do you say Japan in Japanese? Nihon or Nippon?

Meaning and origin of the name Japan

Japan in Japanese is written as [日本] where [日] means sun and [本] means origin. For this reason, Japan is known as the land of the rising sun and has a simple flag that represents the sun. The ideograms in the Japanese language have various readings allowing for the pronunciation of nihon and nippon for the country's name [日本].

The phonemes in the Japanese language are called hiragana and katakana, where each character represents a sound. Using these alphabets, we can write nihon [日本] as follows: [にほん] or [ニホン]. Now notice the slight difference in the word nippon written in hiragana and katakana: [にっぽん] [ニッポン].

The hiragana or katakana letters used are practically the same, the difference is that nippon uses an accentuation to transform an H into a P and a small tsu [っ] to elongate the pronunciation of the P. There is basically no different reading of the ideograms [日本] to pronounce the name of Japan, they are just phonetic details.

Why is Japan the land of the rising sun? That's because according to the Chinese, the country is located in eastern China, where apparently the sun rises. It is also believed in the influence of the Sun Goddess, Amaterasu. We can also notice in the time zone, where Japan is 12 hours ahead of us.

How do you say Japan in Japanese? Nihon or Nippon?

What is the old name of Japan?

The Chinese called Japan before it became an official country wa [倭], becoming what we know in Japanese as wakoku [倭国], which probably has a difference in pronunciation from that time.

However, [倭] was not a good ideogram, so it was changed to [和] which means "agreement." Then the name became established as wamato and later yamato which means something like behind the mountain.

For Westerners, Japan has always been referred to by some variant of the word japan, we will talk about this throughout the article.

Why call it Japan in the west?

Have you ever wondered why the West or the rest of the world calls the land of the rising sun Japan and not Nihon or Nippon? This happened because the person who introduced Japan to the world, the famous Marco Polo, only knew Japan through the Chinese via some dialect in southern China that pronounced the ideograms [日本] as Zipangu.

In traditional Chinese, the ideograms of Nihon or Nippon [日本] are usually pronounced as Rìběn. Marco Polo ended up taking Zipangu and turning it into Jipen, which later became Japan in English and Japan in Brazil. In Japanese we can write Japan using the katakana [ジャパン].

Not even the Japanese usually question this decision of the world, since the ideogram [日] also has the Chinese pronunciation jitsu. So it wouldn't be uncommon for someone to say jitsupon or jitsuhon that slightly resembles Zipangu or Japan, especially in English pronunciation.

Japan underwent several phonological changes throughout its history. Possibly Nifon and Jippon were some of them. This explains a lot why the country is called Japan in English and has pronunciations starting with J in many languages.

Nippon or Nihon - why does Japan have various names?

When to use Nihon and Nippon?

The first pronunciation used in the ideograms [日本] was Nippon. This term began to be used around 640 and makes total sense in relation to the word Japan or Japão. It is believed that the term Nihon emerged in the Edo period in the Kanto region. In fact, the commercial district of Tokyo is called Nihonbashi, while the commercial district of Osaka, which is close to Kyoto (the former capital), is called Niponbashi.

Throughout the history of Nihon, people have debated the best way or the official way to pronounce [日本], is it Nihon or Nippon? Currently, Nihon has become more popular than the original Nippon, used by more than 60% of the population. Note also that no one refers to the Japanese language as nippongo, only as nihongo [日本語].

Not even the government accepted the proposal to officially pronounce the land of the rising sun as Nippon in 1934. It is more common to pronounce Nippon when the word is isolated and alone. If the word is combined with another ideogram presenting some concept or idea about the country, it is more normal to use the Nihon reading...

Nippon or Nihon - why does Japan have various names?

Other ways of referring to Japan

Basically the name of Japan is composed of 2 ideograms that can be pronounced the way the person wants. Was it always like this? Before 640 what was Nihon called? Are there alternatives to the words Japan, Nihon and Nippon?

Before Nihon and Nippon [日本], the land of the rising sun was called Yamato [倭] or simply Wa, or rather, wakoku [倭国]. This name was given by the Chinese who first encountered the Japanese in Southern China. The country at that time was divided into several ancient provinces. Yamato was the main one, responsible for establishing an imperial court in Nara.

Over the years, the ideogram [倭] was simplified to [和], which means harmony and peace. This ideogram is still widely used in the Japanese language in various words related to the Japanese people, such as traditional Japanese food washoku [和食]. The kanji wa [我] also has a certain connection and concept about Japan.

Nippon or Nihon - why does Japan have various names?

Throughout the history of Nihon or Nippon, he gained other names and nicknames such as:

  • Ōyashima [大八洲] Great country of the 8 (many) islands;
  • Yashima [八島] Eight (many) islands;
  • Hinomoto [日の本];
  • Akitsukuni [秋津国];
  • Shikishima [敷島];
  • Mizuho [瑞穂];
  • Fusō [扶桑];

How do you say Japan in other languages?

To finish the article, let's leave a list of how the land of the rising sun is called in different languages. I hope you enjoy it, thank you for sharing, commenting, and reading our article.

languages How to say Japan in another language
Amharic ጃፓን (japani)
Arabic Japan
Armenian ճապոնիա (Chaponia)
Azerbaijani Yaponiya
Bangla Japan
Basque japan
Belarusian Японія (Japanese)
Catalan japan
Croatian Japan
Czech Japan
Dutch Japan
English Japan
Filipino Hapon (Japan)
Finnish Japani
French Japon
Galician the shapon
Georgian იაპონია (iaponia)
German Japan
Greek Ιαπωνία (Iaponía)
Hawaiian Iapana
Hebrew יפן (Yapan)
hindi Japan
Hungarian Japan
Icelandic Japan
Indonesian Jepang
Irish An tSeapáin
Italian Giappone
Kazakh Жапония (Japoniya)
Khmer ជប៉ុន (Japanese)
Kurdish Japanese
Malay جڤون‎ (Jepun)
Maltese Ġappun
Mongólia Япон
Persian ژاپن (žāpon)
Polish japan
romanian japan
Russian Япония (Yaponiya)
Scottish Gaelic Iapan
Sinhalese Japanaya
Slovak Japan
Spanish Japón
Swedish Japan
tâmil ஜப்பான் (Jappaan)
thai ญี่ปุ่น (yīpun)
Turkish Japanese
Ukrainian Японія (Yaponiya)
urdu Japan
Welsh Siapan
Xhosa Japhan