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9 strokes

帝 — Emperor, Sovereign, Deity

N1
On: テイ
Kun: みかど

Meaning

帝 means emperor, sovereign, or supreme deity. At its core, it names whoever holds the highest authority — a ruler commanding an empire, or the celestial lord governing the heavens. In Japanese imperial tradition, 帝 is bound to the idea of divine kingship. The emperor was not merely a political ruler but a sacred figure said to be descended from the gods, whose authority extended over people and nature alike.

Etymologically, 帝 is an ideograph (指事文字). Its oracle-bone script form showed an altar or ritual stand used in ceremonies to communicate with heaven. The upper portion suggests a ceremonial headdress or canopy; the lower component (cloth, towel) hints at the sacred robes worn during imperial rites. Together they depict a figure clothed in ceremony, performing rituals that bridge the mortal world and heaven.

has 9 strokes and belongs to the secondary school Joyo kanji (Grade 8). It sits at JLPT N1, appearing in advanced proficiency tests and formal or literary texts. In everyday casual conversation it's rare, but in historical writing, literature, and proper nouns like 帝国 (empire), it's common.

帝 reaches beyond earthly rulers. In religious and mythological contexts, it also names a supreme deity or celestial emperor — 天帝 (the Heavenly Emperor) in East Asian cosmology, or God in classical Sino-Japanese religious texts. This dual sense — ruler of men and lord of heaven — gives 帝 unusually broad reach across historical, political, and religious vocabulary.

Readings

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

The on'yomi reading of is テイ (tei). Derived from Middle Chinese, テイ appears almost exclusively in compound words (熟語, jukugo) — formal, historical, and academic vocabulary. It's the reading you'll encounter most in written Japanese. It also maps to cognates in Chinese (帝, dì) and Korean (제, je), which can help if you're studying multiple East Asian languages.

  • 帝国ていこく (teikoku) — empire; an imperial nation or territory
  • 帝王ていおう (teiou) — emperor, monarch; also used metaphorically for a dominant figure in any field
  • 皇帝こうてい (koutei) — emperor (general term, used especially for non-Japanese emperors such as Roman or Chinese)
  • 帝都ていと (teito) — imperial capital; historically refers to Tokyo (formerly Edo)
  • 帝位ていい (teii) — imperial throne; the position or rank of emperor
  • 帝室ていしつ (teishitsu) — imperial household; the royal family

One compound worth noting is 帝王切開ていおうせっかい (teiou sekkai), the word for Caesarean section. It literally means "imperial cut," a calque from the Latin sectio caesarea — a striking example of classical imperial vocabulary surviving in modern medical Japanese.

Kun'yomi (訓読み) — Native Japanese readings

The kun'yomi reading of is みかど (mikado). This native Japanese word refers to the Japanese emperor, or by extension the imperial palace and court. Western audiences know it from Gilbert and Sullivan's 1885 operetta The Mikado, set in a fictional Japan. Etymologically, みかど likely derives from 御門 (mi-kado), meaning "the exalted gate" — the gate of the imperial palace, where the sovereign was said to reside. In modern Japanese the word is archaic and literary; 天皇 (tennō) is the standard term today. Still, みかど is essential for reading classical poetry and historical texts.

  • みかど (mikado) — the emperor, His Majesty (archaic and literary usage)

Common Words & Compounds

帝 appears across a wide range of compound words in history, politics, religion, and modern medicine.

Imperial and Political Terms

  • 帝国ていこく (teikoku) — empire; the territory and system governed by an emperor
  • 帝王ていおう (teiou) — emperor, monarch; also used figuratively (e.g., 帝王学, the art of rulership)
  • 皇帝こうてい (koutei) — emperor; the standard term for emperors outside Japan, such as the Chinese or Roman emperor
  • 女帝じょてい (jotei) — empress regnant; a female emperor who holds supreme power in her own right
  • 帝位ていい (teii) — imperial throne; the position of emperor
  • 帝政ていせい (teisei) — imperial rule; a political system governed by an emperor
  • 帝都ていと (teito) — imperial capital; historically applied to Tokyo as the seat of the Japanese emperor
  • 帝室ていしつ (teishitsu) — imperial household; the emperor's family and immediate court

Religious and Cosmological Terms

  • 天帝てんてい (tentei) — Heavenly Emperor; the supreme deity or lord of heaven in East Asian cosmology and mythology
  • 上帝じょうてい (joutei) — God, the Lord; used in classical Chinese religious and philosophical texts to refer to the supreme being

Modern and Derived Usage

  • 帝国主義ていこくしゅぎ (teikoku shugi) — imperialism; the policy of extending a nation's power through colonization or military force
  • 帝王切開ていおうせっかい (teiou sekkai) — Caesarean section; a surgical method of childbirth named after the legendary birth of Julius Caesar

Example Sentences

Mikado wa kodai kara Nihon wo osamete kita.

The emperor has governed Japan since ancient times.

Teikoku no rekishi wa hijou ni fukuzatsu da.

The history of empires is extremely complex.

Koutei wa gyokuza ni suwatte shinka wo mukaeta.

The emperor sat on the throne and received his subjects.

Teito wa kuni no chuushin toshite nagaku sakaeta.

The imperial capital flourished for a long time as the center of the nation.

Teiou wa shinka-tachi ni kibishii meirei wo kudashita.

The sovereign issued strict commands to his subjects.

Teikoku shugi wa ooku no kuni ni fukai kizu wo nokoshita.

Imperialism left deep wounds in many nations.

Jotei ga kuni wo chikarazuyoku touchi shita jidai mo atta.

There were also eras when an empress regnant ruled the nation with great strength.

Tentei no ishi ni shitagau koto ga mottomo taisetsu da to shinjirarete ita.

It was believed that following the will of the Heavenly Emperor was of utmost importance.

Teiou sekkai de umareta akachan wa genki de kenkou datta.

The baby born by Caesarean section was lively and healthy.

Memory Tip

Picture an emperor at a sacred altar, draped in ceremonial cloth — that's the (cloth) component at the bottom of 帝. The upper part suggests a tall headdress or canopy, the mark of supreme rank. For the sound テイ, the English word "deity" works as a phonetic hook — and it fits: the Japanese emperor was long considered a living god. The kun'yomi みかど (mikado) literally means "the exalted gate" (御門), the entrance to the imperial palace where the emperor resided, hidden from ordinary view.

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