100均

Japanese Slang Japanese ★★★★★ 5/5 casual ひゃっきんhyakkin
読み ひゃっきん
ローマ字 hyakkin
漢字の分解 100 (one hundred) + 均 (uniform, equal; short for 均一 = uniform price) → 100-yen uniform-price shop
発音 /çak.kiɴ/

意味

100-yen shop; a store where most items cost around 100 yen, like Daiso, Seria, or Can★Do.

100均 is shorthand for 100円均一 (everything 100 yen) and is a cornerstone of Japanese consumer culture. Stores like ダイソー, セリア, and キャンドゥ offer surprisingly high-quality goods at rock-bottom prices. 100均 hauls are massive content on social media and YouTube, with people showing off creative uses and hidden gems. The stores have evolved far beyond cheap trinkets — you can find kitchenware, stationery, beauty products, and home organization items that rival expensive brands.

例文

  1. 100均で買ったこの収納ボックス、1000円の商品と変わらないクオリティ。
  2. とりあえず100均で探してみよう、大体なんでもあるから。
  3. 100均のコスメが意外と優秀で、SNSでバズってるの知ってる?

使い方ガイド

場面: shopping, daily conversation, social media

トーン: practical, enthusiastic

正しい言い方

  • 100均で十分じゃない?わざわざ高いの買わなくても。 (Isn't the 100-yen shop good enough? No need to buy the expensive version.)
  • 100均の新商品チェックするの好きなんだよね。 (I love checking out new products at the 100-yen shop.)

避ける言い方

  • 「全部100均でいいじゃん」と品質にこだわる人に言うのは避ける (Avoid telling quality-conscious people 'just get everything at the 100-yen shop')

よくある間違い

  • Assuming everything costs exactly 100 yen — many 100均 shops now carry items at 200, 300, or 500 yen as well. Daiso has even launched higher-price-point brands like THREEPPY

起源と歴史

Short for 100円均一 (100-yen uniform pricing). The concept started with ダイソー (Daiso), founded in 1977 by 矢野博丈 as a mobile stall selling items at a uniform price. The 100均 format exploded in the 1990s-2000s.

文化的背景

時代: Daiso founded 1977, 100均 boom from 1990s

世代: All ages

社会的背景: Universal — from students to professionals

地域メモ: Used across all of Japan. Major chains include ダイソー (Daiso), セリア (Seria), キャンドゥ (Can★Do), and ワッツ (Watts). 100均 haul videos are a major social media genre.

関連フレーズ

WordLociで練習する

フラッシュカード、クイズ、音声発音、間隔反復