ペンキ
Plausiblepenki
paint
katakana
Origin
- Source language
- Dutch (nl)
- Source form
- pek / pekverf (hypothesis)
- Borrowing route
- オランダ語 → 近代日本語説
- Semantic shift
- 塗料・防水材系の語 → 塗料一般
- First attested
- 1880
Story
If ペンキ looks like someone tried and failed to say English “paint,” surprise — that is exactly the kind of shortcut learners should be careful with.
ペンキ means paint, especially practical paint for walls, wood, metal, signs, fences, and other surfaces. Japanese also has ペイント, a more transparent modern loan from English “paint.” But ペンキ is older-feeling and more material: the stuff in the can, the wet coating, the smell of a freshly painted wall.
Its origin is less tidy than パン or ボタン. Many explanations connect ペンキ with Dutch-related vocabulary for paint or coating, reflecting the Dutch-contact layer of Japanese loanwords. However, the exact source form and route are not as cleanly memorable as Portuguese pão to パン or Dutch glas to ガラス. A good learner story should say that clearly instead of pretending every etymology is a perfect straight line.
That honesty is the interesting part. Real word histories are sometimes messy. They move through trade, pronunciation, dictionaries, professional use, and everyday speech. ペンキ likely belongs with words that came through older European contact rather than being a simple modern English borrowing, but the details deserve caution.
The mini-scene here is wonderfully ordinary: not a palace, not a treaty, just a can of paint at a hardware store. The label says ペンキ, and that single word tells you Japanese has more than one way to talk about imported materials. ペイント may sound sleek and English-like; ペンキ sounds like the practical substance you roll onto a wall.
For learners, ペンキ is a useful word and a useful warning. Similar meaning does not prove identical origin.
And sometimes the most interesting Japanese words are the ones that refuse to be explained too neatly.