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13 strokes

廉 — Honest, Incorruptible, Inexpensive

N1
On: レン
Kun: かど

Meaning

廉 carries two meanings joined by a single idea. The primary sense is honesty, integrity, and incorruptibility — the moral quality expected of someone in public life who neither takes bribes nor abuses power. The secondary sense is inexpensive or modest in price. These two are not coincidental: a person of 廉 neither overcharges nor exploits others for gain. Their character and their prices are equally spare.

Structurally, 廉 is built on the radical 广 (まだれ), a slanting roof or cliff face that appears in characters related to buildings and sheltered spaces — 店 (shop), 庭 (garden), 広 (wide). The lower component (けん) hints at the on'yomi reading レン and carries a sense of holding to a unified standard. Historically, the full character evoked someone sheltered beneath virtue: their conduct spare, their integrity uncontaminated.

In Confucian moral philosophy — and in early Japanese bureaucratic culture — 廉 was a cardinal virtue. A 廉 official served the people honestly, accepting no bribes and accumulating no illicit wealth. This ideal spread across East Asia, leaving 廉 embedded in classical texts, official titles, and moral treatises. The kanji has 13 strokes and is a Joyo kanji (常用漢字) taught at the high-school level.

Readings

On'yomi (音読み) — Chinese-derived readings

廉 has one on'yomi: レン. It appears almost exclusively in compound words (熟語) covering both pricing and moral character, across formal, literary, and business contexts.

  • 廉価れんか (renka) — low price, bargain price; common in product descriptions
  • 清廉せいれん (seiren) — integrity and purity of character, incorruptibility
  • 破廉恥はれんち (harenchi) — shamelessness, brazen immorality; the negation of 廉恥
  • 廉売れんばい (renbai) — bargain sale, selling goods cheaply

Kun'yomi (訓読み) — Native Japanese readings

The kun'yomi かど means a corner or angle, and by extension a point or matter at issue. Rare in modern Japanese, it surfaces mainly in classical or literary texts. Most learners will encounter the on'yomi far more often, but knowing かど helps when reading older materials.

  • かど (kado) — corner, angle; also a reason or matter in classical usage

Common Words & Compounds

廉 appears mainly in formal, literary, and business vocabulary. The compounds below are grouped by theme.

Price and commercial value:

  • 廉価れんか (renka) — low price, bargain; the most common everyday use of 廉
  • 廉価版れんかばん (renka-ban) — budget edition, economy version of a product
  • 廉売れんばい (renbai) — bargain sale, discount selling

Moral integrity and character:

  • 清廉せいれん (seiren) — purity and integrity, incorruptibility; the most common moral compound
  • 廉潔れんけつ (renketsu) — moral purity, uprightness of conduct
  • 廉直れんちょく (renchoku) — honest and upright, incorruptible in character
  • 廉明れんめい (renmei) — honest and enlightened; used of leaders or officials
  • 廉恥れんち (renchi) — sense of honor and shame, moral conscience
  • 破廉恥はれんち (harenchi) — shamelessness, brazenness; acting without moral conscience

Four-character compounds (四字熟語):

  • 清廉潔白せいれんけっぱく (seiren keppaku) — completely clean and honest; pure in both character and conduct

Classical and historical vocabulary:

  • 廉士れんし (renshi) — a person of integrity (classical term)
  • 廉吏れんり (renri) — an honest, incorruptible official (classical bureaucratic term)

Example Sentences

Kono renka na moderu wa wakamono no aida de ninki ga aru.

This budget-priced model is popular among young people.

Kare wa seiren na seijika toshite hiroku shirarete iru.

He is widely known as a politician of great integrity.

Sono mise wa renbai wo tsuzukete iru node, ooku no kyaku ga atsumaru.

Because that store keeps holding bargain sales, many customers gather there.

Harenchi na kōdō wa shakai kara tsuyoi hihan wo ukeru.

Shameless behavior invites strong criticism from society.

Renketsu na jinbutsu wa fuhai shita soshiki no naka demo jibun no shinnen wo mamoru.

A person of moral purity upholds their principles even within a corrupt organization.

Renka-ban no tanmatsu demo, nichijō no sagyō ni wa jūbun na seinou ga aru.

Even a budget-edition device has sufficient performance for everyday tasks.

Seiren keppaku na kanryō ga gyōsei wo sasaeru beki da.

Bureaucrats of completely clean character ought to support the administration.

Renchi no seishin wo motsu hito wa, yūwaku ni make nikui.

A person who possesses a sense of moral honor is less likely to succumb to temptation.

Renchoku na seikaku wa chōkiteki na shinrai wo kizuku ue de fukaketsu da.

An honest and upright character is indispensable for building long-term trust.

Memory Tip

Picture a wise old official standing beneath a slanting roof (广, the まだれ radical). Corrupt officials pile stolen wealth under their rooftops. This official's shelter is lean and spare — no bribes accepted, no prices inflated, nothing hoarded. His home is modest; his character is clean. Both meanings of 廉 live in that image: cheap and humble in possessions, honest and incorruptible in conduct.

The reading レン sounds like the English word lean — lean in greed, lean in corruption. The four-character compound 清廉潔白せいれんけっぱく (seiren keppaku), meaning "completely pure and beyond reproach," makes a strong anchor for the kanji's ethical dimension.

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