挟
to hold between; insert; be caught in
Kanji 1165
Thank you for visiting this Character Home Page. Below you'll find a synopsis of the essay. If you wish to read the full text, the PDF of the essay is available for purchase to the right.
Find out why several places are called Fusabami, what it means to "discuss something across a table," and what to call attacks from two sides. Learn how one powerful verb can refer to sandwiching something or to filling that sandwich. Discover ways to talk about fingers slammed in doors, houses facing each other, hearsay, interruptions, and meddling (or "sticking your beak in"!).
Revision history:
June 29, 2021:
- p. 1: Restored the link to Radical Note 64, which had somehow disappeared.
- p. 18: Added a link to the Kanshudo games.
Jan. 20, 2020: Revised both the Henshall and Kanjigen etymologies.
Aug. 9, 2019:
- p. 1: Sound-alikes: Added a missing bullet point to はさ•む.
- p. 2: Updated the Henshall etymology and the Sears link.
- p. 18: Added a link back to this page so you can more easily access the game below.
Mar. 24, 2017: Fixed the shared shape in the look-alike listing on p. 1. Also updated definitions of look-alike kanji and fixed broken links on pp. 3, 4, and 6.
May 15, 2015: Originally published.
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