Sakura and Hanami — Japan's Cherry Blossom Culture
Why a two-week bloom stops the whole country: the vocabulary of sakura, hanami parties, the blossom forecast, and the bittersweet idea behind falling petals.
For about two weeks each spring, Japan reorganizes itself around a flower. The TV news runs a nightly 桜前線 (sakura zensen, “cherry blossom front”) map that tracks the bloom advancing north like weather. Coworkers reserve picnic spots with blue tarps at dawn. This is 花見 (hanami) — literally “flower viewing” — and it has been a national pastime for over a thousand years.
Core sakura vocabulary
| Word | Reading | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| 桜 | さくら sakura | cherry blossom / cherry tree |
| 花見 | はなみ hanami | blossom-viewing picnic |
| 満開 | まんかい mankai | full bloom — the peak everyone waits for |
| 開花 | かいか kaika | first blooming (the forecast's key date) |
| 桜前線 | さくらぜんせん sakurazensen | the “blossom front” moving up the country |
| 夜桜 | よざくら yozakura | cherry blossoms at night, often lit up |
| 花びら | はなびら hanabira | petal |
Why falling petals are the point
Sakura are loved because they are brief. The petals fall at their most beautiful, which Japanese aesthetics reads as もののあわれ (mono no aware) — a gentle sadness at impermanence. That's why blossoms blowing in the wind (花吹雪, hanafubuki, “flower blizzard”) appear at emotional moments in films and anime: graduations, farewells, new beginnings. The school year starting in April means sakura are stitched into every memory of meeting and parting.
Hanami survival phrases
| Word | Reading | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| お花見に行きましょう | おはなみにいきましょう ohanaminiikimashou | let's go blossom-viewing |
| 場所取り | ばしょとり bashotori | claiming a picnic spot (a serious job) |
| 花より団子 | はなよりだんご hanayoridango | “dumplings over flowers” — caring more about the snacks than the scenery |
That last proverb is the one to remember: it teases anyone more interested in the picnic than the petals — and describes most hanami parties honestly. Try the kanji: 花 (flower), 見 (see) — hanami is simply those two together.
🔊 Tap any word in the vocabulary tables to hear it spoken.