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日本語 Japanese Ask Questions Thread 7

Name: Anonymous 2012-09-03 14:03

If you have a question about the language, ask it and fellow 4channers might see it and answer it for you.
日本の方からのご協力も大歓迎です。


■USEFUL TOOLS

Rikaichan
http://www.polarcloud.com/rikaichan/
A pop-up dictionary for Firefox that shows readings and definitions when you hover over words.

Rikaikun
https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/jipdnfibhldikgcjhfnomkfpcebammhp
Same as above, but for Chrome.

Anki
http://ankisrs.net/
Flash card program mainly useful for vocab and kanji repetition. Can sync decks between computers and your phone.


■WEB-BASED DICTIONARIES

ALC
http://www.alc.co.jp/
Offers a web interface to the Eijirou dictionary, made for use in translation work.

kotobank
http://kotobank.jp/
Pretty good for J-J lookups. J-E/E-J definitions from Progressive.

Tangorin
http://tangorin.com/
The best interface to Jimu Buuriinu-sama's EDICT, which is a mess, so don't use this unless you have to.

weblio 類語辞典
http://thesaurus.weblio.jp/
It's an extensive thesaurus.

(If you want the best J-E/E-J dictionary, get an EPWING copy of Kenkyusha.)


■MEDIA

D-Addicts
http://d-addicts.com/forum/torrents.php
It's a horrible community, but it's THE go-to for drama series. Many variety shows turn up there as well.

JPopsuki
http://jpopsuki.eu/
It's a private music tracker with an extensive selection of just about everything.

KeyHoleTV
http://www.v2p.jp/video/english/
An application that lets you stream live TV in shit quality.

Tokyo Toshokan
https://www.tokyotosho.info/
anime anime anime anime anime


■PREVIOUS THREADS

See >>2 for links.

Name: Anonymous 2013-08-04 20:10

>>832
I never said that compound kanji do not vary in meaning from their singular parts; it's obvious they would. I'm saying the meanings of singular kanji do not vary, and as such deserve to be learned because of it. Very often it possible to come close to the "meaning", though maybe not the function, of compound kanji by understanding the meaning of each.

And no, learning the meanings of kanji may not help with "reading" but, as I said, it will certainly help with literacy. The same can be said for studying Latin and Greek roots in English. Will it be easier to memorize the thousands of words that use con- and pro-? No, but it will be much easier to surmise the meaning of an unfamiliar word from them, instead of simply interpreting the unknown in a bubble and dedicating it to memory through rote memorization without noticing connections or overlap.

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