If you’re a Facebook user and are learning Japanese, give the Kanji Box app a whirl. And no cheating by using Perapera-kun or Rikai-chan at the same time.
Kanji Box
Rich Pav
Richard has been living in Japan since 1990 with his wife and two teenage sons, Tony and Andy.
I found out about Kanji Box via http://www.nihongojouzu.com and started the whole Facebook thing because of it…and no… I would never never use my beloved Rikaichan for such purposes 笑笑笑
Doing the quizzes from Japan puts you at a disadvantage due to latency w/ the pages refreshing…at least that is the convenient excuse I tell myself for not being the top in Kanji in JLPT 2 and JLPT 1 笑笑笑
It seems like some of the kanji that show up at level 5 of 1-kyuu are waaay obscure. I have never, EVER seen the kanji for “banana” ever used anywhere, and it was useless, trivial characters like that trip me up. Learning kanji that most Japanese probably don’t know is a waste of time. I’m going to contact the developer and ask if he’ll consider using the Mainichi Shinbun Frequency lists for vocab quizzes.
What kanji do most Japanese people utilize? I know when they get out of high school, they know like 1000 different kanji symbols, right?
Carl’s last blog post..Here we go again…
Only 1000 characters? I wish. It’s closer to 2000. And explaining it in rather simple terms, each character can be read in multiple ways depending on how it’s used. Some characters have only two or three pronunciations, others have metric shitloads. The kanji used for given names are the most difficult.