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Those Tiny Symbols on Your Seiko: A Quick Look at Weekday Kanji

Kanji day symbols

If you own a Seiko watch made in Japan with a day-date window, you’ve probably noticed those small, elegant kanji characters rotating through. They look nice enough. Clean, compact, vaguely meaningful. But what are they actually saying?

Simple answer: they’re Japanese abbreviations for the days of the week. Nothing complicated.

The Elements

The naming system comes from traditional East Asian cosmology. Each day gets paired with a celestial body or natural element:

  • 月 (getsu) moon → Monday
  • 火 (ka) fire → Tuesday
  • 水 (sui) water → Wednesday
  • 木 (moku) wood → Thursday
  • 金 (kin) gold/metal → Friday
  • 土 (do) earth → Saturday
  • 日 (nichi) sun → Sunday

The Japanese borrowed this system from China centuries ago, and it stuck around. You’ll see the same kanji on calendars, scheduling apps, and anywhere else that needs a compact weekday label in Japan or East Asia.

Why It Matters

It’s a detail grounded in actual history rather than arbitrary design. You’re looking at a system that’s been around for over a thousand years. Clean presentation, useful information.

Next time someone asks, you’ll know what to tell them.

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