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The number 9 (unlucky Asia vs. neutral West)
9 taboo Asia (homophone death). West sees it as neutral. Misunderstanding price/floor mixed architectures.
Meaning
Target direction : Asia (Japan, China, Korea, Vietnam): 9 (kun'in/jiǔ) homophone death/suffering. Taboo number, floors/rooms/prices avoid 9.
Interpreted meaning : West: 9 numerically neutral. No negative charge. Discrepancy may create uneasiness price labelling/multinational buildings.
Geography of misunderstanding
Offensive
- japan
- china-continental
- south-korea
- vietnam
Neutral
- usa
- canada
- france
- germany
- uk
1. The number 9 in Japan: bad luck and morbid associations
The number 9 (九, ku in Japanese) is traditionally considered an unlucky number in Japanese culture. This association goes back several layers: firstly, the pronunciation "ku" resembles the Japanese word "ku" meaning "suffering" or "death" (苦, bread/suffering). Secondly, the number 4 (shi) also means "death" (死), creating a widespread association between numbers and mortality. The 9, although less charged than the 4, carries a connotation of misfortune. In hospital settings, patients avoid room 9, and hospital floors in Japan often skip 4 and 9.
2. The geography of misunderstanding: local superstition vs. global practice
The misunderstanding arises when multinational companies ignore this local superstition. For example, hotel room numbers, product numbers or price lists containing the 9 may offend or disturb Japanese customers. Conversely, in the West, the 9 has no such negative connotation (although the 13 plays a similar role). This dichotomy creates friction in international business contexts, particularly in the hotel business, product numbers and foreign currency pricing.
3. Historical genesis: linguistic origins and numerology
The origins go back to Taoist and Buddhist numerology imported into China and Japan (7th-9th centuries). There, 9 is considered extreme yin (nine phases of yin in the trigrams). In Japanese, the homophony between "ku" (9) and "ku" (suffering) reinforces the association. Introductory Buddhism in Japan converges superstitions: 9 circles of hell, 9 lives of suffering in the samsara cycle. Japanese popular culture spreads this fear through fairy tales, Noh/Kabuki theaters and literature.
4. documented incidents: commercial incidents and malaise
2000s-2010s: International room numbering incidents Several international hotels operating in Japan had to review their room numbering. Customers refuse to accept rooms 9, 14, 19, 29, etc. Asahi Shimbun documents these cases.
5. Practical recommendations
To do:
- In the Japanese context, recognize that 9 carries an unlucky connotation.
- Adapt numbering (skip 9 in hotels, products, pricing).
- Document this superstition without ridiculing it.
Avoid:
- Ignore local superstitions in international business contexts.
- Assimilate the Japanese 9 to the Western 13 as "just unlucky".
Documented incidents
- 2000-2010 — Clients japonais refusent chambres 9, 14, 19, 29. Hôtels internationaux doivent revoir numérotation. Asahi Shimbun documente malaises commerciaux. (Asahi Shimbun, 2005.)
Practical recommendations
To do
- Asie : éviter 9 étages/prix/numéros. Respects superstition. Occidental : accepter absences bâtiments.
Avoid
- Ne pas utiliser 9 prix Japon/Chine. Ne pas moquer superstition. Éviter étiquetage 9.
Neutral alternatives
- Alternative floor/price numbering.
Sources
- The Mystery of Numbers
- The Korean Language
- Culture's Consequences: Comparing Values, Behaviors, Institutions and Organizations Across Nations