空気

Japanese Slang Japanese ★★★★★ 5/5 neutral くうきkūki
読み くうき
ローマ字 kūki
漢字の分解 空 (empty/sky) + 気 (spirit/energy) → the intangible atmosphere or mood of a situation
発音 /kɯː.ki/

意味

The atmosphere or unspoken mood of a situation — central to the Japanese concept of 'reading the air.'

While 空気 literally means 'air,' its slang usage refers to the invisible social atmosphere in a room or conversation. The phrase 空気を読む (kūki wo yomu, 'to read the air') describes the prized Japanese social skill of perceiving unspoken feelings and expectations. Failing to do this — being KY (空気読めない) — is a serious social faux pas. This concept is deeply embedded in Japanese communication culture.

例文

  1. あいつ空気読めなくてみんな困ってるんだよ。
  2. あの発言で一気に空気が変わったよね。
  3. 会議の空気がピリピリしてて何も言えなかった。

使い方ガイド

場面: friends, workplace, social commentary, everyday conversation

トーン: observational, social

正しい言い方

  • 空気読んでよ、今その話する場面じゃないでしょ。 (Read the room — this isn't the time for that topic.)
  • あのグループの空気に入っていけない。 (I can't break into that group's dynamic.)

避ける言い方

  • 初対面の人に「空気読めないですね」は攻撃的すぎる (Telling someone you just met 'you can't read the air' is way too aggressive)

よくある間違い

  • Thinking 空気を読む is about literal air quality — it is entirely about social perception and unspoken cues
  • Underestimating how important this concept is in Japanese culture — failing to read 空気 can seriously damage relationships

起源と歴史

The literal meaning of 空気 (air) has been used metaphorically for 'atmosphere' for centuries. The buzzword KY (空気読めない, 'can't read the air') exploded in the mid-2000s, making 空気 a central topic in discussions of Japanese social norms.

文化的背景

時代: KY buzzword from mid-2000s, underlying concept centuries old

世代: All ages

社会的背景: Universal

地域メモ: Used across all of Japan. The concept of reading 空気 is considered one of the most important Japanese social skills.

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