List of terminology by alphabetical order: Difference between revisions

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Revision as of 10:11, 2 August 2013

Naturally, the featured game is Japanese mahjong. Therefore, a multitude number of Japanese terminology are used. The following list includes the Japanese terminology, English equivalent, and the terminology usage.

A

Japanese Kanji English Explanation
Agari

「和がり」
Win

Generic term for winning a hand
Aidayonken

「間四軒」

An interval of four between two discarded number tiles. Usually indicates dangerous waits. A discarded 1 and 6 make a 2—5 wait very probable.
Akapai

「赤牌」
Red dora

Red tiles that count as Dora. Usually fives, but not always.
An

「暗」
Closed, concealed

Means "dark", refers to tiles that are concealed in the hand.
Anjun

「暗順」
Concealed sequence

Three self-drawn consecutive tiles of the same suit, used as one of the four melds in a regular hand. An open sequence would be a minjun, the general term for a sequence is shuntsu.
Ankan

「暗槓」
Concealed kan

Four self-drawn identical tiles set aside as a kantsu. Declaring an ankan does not open the hand if it was previously closed.
Ankou

「暗刻」
Concealed triplet

Three self-drawn identical tiles, used as one of the four melds in a regular hand. Compare with the yaku names san ankou and suu ankou. An open triplet would be a minkou, and the general term for any triplet is koutsu.
Anpai

「安牌」
Safe tile

Safe tile, or tiles not subject to agari (to be called as winning tiles).
Aotenjou

「青天井」
No capping

A rarely used rule, which eliminates the score cappings mangan, haneman, etc., and scores all hands as directly with the scoring formula.
Ari

「アリ」
In effect, on

States that the preceding rule is used, as in akadora ari for playing with red fives. Opposite of nashi.
Ari ari

「アリアリ」

Ruleset which allows kuitan and atozuke. Most common basic set of rules in Japan.
Atama

「頭」
Pair, eye

The pair in a standard mahjong hand. Also "jantou".
Atozuke

「先付け」
After-attach

Allows a hand to win despite having no guaranteed yaku while in tenpai, as long as the winning tile generates a yaku. Opposite of sakizuke.
Awaseuchi

「合わせ打ち」

Discarding the same tile as someone else, to avoid dealing into their hand.

B

Japanese Kanji English Explanation
'

「」

C

Japanese Kanji English Explanation
'

「」

D

Japanese Kanji English Explanation
'

「」

E

Japanese Kanji English Explanation
'

「」

F

Japanese Kanji English Explanation
'

「」

G

Japanese Kanji English Explanation
'

「」

H

Japanese Kanji English Explanation
'

「」

I

Japanese Kanji English Explanation
'

「」

J

Japanese Kanji English Explanation
'

「」

K

Japanese Kanji English Explanation
'

「」

L

Japanese Kanji English Explanation
'

「」

M

Japanese Kanji English Explanation
Minjun

「」
Open sequence

An open shuntsu, or a sequence of three consecutive tiles, formed by calling chii on the previously missing tile. A concealed shuntsu would be an anjun.

N

Japanese Kanji English Explanation
Nashi

「」
Invalid, off

States that the preceding rule is not in effect, as in kuikae nashi for disallowing players to call a tile and immediately discard another tile which would have also completed the called meld.
'

「」

O

Japanese Kanji English Explanation
'

「」

P

Japanese Kanji English Explanation
Pao

「包」

A property of certain yakuman that causes one person to be responsible for the whole payment if they discarded the tile that made it a yakuman.

Q

Japanese Kanji English Explanation
'

「」

R

Japanese Kanji English Explanation
'

「」

S

Japanese Kanji English Explanation
Shuntsu

「」
Sequence

This is the generic term for, three consecutive tiles of the same suit, whether open or closed. Chii is used to call a tile to complete a shuntsu and set it aside as a minjun (open). A concealed (closed) shuntsu is an anjun.
'

「」

T

Japanese Kanji English Explanation
'

「」

U

Japanese Kanji English Explanation
'

「」

V

Japanese Kanji English Explanation
'

「」

W

Japanese Kanji English Explanation
'

「」

X

Japanese Kanji English Explanation
'

「」

Y

Japanese Kanji English Explanation
Yakitori

「焼き鳥」
Winless game

A penalty applied to players, who failed to win a hand
Yaku

「役」
Hand pattern

A scoring pattern in the hand that awards Han, such as Tanyao or Toitoi.
Yaochuuhai

「幺九牌」

All tiles numbered 1 and 9 (routouhai) plus characters (jihai).

Z

Japanese Kanji English Explanation
Zentsuppa

「全ツッパ」
All out

A strategy that attempts to win a hand at all costs while ignoring the possibility of dealing into an opponent’s hand.

External links

Terminology list at Osamuko