Components
Kanshudo site search: 39 matches
Site search shows you relevant pages on Kanshudo. SEE ALL »
Our comprehensive guide to studying and mastering Japanese kanji.
The Kanji Wheel is a personalized visualization of your entire knowledge of Japanese kanji. It's based on your 'mastery score' for each kanji in the system - an assessment of how well you know that specific kanji.
A short introduction to kanji - where they came from and what they are.
The most useful kanji to learn are the ones you will encounter most frequently. The 100 kanji here can be studied in collections of 25 and will give you a great start for reading Japanese.
Lists of the 214 standard radicals and the most common components used in kanji, together with a comprehensive list of all radicals and components used in the Jōyō kanji, together with meanings and explanations.
Ever since we started Kanshudo a few years ago, one of the most consistently requested features has been for help answering questions like...
We're very excited to introduce our newest game: Kanji Keywords! Kanji Keywords brings together two of the most important learning...
We are very excited to announce a new way to access in-depth kanji information: Thematic Bundles, from our partner Joy o' Kanji! Thematic...
Kanji Builder, along with a conversation with our founder Jonathan Kirk, was featured on Joy o' Kanji, the kanji 'deep dive' website. Joy o'...
As part of our transition to the new Japanese Mastery system, which tracks your progress with grammar and vocabulary as well as kanji in...
We're delighted to announce several improvements to the Drawing center. Drawing kanji yourself is a great way to cement them in your mind,...
We're excited to announce a new set of kanji collections on Kanshudo: our 'core' collections. We've collected and organized full sets...
We've bundled 16 more Joy o' Kanji essays to show you the connections between kanji. Bundles 15 and 16 largely focus on water. The first...
Flashcards are a great learning tool, and with the modern convenience of phones and computers, more accessible than ever. Kanshudo includes...
We recently introduced Thematic Bundles, which enable you to make connections that you might otherwise miss among groups of Joy o' Kanji...
The best way to learn Japanese kanji readings is to learn the most useful words that use them. In the same way, it is easier to learn words...
Drawing a kanji by hand is one of the best ways to truly cement it in your memory. We are delighted to announce that Kanji Draw is now...
For those of you actively studying Japanese, we have great news: a set of 42 collections of all kanji used in the very popular Japanese for...
Chopsticks are among the most useful and important implements in daily life in Japan - you literally need them to eat! Learn about the...
Manage your preference for the Daily Kanji email, a once-a-day email with details of a kanji suitable for your study level.
Your kanji mastery score is calculated from your mastery of individual kanji, so anything that improves your mastery of kanji will improve your score. For example:
Your kanji mastery will also be 'inferred' when you take a Kanji Quiz, and from other activities such as Boost. Inferred masteries will never reach 4, however - to reach 4, you need to study flashcards or take multiple Challenges over time.
For more information, see our detailed guide How to use the Kanji Wheel to guide your Japanese studies.
Our comprehensive guide to reading Japanese kanji introduces Chinese (on) and Japanese (kun) readings of kanji, gives you rules of thumb for determining how a word you encounter is read, and shows you how to use Kanshudo's search syntax for finding words that use a specific kanji reading.
The Kanshudo Component Builder is a fast and effective way to look up kanji - draw, type, or choose components from a list. This how-to guide provides detailed instructions.
Hyōgaiji, literally ('characters outside the chart') are kanji which are not classified as Jōyō or Jinmeiyō.
The Jinmeiyō Kanji is the set of 862 kanji designated by the Japanese government for use in names in addition to the 2136 Jōyō Kanji.
The Jōyō (常用) or 'daily use' kanji are 2136 kanji designated by the Japanese government for use in schools, newspapers etc. Use our collection to study them by priority or review them for reference.
Kanshudo Kanji Builder is a great way to cement your knowledge of kanji. Choose components from the list, and drag them onto the correct boxes on the grid.
In these collections we present the Jōyō kanji, organized into groups tailored to the JLPT levels. Within each level, we order the kanji by frequency so you can learn the most useful first.
