発 – Kanji Meaning, Reading, and Common Words

What does 発 mean in Japanese?

発 is unusual among N4 kanji because it has no kun’yomi — it always appears as ハツ or ハッ inside compound words. This actually makes it easier to read than most kanji: whenever you see 発, you know its reading is always on’yomi.

On train station timetables, 発 marks departure times. In vocabulary it kicks off words about departure (出発), train departure (発車), pronunciation (発音), and discovery (発見). One kanji, a wide cluster of everyday compounds.

Reading

On’yomi: ハツ (hatsu), ハッ (hatsu)

Kun’yomi:

Basic Information

Kanji
Meaning depart, start, emit, launch
Stroke Count 9
JLPT Level N4

How to Understand This Kanji

発 always requires a second kanji to form a word. Its core sense is something going out or setting off from a point: departure (出発), a train leaving (発車), sound coming out (発音), a new finding emerging (発見). The shortening ハツ → ハッ happens before certain consonants: 発見 → hak-ken, 発表 → hap-pyou, 発達 → hat-tatsu. This is regular and predictable once you hear the pattern.

Common Words

  • 出発(しゅっぱつ / shuppatsu) — departure, setting off
  • 発車(はっしゃ / hassha) — train or bus departure
  • 発音(はつおん / hatsuon) — pronunciation
  • 発見(はっけん / hakken) — discovery
  • 発表(はっぴょう / happyou) — announcement, presentation
  • 始発(しはつ / shihatsu) — first train or bus of the day

Example Sentences

  • 電車は8時に発車します。

    でんしゃははちじにはっしゃします。 / Densha wa hachi-ji ni hassha shimasu.

    The train departs at 8 o’clock.

  • 明日の朝、出発する予定です。

    あしたのあさ、しゅっぱつするよていです。 / Ashita no asa, shuppatsu suru yotei desu.

    I plan to depart tomorrow morning.

  • 先生に発音を直してもらいました。

    せんせいにはつおんをなおしてもらいました。 / Sensei ni hatsuon o naoshite moraimashita.

    I had my teacher correct my pronunciation.

When Learners Usually See This Kanji

発 has no kun’yomi — it only reads as ハツ or ハッ. This means you will never see 発 used as a standalone word in hiragana. Every time 発 appears, it is inside a compound and you read it with the Chinese-derived reading.

The sound change ハツ → ハッ (consonant doubling) happens before k, p, t sounds: 発見 (hak-ken), 発表 (hap-pyou), 発達 (hat-tatsu). Before vowels or other consonants there is no change: 発音 (hatsuon), 発売 (hatsubai). Listening to these words helps the pattern become automatic.

On station boards, 発 (departure) is always paired with 着 (arrival). 東京発15:00、大阪着17:30 means: departs Tokyo at 15:00, arrives Osaka at 17:30. Knowing both kanji lets you read any timetable immediately.

始発 (shihatsu, first train/bus of the day) combines 始 (begin) + 発 (depart). If you want to catch the first train, you need to know this word.

Summary

発 means depart, start, or emit, always reads as ハツ/ハッ (no kun’yomi), and appears in key words such as 出発 (departure), 発車 (train departure), 発音 (pronunciation), and 発見 (discovery).