![]() ![]() Also, a small new feature was added: clicking the keyword or kanji in mnemonics section will direct you to Koohii website for more stories from community. ![]() ・The rest of the deck: Jinmeiyou Kanji appear first then ordered by Frequency. ・The rest of Jouyou Kanji: Ordered by JLPT Level then by Frequency. ・First 1006 Kanji (Grade 1-6): Reorder to match the actual fixed order learned in Japan's School (very logical order in my opinon), in accordance with this: Reordered the whole deck to a more logical order. Just go to Browser, sort by card type, choose the cards and hit 'suspend' or 'delete'. If you find that inefficient or want to focus on reading kanji, you can delete or suspend all recall cards. Note 3: Each note in this deck has 2 cards, recognition and recall. Note2: Kanji not in 2136 Jouyou list (which I tagged "gradeS+") may not have all the information mentioned above. If the font doesn't work, try renaming it to "KanjiStrokeOrders" (remove the "_v3.001") If you're using android phone, put the font in /sdcard/AnkiDroid/fonts (you may need to create folder "fonts"). You just need to download the font file, which is KanjiStrokeOrders_v3.001.ttf, then install it. Note1: For stroke order working, download and install font from this. Other Info: Traditional Form, Radical info, Classification (if you care: ) A link to Koohii website and 2 offline Koohii Stories help you remember the kanji. "Grade S" means kanji learned in Secondary school in Japan. The lower the frequency is, the more popular the kanji is. Kanji Level (JLPT Level, Jouyou Grade, Frequency). Nanori is for reference, has separate line with kunyomi. English meaning, reading (onyomi, kunyomi, nanori). If you follow Heisig's order, I don't think you need this radical deck as you learn radicals along with kanji. A radical deck can be found here: (made by me too). I have also made various tags for your custom study: JLPT, Jouyou Grade, Frequency, Jinmeiyou, Theme & Concept.Īnd also, I recommend you learn radical (component in kanji) first, which make kanji much easier to learn. Mastering these 2136 even helps you gain Level 2 in Kanken, the kanji test for native Japanese (10 levels, level 1 is the hardest). It is also a list of permitted characters and readings for use in official government documents (and maybe most other written works as well, like newspaper or textbook), that means kanji outside this list should be written in hiragana or have furigana to show readings. The rest (Jinmeiyou, etc) should only be for reference.Ī little info about Jouyou Kanji: This list was announced officially by the Japanese Ministry of Education. These 2136 Jouyou Kanji were ordered to appear first in this deck (in school grade order). ![]() However, I recommend focusing on Jouyou Kanji, as almost everything you see in Japanese or even the JLPT N1 test doesn't go beyond the jouyou list. It includes ALL 2136 Jouyou Kanji + JLPT N5 to N1's Kanji + 861 Jinmeiyou Kanji + 2500 Most Frequent Kanji + 3007 Kanji from Heisig's book + even more. This deck contains ALL information you may need for a kanji. ![]()
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