List of terminology by alphabetical order: Difference between revisions
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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. | 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. | ||
For adding new words, use the [[template:term list | For adding new words, use the [[template:term list|Term list template]]. | ||
==Terminology list== | ==Terminology list== |
Revision as of 10:53, 27 January 2014
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.
For adding new words, use the Term list template.
Terminology list
Agari
「和がり」 |
Generic call 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 tiles that count as Dora. Usually fives, but not always. |
An
「暗」 |
Means "dark", refers to tiles that are concealed in the hand. |
Anjun
「暗順」 |
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」 |
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」 |
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, or tiles not subject to agari (to be called as winning tiles). |
Aotenjou
「青天井」 |
A rarely used rule, which eliminates the score cappings mangan, haneman, etc., and scores all hands as directly with the scoring formula. |
Ari
「あり,アリ,有り」 |
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」 |
The pair in a standard mahjong hand. Also "jantou". |
Atamahane
「頭跳ね」 |
A rule that allows only one Ron at a time; the closest to the discarder in turn order takes priority. |
Atozuke
「先付け」 |
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. |
Ba
「場」 |
A “wind round”, e.g. tonba (east round) or nanba (south round). |
Bakahon
「バカホン」 |
Slang for honitsu nomi with no extra yaku or dora. |
Bakaze
「場風」 |
Round wind. |
Barai
「払い」 |
A payment. Also “furikomi”. |
Bazoro
「場ゾロ」 |
The two base Han used when calculating score, given by default rather than from yaku. |
Betaori
「ベタ降り」 |
A strategy that focuses entirely on avoiding dealing into opponents’ hands, with no intention of developing one’s own hand. |
Chakan
「加槓」 |
A kantsu that was upgraded from a minkou. |
Chii
「チー」 |
The call used to make a minjun from an opponent’s discard. |
Chombo
「冲合」 |
A penalty that results in a mangan payment and restarts the current round. |
Chunchan
「中張」 |
The tiles numbered 2 through 8. |
Daburon
「ダブロン」 |
A rule that allows two people to Ron the same tile. |
Daiminkan
「大明槓」 |
A kan formed with possession of three tile types, and calling on the discarded fourth tile. |
Damaten
「黙聴」 |
A tactic of holding tenpai without calling riichi. |
Dejitaru
「デジタル」 |
A school of thought focused on the outcome of a game, explained by probability and statistics. |
Dora
「ドラ」 |
A feature to the game which rewards han to a hand, while in possession of tiles indicated by the revealed tile from the dead wall. |
Dorahyouji
「ドラ表示」 |
The flipped tile on the dead wall, indicating the dora. |
Enchousen
「延長戦」 |
Extra game round, in the event where no player scores more than the target points at the end of a normal game. |
Fu
「符」 |
A unit used to measure the hand's score, based on meld and wait composition. |
Furikomi
「振り込み」 |
A payment, also “barai”. |
Furiten
「振聴」 |
A rule that disables a player's ability to win by discard, due to the presence of a winning tile in the discard and/or the declining of a win during riichi. |
Fuuro
「副露」 |
Calling of discarded tile or closed kan, also "naki". |
Fuutei
「副底」 |
The 20 base Fu used when calculating score, given by default rather than from composition. |
Genbutsu
「現物」 |
A 100% safe tile. |
Haipai
「配牌」 |
The players' dealt tiles at the beginning of a hand. |
Haiteihai
「海底牌」 |
The last drawable tile in the wall. |
Haiyama
「牌山」 |
The walls from which tiles are drawn. |
Han
「飜」 |
The hand value count based on yaku value and/or dora. |
Hanchan
「半荘」 |
A game consisting of an East and South round. |
Harabote
「腹ボテ」 |
A Shanpon or Tanki wait embedded inside a Shuntsu. For example, 4556 waiting on 5. |
Honba
「本場」 |
A counter to indicate the number of hands in-between winning hands, usually indicated by 100-point sticks. |
Houjuu
「放銃」 |
To deal into a hand. |
Houra
「和了」 |
To win a hand |
Houteihai
「河底牌」 |
The very last discarded tile for a hand. |
Iichan
「一荘」 |
