Understanding On'yomi vs Kun'yomi: A Practical Guide
Not one Chinese — four
On'yomi is "the Chinese reading." Kun'yomi is "the Japanese reading." Technically true, and it papers over the interesting bit: on'yomi is not one layer. It's four. Four borrowings, four centuries, four prestige dialects — each one fossilized inside the same writing system, still pronounceable side by side in 2026.
The four layers of on'yomi
Chinese characters arrived in Japan in waves over roughly 1,200 years. Each wave carried the pronunciation of a different Chinese prestige dialect, and those pronunciations froze in place as parallel reading systems.
| Layer | Japanese | Source | Era | Route | Domain |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Go-on | 呉音 | Wu Chinese (Jiankang/Nanjing region) | 5th–6th c. | Via Korean peninsula | Buddhist liturgy, legal terms, early loans |
| Kan-on | 漢音 | Tang capital Chang'an (modern Xi'an) | 7th–9th c. | Direct embassy contact | Secular scholarship, the dominant modern layer |
| Tō-on | 唐音 | Song/Ming dynasty Chinese | 12th–17th c. | Zen monks, trade | Zen vocabulary, material culture, trade goods |
| Kan'yō-on | 慣用音 | N/A (conventionalized errors) | Various | Domestic drift | Readings that "should" follow Go/Kan rules but don't |
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A section of the Heart Sutra (般若心経) hand-copied in Japan c. 755 AD, Nara period. Liturgical sutra-copying is the exact channel that fixed Go-on into Japanese. The same kanji 明 read as Kan-on メイ in secular text is still chanted as Go-on ミョウ in 光明 (kōmyō, "radiant light"), because the monks never updated. Source: Wikimedia Commons.
Kan-on is the workhorse today. The Nara court actively pushed Kan-on over Go-on for reading Chinese texts — but Go-on survived inside Buddhist ritual, where pronunciation is liturgically frozen. Tō-on is rare. Ōtsuki Fumihiko's Genkai dictionary classified only 96 of its 13,546 Sino-Japanese entries as Tō-on. That's 0.7%.
One character, three centuries
The kanji 明 (bright) carries all three borrowing layers in modern use:
| Layer | Reading | Example compound | Era of borrowing |
|---|---|---|---|
| Go-on | ミョウ (myō) | 光明 (kōmyō, "radiant light" — Buddhist term) | 5th–6th c. |
| Kan-on | メイ (mei) | 説明 (setsumei, "explanation"), 発明 (hatsumei, "invention") | 7th–9th c. |
| Tō-on | ミン (min) | 明朝体 (minchōtai, "Ming-dynasty typeface") | 12th–17th c. |
Other stratified kanji worth pulling apart: 行 has Go-on ギョウ/ゴウ (修行 shugyō, ascetic practice), Kan-on コウ (旅行 ryokō, travel), and Tō-on アン (行灯 andon, paper lantern). 京 carries Go-on キョウ (東京 Tōkyō) and Kan-on ケイ (京浜 Keihin). 清 splits cleanly between Go-on ショウ (清浄 shōjō, Buddhist purity) and Kan-on セイ (清潔 seiketsu, secular cleanliness).
Kan'yō-on are the linguistic potholes. 輸 "should" read シュ by regular Go/Kan rules — the accepted on'yomi is ユ (輸出 yushutsu, export). 消 is ショウ, not the expected セイ. Popular mispronunciations that hardened into the standard. Errors with tenure.
