Quizlet provides an export function which lets you save your cards in a format we can import directly:. Go to the set on Quizlet. Find the 'export' function: '.' Icon Export. Select 'comma' as the delimiter between term and definition. Copy the textOnce you have your text, go to, and paste the contents of yourfile in the main text area. If you would like Kanshudo to try to match your Quizlet cards with items in the system (whichwill give you the best experience), select Smart Import.
If you would like the cards to use your Quizlet text exactly as is,use the default CSV. Comma-delimited text, or 'CSV' format, is the simplest format if you are creating cards yourself.All you need is to put the text foreach flashcard on a separate line, with thefront and back separated by a comma. Many programs can save text as CSV - for example,you can store your text in a spreadsheet such as Excel or Google Docs in two columns, and then export to a CSV.Alternatively you can easily create it yourself in any text editor or email program.The text needs to look like this:漢字,'かんじ Chinese characters, kanji'習う,ならう to take lessons in道,'roadway, street, moral, teachings'. Smart import is the most useful way to create your own flashcards.Paste text, with each card on a separate line, and each field separated by either a space, comma or tab.Kanshudo will take the first word or kanjion each line of your text, and try to match it up with a kanji or word in our system. If we're successful, the flashcard will automaticallycontain all the details you'd see if you'd created the flashcard by using our favorites function.
If not, we'll just use your text, puttingeverything apart from the word itself on the back of the card.
We've collected all the important information needed to learn and remember kanji into a handy flashcard format that makes your drilling sessions more efficient than ever. Our Japanese Kanji Flashcards set is used by thousands of students in more than 100 countries in the world. For this reason, White Rabbit Press flashcards became a best-seller on Amazon.
I'm Niko, the founder of. I'm also a Japanese translator, writer, and all-around language nerd.I created this site to help as many people master Japanese (any language, really) as possible.Uh, what else? I live in Tokyo, Bangkok, Sapporo, Saigon, San Diego, Tokyo, Chiang Mai, Portland, Oregon! So if anyone wants to meet up for a refreshing nama beer, I'm probably down for that.
Learning Japanese is tricky-tikki-tavi. But we're in this together. ファイト!Good luck with your studies!Nikop.s. If you like my articles, you may very well love my.
This deck contains ALL information you may need for a kanji.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.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. These 2136 Jouyou Kanji were ordered to appear first in this deck (in school grade order).
The rest (Jinmeiyou, etc) should only be for reference.A little info about Jouyou Kanji: This list was announced officially by the Japanese Ministry of Education. 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. Mastering these 2136 even helps you gain Level 2 in Kanken, the kanji test for native Japanese (10 levels, level 1 is the hardest). More info here: and.I have also made various tags for your custom study: JLPT, Jouyou Grade, Frequency, Jinmeiyou, Theme & Concept.And also, I recommend you learn radical (component in kanji) first, which make kanji much easier to learn. A radical deck can be found here: (made by me too).
If you follow Heisig's order, I don't think you need this radical deck as you learn radicals along with kanji.Info Included:-English meaning, reading (onyomi, kunyomi, nanori). Nanori is for reference, has separate line with kunyomi.-Number of strokes and stroke order.-Example Compound Word-Kanji Level (JLPT Level, Jouyou Grade, Frequency). The lower the frequency is, the more popular the kanji is.
'Grade S' means kanji learned in Secondary school in Japan.-A link to Koohii website and 2 offline Koohii Stories help you remember the kanji.-Components of the kanji.-Other Info: Traditional Form, Radical info, Classification (if you care: )Note1: For stroke order working, download and install font from this:. You just need to download the font file, which is KanjiStrokeOrdersv3.001.ttf, then install it.If you're using android phone, put the font in /sdcard/AnkiDroid/fonts (you may need to create folder 'fonts').If the font doesn't work, try renaming it to 'KanjiStrokeOrders' (remove the 'v3.001')Note2: Kanji not in 2136 Jouyou list (which I tagged 'gradeS+') may not have all the information mentioned above.Note 3: Each note in this deck has 2 cards, recognition and recall. If you find that inefficient or want to focus on reading kanji, you can delete or suspend all recall cards. Just go to Browser, sort by card type, choose the cards and hit 'suspend' or 'delete'.Update Aug 18: (Important)- Reordered the whole deck to a more logical order. Previous order is by grade then onyomi. Cards are customizable!When this deck is imported into the desktop program, cards will appear asthe deck author has made them.
