tmcg: (quill)
[personal profile] tmcg
Midway through Lesson 4-06 in Rosetta Stone Japanese Level I. I started on December 13th (it logs your test results with dates), so I'm pretty happy with that speed. I can write a few kanji without aides to show me stroke order and direction. I can write complete simple sentences using kanji and hiragana. I can't read or write katakana, and I'm finally going to have to crack and learn to do that. I think my hiragana are solid enough now that learning (the similar but not directly analogous) katakana won't mess with my head too much. I'm not sure how many kanji I know. More than a hundred to say the meaning of in English; a much smaller number to associate a Japanese word I know with, so that I could actually use them in a sentence; and only a handful of simple ones with all their On, Kun, and Nanori readings.

I could not hold a simple conversation in Japanese. There's a written children's story online that I still can't make heads or tails of. And I couldn't figure out what [livejournal.com profile] akaspeedo 's kanji icon means, although it was an excuse for a fun foray through the kanji dictionary. {g}

The little starbursts of aural comprehension when I'm watching movies in Japanese are really cool.

(It just shows how in denial I am about katakana that I spelled it "katagana" before fixing it just now. Sigh. But I just found out that in addition to borrowed words, katakana are also used to spell rude words, which makes them seem much more fun. And sometimes they're used for emphasis. Interesting. I just watched Kurosawa's Scandal, and there were katakana all over the tabloids and ragsheets and advertising posters. And Western exclamation points!)

Re: Kanji!

Date: 2003-09-25 09:28 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] terrymcgarry.livejournal.com
Hey Steev...I looked it up at Jeffrey's Japanese English Dictionary (http://www.rut.org/cgi-bin/j-e), and it returned only "kokain," which I'm pretty sure would be rendered in Katakana, the characters used for borrowed foreign words. It didn't give a kanji for it.

If you want to use the Katakana characters for ko, ka, i, and n, I might be able to find a chart where you can look them up if you need to. I thought I had a link for one, but I can't find it.

There are some other options here:
http://www.rut.org/cgi-bin/j-e/inline/dosearch?sDict=on&H=PW&L=E&T=opium

There's a kanji for "mayaku" there, which means "narcotic drugs."

Hope that helps!

January 2013

S M T W T F S
  12345
678 9 101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
2728293031  

Style Credit

Page generated Jul. 26th, 2025 09:15 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags

Most Popular Tags