A page from the Genryaku-bon (元暦校本) manuscript of the *Man'yōshū, an 11th-century collation of an 8th-century anthology. The Nara-period scribes had no native script — they wrote Japanese by deploying kanji for sound (man'yōgana, the seed of modern kana) and for meaning, sometimes inside the same poem. This is the textual environment in which on'yomi and kun'yomi crystallized as parallel reading habits. Source: Wikimedia Commons.*
The phonological squeeze
Middle Chinese had a syllable structure that Japanese phonotactics simply could not accommodate — final stops (-p, -t, -k), final nasals (-m, -n, -ŋ), consonant clusters. Old Japanese permitted open syllables (consonant + vowel) or syllable-final /n/. That's it. The borrowing process systematically resolved the mismatch:
| Middle Chinese final | Japanese adaptation | Example |
|---|---|---|
| -k | -ku, -ki | MC kwok → コク (国 koku) |
| -t | -tsu, -chi | MC nyit → ニチ (日 nichi, Go-on), ジツ (jitsu, Kan-on) |
| -p | -fu → weakened to -u | MC nyit-pwon → ニッポン / ニホン (日本) |
| -m, -n | -ン (moraic n) | MC kam → カン (感 kan) |
| -ŋ | Vowel lengthening (エイ, オウ, ウウ) | MC mjaeng → メイ (明 mei); MC kjaeng → ケイ (京 kei) |
The -ŋ → vowel lengthening rule is the subtle one and probably the most consequential. It explains why so many on'yomi end in -ei or -ou — those long vowels are the ghost of a velar nasal Japanese mouths could not produce. High vowels also triggered palatalization: front vowel /i/ pushed /t/ to surface as /ch/ (チ) rather than /tsu/ (ツ). That's why 日 splits into nichi and jitsu depending on the borrowing layer.
The joyo kanji by the numbers
The 2,136 joyo kanji carry a combined 2,352 on'yomi and 2,869 kun'yomi (Tamaoka et al., 2017). Eleven years of Mainichi Shimbun text — 282 million tokens — gives the working frequencies:
| Statistic | Value |
|---|---|
| Kanji with both on and kun readings | 1,240 (58.1%) |
| Kanji with multiple on'yomi | 272 (12.7%) |
| Kanji with multiple kun'yomi | 222 (10.4%) |
| Kango (Sino-Japanese) share of dictionary headwords | ~49% |
| Kango share of common speech | ~18–20% |
| Kango share of written/formal text | ~50–65% |
The gap between dictionary representation and spoken frequency is the interesting number. Kango dominates the formal registers — law, science, administration. Wago (native Japanese) runs the everyday. That split is a direct echo of the borrowing pattern: Chinese vocabulary entered through elite channels (Buddhist scriptures, Confucian scholarship, imperial administration) and never fully diffused outward. Status sticks.
Predicting readings in compounds
"Two-kanji compound → on'yomi" is the single most useful heuristic in kanji reading, and it holds — over 90% of common two-kanji compounds (熟語) are on-on. The full picture has four shapes:
- On-on (音音): 学校 gakkō, 電話 denwa — the overwhelming majority
- Kun-kun (訓訓): 花火 hanabi, 名前 namae — nature and everyday words
- Jūbako-yomi (重箱読み, on-kun): 本屋 hon'ya, 台所 daidokoro
- Yutō-yomi (湯桶読み, kun-on): 場所 basho, 手帳 techō
Names are the hard case. 田中 is kun-kun (Tanaka), not on-on. Place names and personal names routinely break the on-on rule because they preserve archaic native readings that predate the Chinese borrowing entirely.
Heuristic for content words: trust on-on. For names, look it up.
References
- Tamaoka, K., Makioka, S., Sanders, S., & Verdonschot, R.G. (2017). www.kanjidatabase.com: A new interactive online database for psychological and linguistic research on Japanese kanji. Behavior Research Methods, 49(5), 1731–1748.
- Ōtsuki, F. (1889–1891). Genkai (言海). Ōtsuki Fumihiko.
- Miyake, M.H. (2003). Old Japanese: A Phonetic Reconstruction. RoutledgeCurzon.
- Shibatani, M. (1990). The Languages of Japan. Cambridge University Press.
- Seeley, C. (1991). A History of Writing in Japan. University of Hawai'i Press.
- Frellesvig, B. (2010). A History of the Japanese Language. Cambridge University Press.