If you'd like to customize what appears onthe front and back of a card, you can do so by clicking the Edit button, andthen clicking the Cards button.Kanji渉OnyomiショウKunyomiわた.るNanoriえんEnglishford, ferry, portExamples交渉(こうしょう): (1) negotiations; discussions (2) connection干渉(かんしょう): interference; intervention; meddlingJLPT Level1Jouyou GradeSFrequency499Components水: water歩: walk; counter for stepsNumber of Strokes11Kanji Radical水Radical Number85Radical Strokes4Radical Readingみず・したみず・さんずいTraditional Form涉Classification会意 Compound IdeographicKeywordfordKoohii Story 1The new Ford Jesus. It can do everything except WALK on WATER.Koohii Story 2A ford is a place where one can walk through the water, a place only a few footsteps deep.TagsJLPT.N1 gradeS kanjifreq251-500Kanji届OnyomiカイKunyomiとど.ける、-とど.け、とど.くNanoriEnglishdeliver, reach, arrive, report, notify, forwardExamples届け(とどけ): report; notification; registration届く(とどく): (1) to reach; to arrive; to get through; to get at (2) to be attentive; to pay attention (3) to be delivered; to carry (e.g. Sound)届ける(とどける): (1) to deliver; to forward; to send (2) to report; to notify; to file notice (to the authorities); to give notice; to registerJLPT Level2Jouyou Grade6Frequency939Components尸: corpse; remains; flag radical (no. 44)由: wherefore; a reasonNumber of Strokes8Kanji Radical尸Radical Number44Radical Strokes3Radical Readingしかばね・かばね・かばねだれTraditional Form屆Classification会意 Compound IdeographicKeyworddeliverKoohii Story 1In the US, when the mail is delivered, a flag sprouts up on your mailbox. (We don´t have that in Australia.).Koohii Story 2A Japanese man ordered some Brussel sprouts from Belgium. It’s got lots of kanji, but IMO, I don’t need to see the cards in reverse, and not having the cards in reverse doesn’t seem to be an option. I need to learn how to recognize kanji, not translate from English to kanji which is an entirely different skill.
Furthermore, having reverse cards can be confusing because some words in English could have many possibilities for kanji. For example, the words “lament, grief, regret” can be associated with 慨, 恨, 悼, 悔, 怨, 嘆, 歎, 惜, 憂, 愁 and others, making it frustrating to learn.
It would be nice to have this deck with no reverse versions of the cards.on. This deck doesn't really teach you how to use the kanji; you only learn the English dictionairy meaning. When starting with this deck the most obvious problem with the deck is the lack of kana on the question card. When you are learning a kanji you just get to see a (sometimes outdated) dictonairy meaning; firstly this gives a problem with variant kanji that have the same meaning such as 國 and 国 (more on this later); but maybe more importantly you are learning kanji to read/write Japanese, not English; so the kana is much more relevant and I'd rather learn the kanji using just the readings and leave out the English completely (add it as option of course, also add it if the meaning is not clear from just the reading). Also please split obscure kana readings from commonly used ones and mark them (with another color for example).
Or maybe it would even be better if you could list all words the kanji in kana and from there write down the kanji (again add English meaning as option and English should be added by default when there are common synonyms) because that's how you will be using kanji: to write Japanese words.For exampleQuestion:みずすいようびetc.Answer: 水Of course the part which is used to write the specific kanji should be marked (ie. Bolded).Some kanji already have some example words. However some kanji especially the more advanced ones such as 藤 and 潟 don't give any example at all (these are still Kanji in JPLT so they should be used somewhere). At least give one example for every kanji; maybe you could mark obscure meanings or those usually written in kana (ie. Using a different color). On the other hand some kanji give completely irrelevant example words such as 雄 which gives 'Eroica Symphony (Beethoven, 1804)' and 'Heroic Polonaise (Chopin)' as examples so I'm really confused why you added that.Regarding variant characters such as 國, they should make a reference to the more commonly used character.
Great DeckHey, first, I wanted to thank you for putting in the work to create this great deck, it's the best one available by far!However, I do have a few questions I was wondering you could maybe answer. When I look at the 'notes' table and the 'flds' column, I see all the data that goes on the pack of card dumped there without anything seperating them. How does anki generate the html on the cards for this if it can't tell where one field ends and the next begins? I'm guessing that it looks at the 'models' row in the 'col' table, but I still don't see how it knows how to generate the HTML and what the seperation objects are in the 'flds' column.
If it's not any inconvenience to you, I'd greatly appreciate a short reply at [email protected]. Thanks in advance!on.
But one question about the updates.UPDATED 2/29/16: Thanks a ton! To the author for the instructions about updating card order.
