property

On-Yomi: ザイ、サイ、ゾク — Kun-Yomi: たから

Koohii stories:

1) [dwhitman] 31-10-2007(257): If you're a money genius, you can afford a lot of property.

2) [fuaburisu] 13-10-2005(116): The keyword refers to property in the sense of money or funds rather than of buildings or real estate. Keep this one distinct from frame 193 (“wealth”) and frame 473 (“assets”). Here we have a genie, gulping down oysters. Someone tries to grab an oyster and the genie puts his big arms around his oysters and states his “right of ownership” : “They're mines, my property!”.

3) [Harrow] 23-11-2008(81): Property comes in several forms, shells (money) and intellectual property (genius).

4) [Istvan] 21-6-2007(17): A genius with money LEFT over buys property.

5) [xxinde] 8-10-2009(15): To gain a lot of property, you need either a genie or to be a genius. The clam is there to emphasize that this character is more about financial property or funds than real estate.