Kami

/ˈkɑmi/ noun

Definition

In Shinto religion, spiritual beings or gods that inhabit natural places like mountains, trees, water, and animals.

Etymology

From Japanese 神 (kami), a word that originally meant 'upper' or 'superior' but came to mean divine spirits. The concept is fundamental to Shinto belief and has no exact equivalent in Western religions.

Kelly Says

Kami aren't like gods in Western religions—there are millions of them, they're not all-powerful, and they can be mischievous or grumpy, reflecting nature's actual unpredictability rather than an ordered divine plan.

Translations

AMአማርኛ
ነን
nen
ARالعربية
نحن
nahnu
BNবাংলা
আমরা
amra
CACatalà
nosaltres
no-sal-tres
CSČeština
my
my
DADansk
vi
vee
DEDeutsch
wir
kah-mee
ELΕλληνικά
εμείς
e-me-is
ESEspañol
nosotros
ka-mee
FAفارسی
ما
ma
FISuomi
me
me
FRFrançais
nous
kah-mee
GUGU
હા
ha
HAHA
mu
moo
HEעברית
אנחנו
e-ne-kha-nu
HIहिन्दी
हम
ham
HUMagyar
mi
mee
IDBahasa Indonesia
kami
kami
IGIG
anyị
a-nyee
ITItaliano
noi
kah-mee
JA日本語
我々
kami
KKKK
біз
biz
KMKM
យើង
yaung
KO한국어
우리
uri
MRMR
आम्ही
aamhee
MSBahasa Melayu
kami
kami
MYမြန်မာ
ကျွန်တော်တို့
kyun-taw-to
NLNederlands
wij
viy
NONorsk
vi
vee
PAPA
ਸਾਡੇ
saade
PLPolski
my
my
PTPortuguês
nós
ka-mee
RORomână
noi
noy
RUРусский
мы
my
SVSvenska
vi
vee
SWKiswahili
sisi
see-see
TAதமிழ்
நாங்கள்
naangaḷ
TEతెలుగు
우రి
uri
THไทย
พวกเรา
phak rao
TLTL
kami
kami
TRTürkçe
biz
kah-mee
UKУкраїнська
ми
mee
URاردو
ہم
ham
VITiếng Việt
chúng tôi
chung toi
YOYO
wa ni
wa nee
ZH中文
我们
wǒmen
ZUZU
sith
seeth

Related Words

Explore More Words

Get the Word Orb API

Complete word intelligence in one call. Free tier — 50 lookups/day.