A game consisting of East, South, West, and North rounds. More common in Chinese variants. |
Ikasama
「イカサマ」 |
To cheat using sleight of hand, etc. |
Inchiki
「雀頭」 |
The pair in a standard mahjong hand. Also named “atama”. |
Jantou
「雀頭」 |
The pair in a standard mahjong hand. Also “atama”. |
Jansou
「雀荘」 |
A public place specifically used to host and cater mahjong play |
Jigokumachi
「地獄待ち」 |
A wait in which all but one of the winning tiles are visible or claimed. |
Jihai
「字牌」 |
Character tiles (sangenpai and kazehai). |
Jikaze
「自風」 |
Your seat wind. |
Jun
「巡」 |
The turn number within a round. |
Kabe
「壁」 |
A tile-counting technique that measures the possibility of someone making Shuntsu based on how many instances of a tile are visible. |
Kamicha
「上家」 |
The player to the left of one's perspective. |
Kantsu
「槓子」 |
A meld of four identical tiles, which must be declared as kan to be counted as such. |
Karaten
「カラテン」 |
The state of a tenpai hand, by which all available waiting tiles are not available due to discards and/or dora indicators. |
Kanchan
「嵌張」 |
A wait that completes the inside of a Shuntsu, like a 4-6 waiting on 5. |
Kandora
「カンドラ」 |
Additional dora indicators revealed after calling kan. |
Kazehai
「風牌」 |
Wind tiles. |
Kikenhai
「危険牌」 |
Dangerous tile, or a tile that may be likely used by another player to win with. |
Kiru
「切る」 |
To discard a tile. |
Koutsu
「刻子」 |
A meld of three identical tiles. |
Kuikae
「喰い替え」 |
A rule that allows you to call a tile, then discard another tile that could have completed the meld. For example, to chi 123 and discard a 4. |
Kuisagari
「喰い下がり」 |
A property of some yaku that reduces the han value by 1 when the hand is open. |
Kuitan
「喰い断」 |
A rule that allows tanyao to be open. |
Kyoku
「局」 |
A portion of the game, starting from the dealing of tiles and ends with the declaration of a win, aborted hand, or draw. Examples: East Round 1. South Round 2. |
Machi
「待ち」 |
The tiles waiting for with a tenpai hand. |
Manzu
「萬子」 |
One of the three numbered suits, consisting of a kanji number plus 萬, meaning 10000. |
Mawashiuchi
「回し打ち」 |
The strategy of attempting to develop a hand, while discarding only safe tiles. |
Mentanpin
「メンタンピン」 |
Abbreviation for Menzen-Tanyao-Pinfu, a common set of yaku. |
Mentsu
「面子」 |
The melds: koutsu, shuntsu, and kantsu. |
Menzen
「門前」 |
A fully closed hand, thus no open melds. |
Min
「明」 |
Meaning “light”, refers to tiles that have been exposed by calling. |
Minjun
「」 |
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. |
Minkou
「明刻」 |
An open koutsu made by calling a discarded tile. |
Naki
「鳴き」 |
Calling a discarded tile. |
Nan
「南」 |
South wind tile. |
Nashi
「なし,ナシ,無し」 |
States that the preceding rule is not in effect.
|
Nashi Nashi
「ナシナシ」 |
Ruleset which disallows kuitan and atozuke. Opposite of Ari Ari. |
Nobetan
「延べ単」 |
A double Tanki wait, e.g. 4567 waiting on 4 or 7. |
Nomi
「ノミ」 |
A term referring to a hand containing just a single yaku and no dora, with exception to nagashi mangan. |
Noten
「ノーテン」 |
When your hand is not in tenpai at the end of the round. |
Noten bappu
「ノーテン罰符」 |
A payment made at the end of a round by those who are not in tenpai (or choose not to reveal their hands) to those who are in tenpai. |
Nukidora
「抜きドラ」 |
A tile that counts as Dora when extracted from the hand, e.g. flower tiles or the Pei (North) in most three-player variants. |
Occult
「オカルト」 |
A school of thought tying game outcome with luck, flow, mahjong demons, psychology, etc. |
Oka
「オカ」 |
First place bonus applied when calculating uma. |
Oikake riichi
「追いかけリーチ」 |
To declare riichi after someone else rather than defend. |
Okurikan
「送り槓」 |
Four tiles that could be called for kan, but rather left undeclared in order to use the tiles for other melds. |
Oorasu
「オーラス」 |
The final regular hand of a game. |
Otakaze
「客風」 |
Non-bonus wind tiles. For example, if seated South in the East round, then Otakaze are West and North tiles. |
Oya
「親」 |
The dealer position, seated east |
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. |
Pei
「北」 |
North wind tile. |
Penchan
「辺張」 |
A wait consisting of 12 waiting on 3, or 89 waiting on 7. |
Pinzu
「筒子」 |
