サプリ

Japanese Slang Japanese ★★★★ 4/5 casual サプリsapuri
読み サプリ
ローマ字 sapuri
漢字の分解 Abbreviation of サプリメント, from English 'supplement.' The shortened form サプリ is standard in casual usage.
発音 /sa.pu.ɾi/

意味

Supplement — a vitamin, mineral, or health supplement in pill or powder form, abbreviated from サプリメント.

サプリ is the universally used abbreviation of サプリメント (supplement) in Japan. The Japanese supplement market is enormous, with products available at every drugstore (ドラッグストア), convenience store, and online. DHC, Fancl, and Suntory are major domestic brands. Japanese supplement culture is characterized by specific-benefit products — supplements for skin (肌), eye strain (目の疲れ), joint pain (関節), sleep (睡眠), and fatigue (疲労) line the shelves of every pharmacy. Taking daily サプリ is a common habit across all age groups.

例文

  1. 健康のためにビタミンのサプリ飲み始めた。
  2. サプリに頼りすぎるのもよくないけど、忙しいときは助かる。
  3. 鉄分のサプリ飲むようにしたら、朝の目覚めが全然違う。

使い方ガイド

場面: daily conversation, friends, healthcare, social media

トーン: practical, health-conscious

正しい言い方

  • なんかいいサプリない?最近疲れが取れなくて。 (Know any good supplements? I can't shake this tiredness lately.)
  • サプリ飲むより食事をちゃんとした方がいいけどね。 (Eating properly is better than supplements, but still.)

避ける言い方

  • 「このサプリで病気が治る」は薬機法違反 — サプリは薬ではない (Claiming 'this supplement cures disease' violates pharmaceutical law — supplements are not medicine)

よくある間違い

  • Thinking サプリ can replace a balanced diet — Japanese health authorities emphasize that supplements should complement, not substitute for proper nutrition

起源と歴史

Abbreviation of サプリメント (from English 'supplement'). The Japanese supplement market grew rapidly from the 2000s, driven by an aging population and health consciousness.

文化的背景

時代: 2000s market expansion, now a massive industry

世代: All ages

社会的背景: Universal

地域メモ: Used across all of Japan. DHC and Fancl are the most recognized Japanese supplement brands. Every drugstore has extensive supplement aisles.

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