Kanji alive: a free study tool for reading and writing kanji. We’re very pleased to announce the release of a new version of the Kanji alive web application. It took a lot of time, and a great deal of work in particular by our main developer, Josh Day, who put in many, many hours of volunteer time to get us to this point. We owe him and the […] The post Kanji alive v2 is now available appeared first on Kanji alive.| Kanji alive
Kanji alive: a free study tool for reading and writing kanji. We’ve just made a new test version of Kanji alive v2 available for testing under https://beta.kanjialive.com (many thanks to Tanya Gray Jones @ Oxford and Peter Thorson @ Chicago for improving the user interface and addressing bugs). A current version of Chrome, FireFox, Safari or Internet Explorer is required to use the app. Please take a […] The post Kanji alive v2 is ready for testing appeared first on Kanji alive.| Kanji alive
Kanji alive: a free study tool for reading and writing kanji. It’s been a very long time since we’ve shared news on updates and improvements to Kanji alive with our users. Kanji alive is part-time and largely volunteer effort supported by some modest institutional funding for our software developers. As a result, it’s seldom possible for us to work as quickly and efficiently as we would like. Nonetheless, […] The post An early look at the next version of Kanji alive appeared first o...| Kanji alive
Kanji alive: a free study tool for reading and writing kanji. For what seems like a long time we’ve been meaning to make the language data and media files we created to build Kanji alive freely available for anyone to use under an open source license. Well, we finally did it! Please visit our new open source repository on GitHub where you’ll find all of the language data […] The post Kanji alive language data and media files are now freely available as open source appeared first on Ka...| Kanji alive
Added support in Kanji alive for "TOBIRA: Gateway to Advanced Japanese Learning Through Content and Multimedia" by Mayumi Oka (et al), Kurosko (2009).| Kanji alive
Kanji alive is a resource for learning kanji, dedicated to helping you open the door to the fascinating characters that form the written Japanese language| Kanji alive
Kanji are classified by their radicals (roots) or 部首. The table shows all the kanji radicals with their meanings, positions, stroke numbers and readings.| Kanji alive