[はつおん, hatsuon] (n, vs, adj-no) pronunciation; (P) #3552
[てん, ten] (n) (1) altering pronunciation or meaning; word with altered pronunciation or meaning; (2) (abbr) (See 転句・てんく) turning or twisting part of a text (in Chinese poetry) #6497
[おんぷ, onpu] (n) (1) (See お玉杓子) musical note; note symbol; (2) phonetic symbol (inc. the kanji and kana-doubling symbols, vowel-lengthening symbol, etc.); (3) (See 意符) part of a kanji for which the role is primarily to represent the pronunciation (as opposed to the meaning); (P) #14351
[いふ, ifu] (n) (See 音符) part of a kanji for which the role is primarily to represent the meaning (as opposed to the pronunciation)
[ひっぱる, hipparu] (v5r, vt) (1) to pull; to draw; to pull tight; (2) to string (lines); to run (cable); to stretch; (3) to pull towards oneself (e.g. someone's sleeve); (4) to drag; to haul; to tow; (5) to lead (e.g. one's followers); (6) to take someone somewhere (e.g. a suspect to the police); (7) to tempt into joining; to strongly invite to join; (8) to delay; to prolong; (9) to lengthen the pronunciation (of a word); (10) to quote; to cite; to reference; (11) to pull the ball (i.e. pull hitting in baseball); (12) to wear; to put on; (P)
[えいおん, eion] (n) English pronunciation
[えいこくはつおん, eikokuhatsuon] (n) British pronunciation
[おんくんさくいん, onkunsakuin] (n) index listing kanji by their Chinese and Japanese pronunciations
[かしゃく, kashaku] (n, vs) (1) borrowing; pardon; extenuation; (2) borrowing a kanji with the same pronunciation to convey a certain term
[かいこうおん, kaikouon] (n) (1) (of Chinese) pronunciation of kanji without a medial between the initial consonant and center vowel; (2) (of Japanese) the long "o" vowel arising from combination of the "a" and "u" sounds
[かんようおん, kanyouon] (n) traditional (popularly accepted) pronunciation (e.g. of a kanji)
[かんようよみ, kanyouyomi] (n) reading of a word or kanji using its customary pronunciation (which is not necessarily correct)
[かんじおん, kanjion] (n) (See 音読み) Japanese pronunciation of a kanji (based on adopted Chinese pronunciations)
[きょうことば, kyoukotoba] (n, adj-no) (1) Kyoto pronunciation; (2) Kyoto dialect
[くんずる, kunzuru] (vz) (obsc) to read kanji using its native Japanese pronunciation
[けいせい, keisei] (n) kanji in which one element suggests the meaning, the other the pronunciation
[こおん, koon] (n) old (pre-Wu dynasty) character pronunciation
[ごうこうおん, goukouon] (n) (1) (of Chinese) pronunciation of kanji with a medial between the initial consonant and center vowel; (2) (of Japanese) the long "o" vowel arising from combination of the "o" and "u" or "e" and "u" sounds
[じおん, jion] (n) (See 音読み) Japanese pronunciation of a kanji (based on adopted Chinese pronunciations)
[ふりがな, furigana] (n) (See ルビー・2) furigana (kana over or beside kanji to indicate pronunciation); (P)
[せいめいはんだん, seimeihandan] (n) fortunetelling based on writing or pronunciation of one's name
[せいおん, seion] (n) correct Chinese (on) pronunciation of a character
[せついん, setsuin] (n) qieyun (ancient Chinese dictionary arranged by rhyme, displaying characters' meanings and representing their pronunciation with fanqie)
[てんおん, ten'on] (n) euphonic change of pronunciation; elision
[どうおんいぎ, douon'igi] (n) having the same pronunciation but bearing different meanings
[どうおんいじ, douon'iji] (n) homophone; word with the same pronunciation and similar meaning as another but a different written form
[よみかえる, yomikaeru] (v1, vt) (1) to read a kanji with a different pronunciation; (2) to load (e.g. data on a computer); to read; (3) to change the language or wording (of a provision, etc.) (law)
[よみくせ, yomikuse] (n) idiomatic pronunciation or peculiar reading of a kanji or compound
[ひょうきゆれ, hyoukiyure] (n) orthographical variants; words with the same pronunciation and meaning, but different written forms
[もううり;まうり;もううい;モーウイ, mouuri ; mauri ; mouui ; mo-ui] (n) (もううり is the Okinawan pronunciation) Okinawan yellow cucumber
[なまり, namari] (n) (1) (uk) accent (of one's speech); (2) dialect; provincialism; patois; (3) corrupted form (e.g. of word); mispronunciation; (P)
[かご, kago] (n) non-standard pronunciation