The suit consisting of dot patterns. |
Pon
「ポン」 |
A tile call used to make a minkou from an opponent’s discard. |
Renchan
「連荘」 |
A continuation of dealer position because the dealer either won or was tenpai at the end of the round. |
Riipai
「理牌」 |
Arranging the tiles in your hand. |
Rinshanpai
「嶺上牌」 |
The tile drawn after making a Kan. |
Ron
「栄 or ロン」 |
A win using an opponent’s discard. |
Routouhai
「老頭牌」 |
The tiles numbered 1 and 9. |
Ryankan
「両嵌」 |
Two kanchan shaped taatsu merged together, e.g. 357 which can be completed by either 4 or 6. |
Ryanmen
「両面」 |
A two-sided wait, like 56 waiting on 4 or 7. |
Ryuukyoku
「流局」 |
The end of the hand, where every tile not in players' hands and the dead wall has been drawn and discarded; and no winning hand was determined. |
Saikoro
「骰子」 |
The dice, used to determine dealer position and wall breaks. |
Sakizuke
「先付け」 |
Disallows a yakuless hand to win upon gaining yaku with a discard. Opposite to atozuke. |
Sangenpai
「三元牌」 |
The dragon tiles: Haku, Hatsu, and Chun. |
Sanma
「三麻」 |
The game played with three players. |
Sashikomi
「差し込み」 |
Intentionally dealing into an opponent’s hand. |
Shaa
「西」 |
The west tile. |
Shabo
「シャボ」 |
Abbreviation of shanpon. |
Shanten
「向聴」 |
Number of tiles needed to reach tenpai. |
Shanpon
「双ポン」 |
A wait consisting of two pairs, one of which must be upgraded to a koutsu. |
Shibori
「絞り」 |
Holding on to tiles that an opponent would otherwise be likely to pon or chi. |
Shimocha
「下家」 |
The player to the right. |
Shoku
「色」 |
Suit. Literally means "color". |
Shonpai
「生牌」 |
A tile that has not yet been discarded this round. |
Shuntsu
「順子」 |
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. |
Shuupai
「数牌」 |
The number tiles. Also “suupai”. |
Souzu
「索子」 |
The suit consisting of patterns of bamboo sticks. |
Suji
「筋」 |
The tiles that complete ryanmen (open waits). Means “muscle”. |
Suupai
「数牌」 |
The number tiles. Also “shuupai”. |
Suteru
「捨てる」 |
To discard a tile. |
Taatsu
「塔子」 |
A tile pattern that can be turned into a shuntsu with one more tile. For example, 46 can be completed with a 5. |
Takame
「高目」 |
The specific tile with a multiple tile wait, during tenpai, that would produce the most points. Opposite of yasume. |
Tanyaohai
「断幺牌」 |
The tiles numbered 2 through 8. Also “chunchan”. |
Tanki
「単騎」 |
A wait on a single tile to complete the pair. |
Tenbou
「点棒」 |
Point sticks used for manual scoring. |
Tenpai
「聴牌」 |
A hand that needs only one tile to win. |
Tenpane
「テンパネ」 |
The advantage of rounding up to the higher 10 fu mark, when just crossing the previous 10 fu. Example: Being 2 fu above 30 fu, allowing an above rounding of 40 fu. |
Tochuu ryuukoku
「途中流局」 |
Specific conditions that immediately ends a hand session. |
Toitsu
「対子」 |
A pair of identical tiles. |
Toimen
「対面」 |
The player sitting directly across from you. |
Ton
「東」 |
East wind tile. |
Tonpuusen
「東風戦」 |
A game consisting of an East only round. |
Tsumo
「自摸」 |
A self-drawn tile. Also short for Menzenchin tsumohou, or winning by self-draw. |
Tsumokiri
「ツモ切り」 |
Discarding the tile that was just drawn. |
Uma
「ウマ」 |
An additional end game score, calculated based on the ante, plus-minus adjustment, and game rank. |
Ura dora
「裏ドラ」 |
Additional dora located underneath previously revealed dora indicators, which can be earned by winning with riichi. |
Wanpai
「王牌」 |
The “dead” section of wall that can’t be used except for Dora indicators and Kan draws. |
Wareme
「割れ目」 |
A rule that doubles any payment involving the player whose wall was broken at the start of a kyoku |
Yakitori
「焼き鳥」 |
A penalty applied after a hanchan to players who did not win at least one hand |
Yaku
「役」 |
A required scoring pattern or condition in the hand that awards han, such as Tanyao or Toitoi. |
Yama
「山」 |
The tile walls, literally means "mountains". |
Yaochuuhai
「幺九牌」 |
All tiles numbered 1 and 9 (routouhai) plus characters (jihai). |
Yasude
「安手」 |
A low scoring hand. |
Yasume
「安目」 |
The specific tile(s) in a multiple wait that would produce the least points. Oppose of takame. |
Zentsuppa
「全ツッパ」 |
A strategy that attempts to win a hand at all costs while ignoring the possibility of dealing into an opponent’s hand. |