It was a little confusing to me at first, but I fought my way through and was able to execute the update, including reimporting Heisig stories (even though I rarely seem to use them).I have been making a lot of progress with this wonderful deck. Many thanks to the author(s), I use this deck almost every day and it's really well-made.However, I loaded it in Summer 2015 and I see that the card order has since been changed. I would love to be able to load the update—sometimes the kanji come up in strange order (e.g., this week I saw 河 before 可)—but I'd rather not have to start over from the beginning (I'm several hundred kanji in at this point, starting over might break my spirit).Can anyone tell me if it's possible to load the updated deck without losing the work I've already done? Thanks in advance, and many thanks to the author(s) for continuing to tweak and improve the deck.on. Fine deck but.OK, I'd now rate this deck 5 stars even if you use heisig, PROVIDED you follow the Heisig reordering guidelines given bellow. I'm pretty sure the poster never did Heisig or he would never recommend you mess around with that order-it would be insane to do so I know because followed his recommendation with much regret and I was referencing Kanji 2000 when was trying to learn Kanji 100 (not a real example, hopefully you see the problem).
It was extremely awkward. Please also not the deck is double-sided (2 cards per kanji) and that could cause you grief if you're new to Anki. If you've done 200 cards, you've only done 100 kanji. It's a beautiful deck.
New to Japanese? New to the sub?To submit a translation request,Welcome to, the hub on Reddit for learners of the Japanese Language. If you are new to learning Japanese, read the. Check to see if your question has been addressed before posting by searching or reading the wiki. Not doing so falls under 'Low effort' (see rule 6). State your question clearly in your post title 3. Consider the OP's skill level when answering a question.
Use if you think they won't understand your kanji usage. Do not guess or attempt to answer questions beyond your own knowledge. Remember that answers you receive are never guaranteed to be 100% correct. No requests for or links to copyrighted material. Trolling, immature, or hostile behavior will result in a warning or ban 7.
Joyo Kanji Flashcards
The following will result in post removal:. Asking 'How do I learn Japanese?' Or 'What should I learn next?'
And other duplicate enquiries without reading the pages. Translation requests ( asking for help with your own translation is fine except for tests and exams). Requests for, or links to copyrighted content. Tech support questions. Memes/image macros. 'Low-effort' posts (e.g.
Some random Japanese you took a picture of). Hiragana/Katakana posts should go into the stickied Shitsumonday thread8. Content creators wishing to advertise must contact the mods first. (no kana apps)This is not the full list of rules. Furigana To create furigana in your posts, use the following syntax: 漢字(#fg 'かんじ')will display The quotation marks are not optional. Related Subreddits.
Hello, I recently got a Spectre x360 laptop and am interested in using the Genki books on the left side of the screen while using a software (preferably not Paint) on the right side of the screen to practice the characters depicted.Alternatively, a good program that allows me to load the Genki workbook and be able to write on it would be the best option.If there is no software such as I have described, I will probably end up using my iPad and some app for practicing, although I would much rather read through and follow the Genki books. This.Another good source of 原稿用紙 (げんこうようし = Japanese manuscript paper) is incompetech.com, specificallyBarring that, get some regular graph paper and block off 4 squares per masu or whatever you want to adjust the size.To the OP:What you need software for (if you need it) is in coming up with the test questions for your daily quiz. You don't need the software to grade you. You can do that, if you have the answer key.You can use Anki or similar SRS that work great for managing the 'what am I about to forget?' Put vocabulary words individually into it.
The genius of Anki is, it relies on YOU to grade yourself. So you can make your 'answer' require whatever you want. In your case, make it 'write the prompted word for a basic success, and then assuming I'm correct, write an entire row of it on paper' if you want. Then you judge, do you like your handwriting on this word? Aspire one 722 hard drive upgrade. So adjust the 'next time it comes up' accordingly, because you are the grader.I mean, you can use Anki for dance moves, even. 'Dance this named step, did I guess it right?'
For a basic pass and then if you think you need more practice, it's a 2, otherwise a 3, if it's totally easy then 4, whatever. I'm basing my argument from the 10 year old who I watched for 4 years and the amount of progress he makes daily through practice (and yes, young people learn more quickly.)It's not even the pen and paper that is important. If you have a calligraphy brush and a bucket of water you can practice on a concrete path on a hot day. I've see Chinese monks do this. You can practice with chalk on a blackboard. You could even practice with your finger on a tablet if you don't get distracted by all of its other bells and whistles.
The magic is in the doing.I've met a non-native girl who went to a Japanese school did the same things that the 'native' kids did in the classroom. She left the country with her parents and moved to another country and joined a Saturday school with Japanese kids who had lived outside Japan.
They will be 'native' when they go back to Japan. She was miles ahead of the in reading and writing because she had done more practice (and obviously had more exposure in daily life.)I met a non-native professor of Japanese Studies in the 1980s who had changed schools and was told at the interview that students at his new school were already at a higher level than him and that he needed to catch up. Actually they weren't but all the practice he put in over the summer holiday gave him an advantage that stayed with him for years.I'm curious about your theory of 'being native' please elaborate why it may be more effective than practice.
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