11. The "Enter" Radical: 入
The "enter" radical 入 is on duty in just one Joyo kanji, which is the 入 character itself:
入 (63: to enter, come in; put in; contain; accept; emphatic verbal suffix)
Henshall says in his newer edition that this shape depicts the "entrance to a dwelling."
The Japanese Names of the 入 Radical
The 入 kanji carries four Joyo yomi—namely, い•る, い•れる, はい•る, and ニュウ. Two have inspired names for the radical:
いる
にゅう
When the radical sits at the top of a character, 入 can also have these names:
いりがしら
いりやね
In both cases, the いり comes from いる. The かしら (頭), voiced as がしら in the radical name, means "top," and the やね (屋根) means "roof."
Though we have two names for 入 at the top of a character, I'm hard-pressed to find any examples of that situation!
The Shape of the "Enter" Radical
The shape of our two-stroke radical is quite simple. The only variable is that the 入 may have a hook on top, as in this sign:
Photo Credit: Lutlam
Alternatively, the hook may disappear, turning the radical into an inverted Y:
Photo Credit: Ulrike Narins
The 入 Component in Other Kanji
The 入 component plays a role in this kanji, where the on-duty radical is 辶 ("movement"):
込 (1275: to move inward; emphatic verbal suffix; be crowded; including; concentrate on)
In the past, 入 also served as a component in the following character:
両 (411: both; car; old monetary unit)
I'm referring to 兩, now the non-Joyo variant. Our radical showed up twice in that composition and has completely disappeared in the Joyo model!
Similarly, 入 has vanished from the Joyo version of this kanji:
内 (364: inside, within; private, unofficial)
The character once consisted of 冂 + 入, and our radical was actually on duty then. But in 1981 the Joyo shape officially became 冂 + 人, with 冂 ("upside-down box") as the on-duty radical.
A Look-Alike Radical
The history of 内 brings up another point of interest—namely, that 入 has a look-alike radical:
人 ("person")