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Paperback Let's Learn Kanji: An Introduction to Radicals, Components and 250 Very Basic Kanji Book

ISBN: 4770020686

ISBN13: 9784770020680

Let's Learn Kanji: An Introduction to Radicals, Components and 250 Very Basic Kanji

Everyone agrees that it is possible to learn to speak Japanese in a reasonable amount of time, but no one has ever said that about reading and writing it. It is widely held that spoken and written Japanese require separate efforts by the student, as if these two aspects were in fact distinct languages.

A first step toward alleviating this situation was taken by Yasuko Mitamura in 1985 with the publication of Let's Learn Hiragana and Let's Learn...

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Good

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Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Best book I've found for getting to grips with Kanji

I've been studying Japanese on-and-off for many years, and as such, amassed more Japanese books that anyone would need. "Let's Learn Kanji" despite its friendly title, is a book that *with dedicated study*, will enable you to obtain a very solid foundation in the building blocks (the radicals and components) that form Kanji. You'll learn that Kanji construction is often quite logical. It starts out with information on the importation of Kanji from China to Japan, to give you some background on how kanji evolved. Next you learn the strokes (and their names in Japanese, which lends an authentic flair that books like "Remembering the Kanji" just don't have.) Next you learn the 92 most common traditional radicals, again, along with their names. They are grouped (so helpful) by where they appear in a kanji (For example, some radicals always appear on the left side of a kanji - these are called "hen" radicals.) Each possible kanji location has a name in Japanese, which I found interesting, and again, this knowledge lends that authentic flair I love about this book. These radicals tend to impart meaning (versus sound) to a kanji. Next you learn 107 "Useful but non-traditional components" - some have names, some don't. These are as important as the traditional radicals as building blocks, as many indicate how the kanji sounds. Some will seem very complex, with many intricate strokes, but the authors do advise state that beginners can save the very high-stroke-order kanji for later in their studies. The choice is yours. Personally, I'm going to study them. With each radical and component, the authors have provided two or three example kanji that incorporate the radical or component being studied. (One thing I read somewhere: The radicals and components can be thought of as Lego Bricks that you fit together to create simple kanji, followed by more complex Kanji constructions!) Throughout the stroke, radical, and component chapters, the authors use romaji. Which is annoying, but all is forgiven in Part 2, where you learn the 250 Very Basic Kanji. The authors present the kanji by stroke order. Each Kanji entry has a lot of information * The readings (IN KANA! WOOT!) * Its basic English meaning * one to three examples of a single "more complex" kanji incorporating the basic kanji * Short phrases incorporating the kanji, grouped by on and kun reading. After each group of kanji, you get a plethora of exercises including many sentences to see the kanji in context. (For this reason, I would recommend that you knew some basic Japanese grammar before tackling this section of the book. You should also know hiragana and katakana well.) The book itself is a very high quality paperback, complete with dust jacket. The paper is very thick (and forgiving if you make a mistake and need to erase! :) ) Highly recommended - but we need to get Kodansha to REPRINT "LET'S LEARN MORE KANJI"!!!!! Thanks for reading, and I hope

Great Book! ( heh I'm on my dad's account)

The same author of this book wrote " Let's Learn Hiragana" and " Let's Learn Katakana". So for those of you who bought those books and loved them; then this book is for you. I'm 14 years old and learning japanese and once I had my grammar right and learned hiragana and katakana, I was left with the task of learning Kanji. This book made is really simple and people of all ages can use it ( mostly recommended for middle school age and above). It shows you the strokes, radical origins ( which come in handy) and all the Kun and On readings of the Kanji. Great to use on the Japanese Proficiency Exam Level 4.

Everything Isn't For Everybody...

...but this book is working for me! A little background so you understand why I rate this book 5 stars: I have a decent handle on Japanese grammar and aural comprehension, making steady progress every week. The remaining challenge was progressing in Kanji. However, every source I checked indicated that the rote memorization of Kanji was unavoidable. I tried some of the mnemonic techniques but that approach seemed to add more work, with marginal results. You can follow the stroke order etc, but the details start to blur after a while if it seems like you are just drawing random pictures. Alas, learning Kanji seemed like it was going to be a long hard slog. Fortunately, I'm really good at take low level details and using induction to put the details into a larger context. Lo and behold along comes Let's Learn Kanji! The genius of this book(I've searched for others that are similar in approach but no luck there) is that it teaches about the fundamental Kanji radicals and how they can aggregate and combine into more complicated Kanji. Since I learned the Kana fairly quickly, this felt like learning new Kana(even though it isn't) because the shapes were not as complicated from jump and I could get comfortable with how they were actually contstucted with correct stroke order and stroke type. Now, when I read my grammar books, with the kanzi, okurigana and romazi translations, I can see the radicals present within the Kanji. The Kanji then start making sense, given that the radicals have already been described. The correlation with the radicals isn't 100% but there is enough for me to make consistent progress without feeling overwelmed. Discovering this book was energizing. Be forewarned, that it will still take time to go through all of the material. However, in a relative sense, I think of it as short term (mild) pain, for long term gain. This approach is not for everyone. But for those who like to understand low level details(radicals) so they can fit it into a larger picture(Kanji). I highly recommend it.

BEAUTIFUL!

I have been writing Japanese for years, and I started with the author's "Let's Learn Hiragana" and "Let's Learn Katakana." I loved both books, especially the Hiragana. I learned Kanji from various sources, spent hundreds of dollars on books (literally), yet none of them were as beautifully written as this one. If you want to learn the characters in depth, and want to really enjoy writing them (yes, it is artistic and even fun to do) and not just be flabbergasted and frustrated, this is the book to start with (or even switch over to). I might get this book just to improve my handwriting!

A Good Introduction to Kanji

This is a good book for beginning students of Japanese. This book walks you through the basics of kanji: stroke order, style, radicals, readings, and compounds. It starts out a little slow because it teaches you all the basic radicals before moving to real kanji. However, I feel that learning the radicals first is a good thing and the book is right in doing so, but nevertheless for the impatient student this book may seem slow. I strongly recommend this book to anyone who has just started to learn kanji.
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