Remembering The Kanji

These are printable kanji flash cards on PDF that can be used along with the books Remembering The Kanji I, II, and III by James Heisig. These books and flash cards have been a great help for me when I was studying Kanji. Give them a try...

  1. Remembering The Kanji Anki
  2. Reviewing The Kanji
  3. Remembering The Kanji Ebook
  4. Remembering The Kanji Pdf

Remembering the Kanji III aims at raising proficiency in writing and reading Japanese to the level of 3,000 kanji. Using the methods of volumes I and II, which have helped thousands of students to teach themselves written Japanese, this volume breaks new ground in presenting a systematic selection and organization of kanji needed for reading. Mar 03, 2020 Remembering The Kanji Volume 1 4th Edition PDF – Nihongo Ebook – Remembering The Kanji Pdf. Hiragana chart is a very popular tool for finding out Japanese. This chart is produced to assist the pupil of Japanese in finding out the pronunciation of the alphabet. Hiragana manuscript is one of the oldest kinds of Japanese writing, which is. Kanji Koohii comes with built in flashcards for Remembering the Kanji. Show example words and readings (optional). Review on desktop and mobile.


Card Layout
Side A contains the kanji in two fonts and the following:
  • RK = Remembering The Kanji index
  • N = Modern Reader's Japanese-English Character Dictionary (Classic Nelson) index
  • NN = The New Nelson Japanese-English Character Dictionary index
  • KL = The Kodansha Kanji Learner's Dictionary index
  • U = Unicode
  • S = stroke count
  • G = G1-G6: jouyou grades 1-6; G8: for general-use; G9 for name-use
  • F = kanji frequency of use ranking
  • R = radical
A '-' means the information is not available.
Side B contains the Remembering The Kanji keyword in bold, and then other keywords found in KANJIDIC. The onyomi is shown in katakana, and kunyomi in hiragana.

  • Print with SUBSET set to ODD PAGES.
  • Flip the stack of cards, re-feed.
  • Print with SUBSET set to EVEN PAGES.
  • For best results, print them on thick cardstocks available from most office supply stores.

    Remembering The Kanji Anki


    Reviewing The Kanji

    Thanks!

    Remembering The Kanji Ebook

    Data for the files came from KANJIDIC by Jim Breen. Additional data for RTK3 is by John Vold. Also thanks to Denis Fabrice of kanji.koohii.com (visit his site for more RTK!) and earlneath for forwarding me the RTK3 file.

    Remembering The Kanji Pdf

    Anki