Almost all kanji are actually made of smaller elements called 'components'. Kanshudo uses this fact as the basis of our learning mnemonics. Various symbols are used to define the location of components in kanji: ⿰⿱⿲⿳⿴⿵⿶⿷⿸⿹⿺⿻.
The truest test of your knowledge of a kanji is the ability to draw it! Practice or study with our standalone Kanji Draw game.
Use the Kanshudo Component Builder to quickly identify kanji components and search for kanji that contain them. Draw a component, type its name, or look it up in a list.
Choose a set of kanji to focus your studies on. Your study set is recommended for you by Kanshudo, but you can also set it manually. Challenges and other Kanshudo features use your study set by default.
The Kanshudo Challenge uses a combination of learning games and tests to help you learn a kanji with associated words and example sentences. It's the most effective way we've found for studying kanji.
Read our detailed how to guide on the Kanshudo Challenge - the most effective way we've found for studying kanji.
A quick overview of the Kanshudo approach to learning Japanese kanji: mnemonics, components, and 'cascading kanji'.
The Kyōiku Kanji (教育漢字) are the first 1006 kanji taught in Japanese schools, during grades one to six. They form the first half or so of the Jōyō Kanji. Here you can view or study the kanji in ordered sets.
Grammar point search: 3 matches
Click a grammar point's title for a preview, or the icon to go to the details view. SEE ALL »
Point of interest search: 2 matches
Word search: 244 matches
Click a word's green box for more details. Showing first 5 matches. SEE ALL »
0
noun
Chinese characters; kanji
(click the word for examples and links)
0
noun
feeling; sense; impression
(click the word for examples and links)
0
Most common form:
noun
1. plate; dish; platter; disc  (see also: お皿)
noun, noun (suffix), counter
2. serving; helping; course
(click the word to view an additional 1 meaning and 2 forms, examples and links)
0
adverbial noun (fukushitekimeishi), noun
1. weekday; ordinary days (i.e. non-holiday)
noun
2. kanji radical 73  (this meaning is restricted to reading ひらび)
(click the word to view an additional 1 reading, examples and links)
0
Most common form: 毛革
1. fur; skin; pelt
2. kanji "fur" radical  (this meaning is restricted to reading けがわ)
(click the word to view an additional 1 reading and 2 forms, examples and links)
Common name search: 4 matches
Click a name's box for more details. Showing most common matches only. SEE ALL »
ひろし   Hiroshi   (male given name)  
 (click the name to view details)
たまき   Tamaki   (female given name)  
 (click the name to view details)
ひろゆき   Hiroyuki   (male given name)  
 (click the name to view details)
かみこ   Kamiko   (female given name, surname)  
 (click the name to view details)
Kanji search: 1 match
Click a kanji's blue box for more details. SEE ALL »
クン    teaching, precept; Japanese reading of a kanji   
Please LOG IN to view this kanji's mnemonic
セン   かわ river   
Please LOG IN to view this kanji's mnemonic
katakana 'no'; whereupon; splitting away from
stick   
ゲン   ゴン   say; word   こと word, saying   い to say   
Please LOG IN to view this kanji's mnemonic
イチ   イツ   ひと    ひと- one   
コウ   ク   くち mouth   
Please LOG IN to view this kanji's mnemonic
Example search: 36 matches
Click an example's DETAILS link for grammar and inflection information. Click a word to view details for that word. Showing first 5 examples.
Results include examples of words that could be read in the same way as kanji.
SEE ALL »
 
きのうがっこうたくさんかんじおぼえました
I learned many kanji at school yesterday.
かんじテストべんきょうしたかったから
Because he wanted to study for the kanji test.
かんじテストするきょうしつ
The classroom for conducting the kanji test.
かんじテストある

The day of the kanji test.
かんじ
漢字
なんて
です
It's kanji that I like.
 
Not the results you need? Please CONTACT US.
Kanshudo is your AI Japanese tutor, and your constant companion on the road to mastery of the Japanese language. To get started learning Japanese, just follow the study recommendations on your Dashboard. You can use Quick search (accessible using the icon at the top of every page) to look up any Japanese word, kanji or grammar point, as well as to find anything on Kanshudo quickly. For an overview, take the tour.
Search results include information from a variety of sources, including Kanshudo (kanji mnemonics, kanji readings, kanji components, vocab and name frequency data, grammar points, examples), JMdict (vocabulary), Tatoeba (examples), Enamdict (names), KanjiVG (kanji animations and stroke order), and Joy o' Kanji (kanji and radical synopses). Translations provided by Google's Neural Machine Translation engine. For more information see credits.
×