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Tsuyu — Japan's Rainy Season (梅雨)

Tsuyu — Japan's Rainy Season (梅雨)

The “plum rain” month between spring and summer: why it's written with the plum kanji, hydrangeas and teru-teru bōzu, and the rain vocabulary Japanese is famous for.

From roughly early June to mid-July, a stationary front parks itself over Japan and it rains — softly, greyly, for weeks. This is 梅雨 (tsuyu), written “plum rain” because it coincides with plums ripening. It's the unofficial fifth season, with its own icons: hydrangeas, snails, and small ghost-shaped dolls hung in windows to wish for sunshine.

Rainy-season words

WordReadingMeaning
つゆ
tsuyu
the rainy season (lit. “plum rain”)
あめ
ame
rain
かさ
kasa
umbrella — the convenience-store kind is 500 yen
あじさい
ajisai
hydrangea, the flower of tsuyu
てるてる坊てるてるぼうず
teruterubouzu
hand-made doll hung up to wish for clear weather
湿しっけ
shikke
humidity — the real enemy
つゆあけ
tsuyuake
the end of rainy season (summer officially begins)

A language of rain

Japanese distinguishes rains the way English distinguishes winds. A fine drizzle is 小雨 (kosame); a sudden evening downpour is 夕立 (yūdachi); rain that falls while the sun shines has the wonderful name 狐の嫁入り (kitsune no yomeiri, “the fox's wedding”). You don't need them all — but 雨 itself is JLPT N5 and appears constantly in weather forecasts, which are excellent listening practice: see the kanji page for 雨.

Surviving tsuyu like a local

Carry a folding umbrella (折りたたみ傘), embrace the coin laundry's dryers, and learn the phrase 「じめじめしますね」 (“humid, isn't it”) — the seasonal equivalent of talking about the weather anywhere else on Earth. When 梅雨明け is declared on the news, the whole country exhales and summer festival season begins.

🔊 Tap any word in the vocabulary tables to hear it spoken.

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