朝
あさ
asa
= morning / early part of the day
Asa is morning — the fresh beginning that Japanese culture loads with metaphor, from cherry blossoms to schoolgirl uniforms, each dawn a small rebirth.
Asa (朝, morning) refers to the early hours of the day, typically from dawn until around 10-11 AM when hiru (daytime) begins. In Japanese, time-of-day words are precise: yoru (night), asa (morning), hiru (daytime/noon), yuu (early evening), ban (evening). Asa carries emotional resonance — it is fresh, full of potential, and slightly melancholic in poetry. The phrase asa no hizashi (morning sunlight) is inherently beautiful and hopeful.
Asa is used for morning greetings (ohayou = good morning), morning routines, and morning-specific events. Contrast with yoru (night), hiru (daytime), and ban (evening) — each time period has its own cultural associations. Asa kara (from morning) and asa made (until morning) are common constructions. Poetically, asa implies beginning and renewal.
EXAMPLE 1
毎朝、6時に起きます。
Maiiasa, roku-ji ni okimasu.
I wake up at 6 AM every morning.
EXAMPLE 2
朝の光は美しい。
Asa no hikari wa utsukushii.
Morning light is beautiful.
EXAMPLE 3
朝食を食べてから、学校に行く。
Asashoku wo tabete kara, gakkou ni iku.
I eat breakfast and then go to school.
Morning in Japanese culture is a time of fresh beginnings and respect. Children bow slightly when greeting morning, and schools hold morning assemblies to set the tone for the day. Asa no rajio taiso (morning radio exercises) are a national ritual performed by millions, a shared moment of collective renewal.
In art and literature, asa is the season of cherry blossoms, new school years, and romantic possibilities. The phrase asaborake (the break of dawn) is poetic and melancholic, capturing the bittersweet edge of morning beauty.
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