Shogi Vocabulary 101: Simple Words You’ll Hear a Lot (with Pronunciation)

So you’ve learned the pieces (or you’re working on it), and now you’re watching a shogi video or playing an app… and suddenly people are saying things like “sente,” “gote,” “oute,” and “tsumi.”

Don’t worry—shogi has its own little “starter dictionary,” and once you know a handful of terms, everything starts making way more sense.

This post is a friendly guide to simple shogi-related vocabulary for English speakers: what the words mean, how to say them, and when you’ll hear them.

Quick pronunciation cheat (so you feel confident saying the words)

Japanese sounds are pretty consistent:

  • a = “ah” (like father)
  • i = “ee” (like see)
  • u = soft “oo” (like food, but lighter)
  • e = “eh” (like met)
  • o = “oh” (like go)

If you see a long vowel like ō, hold it a little longer:

  • shō = “shohh” (not “show” like a TV show)

1) The game basics: “What are we even looking at?”

Shōgi (しょうぎ) — “show-gee”

That’s the whole game: Japanese chess.

Ban (盤) — “bahn”

The board. You might hear:

  • shōgiban = shogi board

Koma (駒) — “koh-mah”

A piece (any shogi piece).

Komadai (駒台) — “koh-mah-dai”

The little piece stand next to the board where captured pieces sit (because in shogi you can reuse them!).

Masu (マス) — “mah-soo”

A square on the board. (This is usually written in katakana, not kanji.)


2) Who’s who: first player, second player

Sente (先手) — “sen-teh”

The first player (the one who moves first).

Gote (後手) — “goh-teh”

The second player.

You’ll hear these constantly in videos and commentary, like:

  • “Sente is attacking.”
  • “Gote defended well.”

Helpful tip: In many diagrams, sente is at the bottom and gote is at the top, because pieces point toward the opponent.


3) Turns and moves

Te (手) — “teh”

This word is everywhere. In shogi, te often means:

  • a move
  • or a turn

Example:

  • “Good te!” = good move.

Teban (手番) — “teh-bahn”

Whose turn it is—the side to move.


4) Capturing and the “drop” rule (the most shogi thing ever)

Toru (取る) — “toh-roo”

To take/capture a piece.

Example idea:

  • “I can toru that pawn.” = “I can capture that pawn.”

Mochigoma (持ち駒) — “moh-chee-goh-mah”

Pieces you’ve captured and are holding “in hand.”
These are the pieces you’re allowed to drop back onto the board.

Utsu (打つ) — “oo-tsoo”

To drop a piece onto the board.

This is one of the biggest differences from chess:

  • In shogi, when you capture a piece, it becomes yours.
  • Later, you can drop it back in to help you attack or defend.

You might hear:

  • “Nice drop!”
    That’s “ii uchi!” sometimes (more on uchi below).

Uchi (打ち) — “oo-chee”

This is related to utsu. In shogi writing and commentary, uchi often means a drop.

So “pawn drop” might be talked about like:

  • “fu-uchi” (pawn drop)

5) Promotion words

Naru (成る) — “nah-roo”

To promote.

Nari (成り) — “nah-ree”

Promotion / promoted state (you’ll hear it as a noun).

Narazu (不成) — “nah-rah-zoo”

Choosing not to promote when promotion is optional.

This pops up a lot in puzzles and game records:

  • “Narazu is important here” = “Don’t promote here (yet)!”

6) Check and checkmate

Ōte / Oute (王手) — “oh-teh”

Check.
This is one of the most common shouted words in casual play.

You might hear someone say “Oute!” when they give check.

Tsumi (詰み) — “tsoo-mee”

Checkmate. The king is trapped and there’s no legal escape.

Tsumeru (詰める) — “tsoo-meh-roo”

To mate / to finish with checkmate (or to “tighten the net”).


7) Game results and “end of game” words

Tōryō / Toryo (投了) — “toh-ryoh”

Resignation.
In many shogi apps or broadcasts, you’ll see this when a player gives up.

Sennichite (千日手) — “sen-nee-chee-teh”

A repetition draw (same position repeats multiple times under the rules).

Jishōgi / Jishogi (持将棋) — “jee-shoh-gee”

An impasse-type result, when both sides’ kings are deep in enemy territory and the game is judged by points (this is more “rules-y,” but you’ll hear it sometimes).


8) Study words you’ll see in books, videos, and apps

Kifu (棋譜) — “kee-foo”

A game record (moves written down).

If someone says:

  • “Let’s review the kifu,”
    they mean, “Let’s go through the moves.”

Tesuji (手筋) — “teh-soo-jee”

A clever tactical technique—like a “good trick” or a smart sequence.

Jōseki / Joseki (定跡) — “joh-seh-kee”

An opening pattern people study.

Yose (寄せ) — “yoh-seh”

The endgame—the phase where you try to convert your advantage into a win.

Tsume shōgi (詰将棋) — “tsoo-meh show-gee”

Shogi checkmate puzzles. Great for training!


9) Common shorthand you’ll hear (especially in notation)

Even if you know the full piece names, people often use short forms:

  • Fu = pawn
  • Kaku = bishop
  • Hi = rook
  • Kin = gold
  • Gin = silver
  • Kei = knight
  • Kyō = lance
  • Gyoku / Ō = king

So someone might say:

  • “Hi is hanging!” = “The rook is in danger.”

A mini “conversation” you might hear at a shogi club

“Sente has a nice tesuji here.”
“Yeah, and that pawn drop—fu-uchi—was strong.”
“Now it’s oute… is it tsumi?”
“Pretty close. I think gote should toryo soon.”

Translated into plain English:

  • First player found a good tactic.
  • A pawn drop was powerful.
  • Check happened—might be checkmate.
  • Second player is probably going to resign.

Quick cheat sheet (the “most useful” words)

If you only memorize a few, make it these:

  • sente = first player
  • gote = second player
  • koma = piece
  • toru = capture
  • mochigoma = captured pieces you can use
  • utsu / uchi = drop a piece
  • naru / nari = promote
  • oute = check
  • tsumi = checkmate
  • toryo = resign
  • kifu = game record