Shiritori
Shiritori (しりとり) is a
Japanese word game in which the players are required to say a word which begins with the final
kana of the previous word. No distinction is made between
hiragana,
katakana and
kanji. "Shiritori" literally means "taking the bottom" as Japanese language can be written vertically.
*Two or more people take turns to play.
*Only
nouns are permitted.
*A player who plays a word ending in the
mora N (") loses the game.
*Words may not be repeated.
*Phrases connected by
no (の) are permitted, but only in those cases where the phrase is sufficiently fossilized to be considered a "word".
Example:
sakura (さく
ら)-> rajio (ラジオ)->
onigiri (おにぎ
り)-> risu (り
す)-> sumou (すも
う) ->
udon (うど")
The player who played the word
udon lost this game.
There are various optional and advanced rules, which must be agreed on before the game begins.
*
Dakuten and
handakuten may be ignored. Thus
suupu(すーぷ)
may be followed by furo (ふろ).
*A long vowel may either be ignored or considered as a vowel.
Mikisaa (ミキサー/みきさー) can be followed by either
sakura or
aki (あき).
*Common pronouns and place names may not be permitted.
Edo jou (えどじょう) lit. Edo castle is safe.
*Two words spelled with the same kana but different kanji may be permitted. For example,
Su (す) can either be spelled as "巣" (lit. a birdnest) or "酢" (lit. vinegar).
*Words are limited to a certain genre.
*Instead of using only the last kana, the final two kana must be used again. In this case, neither kana may be
N.
*The length of a word must be three or more syllables.
*Only words beginning and ending in dakuten and handakuten may be used.
A Shiritori game using only English words was invented to help one learn English. Most rules are the same, yet there are several original and optional rules that are used.
*For students of English, any words including nouns, verbs, and adjectives can be used.
*Players cannot use past tenses of a verb except when a verb does not follow the standard pattern. A player may use "be", "was", or "is" but not "kick" and "kicked".
*When a word ends in a vowel, like "life", one may use the preceding consonant instead.