🇯🇵 Japanese

Colors in Japanese

Colors in Japanese are more than vocabulary — they reveal how the language categorizes the world. Japanese distinguishes between "true" color adjectives (い-adjectives) and colors that function as nouns. Understanding this distinction is essential because it changes how you use colors in sentences. This guide covers all the key colors with kanji, hiragana, and the grammar you need.

🌐

Learn from Your Home Screen

Lingo puts new words on your Home Screen with pronunciation and translations — so you learn 30 languages without even opening the app.

Download on the App Store

The Four Original い-Adjective Colors

Classical Japanese had only four true color adjectives. These are the only colors that can take the い-adjective ending directly, and they remain the most common colors in modern Japanese.

JapaneseEnglish
Pronunciation
赤い (あかい)Red
ah-kah-ee
青い (あおい)Blue / Green (traditional)
ah-oh-ee
白い (しろい)White
shee-roh-ee
黒い (くろい)Black
koo-roh-ee
黄色い (きいろい)Yellow
kee-ee-roh-ee
Pro Tip

Each い-adjective color also has a noun form (drop the い): 赤 (aka, red), 青 (ao, blue), 白 (shiro, white), 黒 (kuro, black), 黄色 (kiiro, yellow). Use the い-form to modify nouns directly (赤い車, akai kuruma, red car) and the noun form with の (赤の車, aka no kuruma) or in compounds.

Noun-Form and な-Adjective Colors

These colors do not have a natural い-adjective form. They function as nouns and connect to other nouns using の (no), or in some cases behave as な-adjectives.

JapaneseEnglish
Pronunciation
緑 (みどり)Green
mee-doh-ree
紫 (むらさき)Purple
moo-rah-sah-kee
オレンジOrange
oh-rehn-jee
ピンクPink
peen-koo
茶色 (ちゃいろ)Brown
chah-ee-roh
灰色 (はいいろ)Gray
hah-ee-ee-roh
水色 (みずいろ)Light blue
mee-zoo-ee-roh
金色 (きんいろ)Gold
keen-ee-roh
銀色 (ぎんいろ)Silver
geen-ee-roh

Practice These Words in Lingo Widget

Home screen widgets, daily vocabulary, and 30 languages to explore.

Download on the App Store

How to Use Colors in Sentences

The grammar for using colors depends on whether the color is an い-adjective or a noun:

い-Adjective Colors (Direct Modification)

Noun Colors (Use の to Connect)

Pro Tip

The color 茶色 (chairo) literally means "tea color." Many Japanese color names are compound words: 水色 (mizuiro, "water color" = light blue), 灰色 (haiiro, "ash color" = gray). This pattern makes them easier to remember.

青 (Ao): The Blue-Green Question

One of the most fascinating aspects of Japanese colors is that 青 (ao) historically covered both blue and green. Today, green things that are traditionally described as 青 include:

In modern everyday speech, 緑 (midori) is used for green in most contexts. But these set expressions preserve the old usage and appear constantly in daily life.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between い-adjective and な-adjective colors in Japanese?

い-adjective colors (赤い, 青い, 白い, 黒い, 黄色い) can directly modify nouns: 赤い車 (akai kuruma, red car). な-adjective colors and noun-form colors need な or の to connect: 緑の車 (midori no kuruma, green car). The い-adjective colors are the "original" Japanese colors, while the others were added to the language later.

Why does 青 (ao/blue) sometimes refer to green things in Japanese?

Historically, Japanese used 青 (ao) to cover both blue and green. This is why traffic lights are called 青信号 (ao shingō, "blue signal") even though they appear green, and why unripe fruits are described as 青い (aoi). Modern Japanese distinguishes blue (青) from green (緑) in most contexts, but the old usage survives in many set expressions.

How many basic colors does Japanese have?

Japanese traditionally has four basic color adjectives: 赤い (red), 青い (blue), 白い (white), and 黒い (black). These are the only colors that form true い-adjectives in classical Japanese. 黄色い (yellow) was added later. All other colors function as nouns or な-adjectives that were incorporated into the language over time.

How do you say "light" or "dark" with colors in Japanese?

Use 薄い (usui) for light/pale and 濃い (koi) for dark/deep: 薄い青 (usui ao, light blue), 濃い赤 (koi aka, dark red). You can also use the prefix 明るい (akarui, bright) and 暗い (kurai, dark) for brightness variations.