| Kanji Pict-o-Graphix: Over 1,000 Japanese Kanji and Kana Mnemonics (Zzz) | 
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Avg. Customer Rating:   (based on 50 reviews) Sales Rank: 45992 Category: Book
Author: Michael Rowley Publisher: Stone Bridge Press Studio: Stone Bridge Press Manufacturer: Stone Bridge Press Label: Stone Bridge Press Languages: English (Original Language), English (Unknown), English (Published) Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 216 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.1 Dimensions (in): 7.9 x 7.9 x 0.8
ISBN: 0962813702 Dewey Decimal Number: 495.682421 EAN: 9780962813702 ASIN: 0962813702
Publication Date: June 1, 1992 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description Japanese written characters, or kanji, have their origin in a picture-language developed in ancient China. Over time this language evolved into stylized abstract forms that are difficult to memorize. This delightful book presents 1,200 kanji with readings, main definitions, standard printed forms, and visual and text mnemonics to make them easier to remember. Fully indexed and cross-referenced. Winner of several international design awards.
Amazon.com Review How does one learn kanji, the characters of written Japanese? The traditional approach is rote memorization. Japanese children write each kanji hundreds of times at their desks, and eventually they are acquired. Michael Rowley offers a different way, a mnemonic-association approach that provides a hook on which to hang the meaning and retrieve it easily when the kanji comes into view. The concept is simple: each character is represented under the word or concept it stands for (such as turf, bamboo, eat, or duty), followed by the pronunciations of the word in Chinese and Japanese, and a drawing that captures the meaning and resembles the character enough so that it'll come to mind whenever the kanji is seen. Organized thematically in chapters such as "Power," "Places," "Tools," "The World," "Food," "People," and "The Body," Rowley's book lets you learn the root symbols before teaching the words that add to them for further meanings. For example, the character for water is a splatter of three dashes that Rowley pictures as three splashing water drops. Later, you see that steam, float, boil, dirt, and bathe all build on the water character. For steam, there's the water character plus a series of lines that Rowley exaggerates to resemble swirling, vapory tendrils, and the association helps. Building on units of memory and relationship, recall is aided considerably by the simple yet evocative drawings. Rowley even manages to help with the hiragana and katakana syllabaries, providing appealing pictures that look a bit like the letters in question and begin with the same sounds. So the na letter looks like a knot, nu resembles Rowley's drawing of noodles held by chopsticks, and it's easier to remember which symbol means te when you picture a telephone pole. It's hard to do Rowley's book justice with words, since the visual element is what makes it tick. He does a wonderful job, blending insight, imagination, and drawing technique, in a book that far surpasses the old rote method, making kanji learning both appealing and accessible. --Stephanie Gold
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| Customer Reviews: Read 45 more reviews...
  japanese ? easy... November 30, 2008 a fun way to (try) to learn kanji... you can even give signs on passing (japanese) trucks a go ! you'll be surprised...
  Okay if you know what you're looking for September 19, 2008 I'm self teaching myself Japanese and Kanji definetly is a hard hurdle to master. While I've only so far used this book to learn Kanji (along with [...]), suffice it to say you need quite a few different methods/tools to learn this difficult aspect of Japanese language. While this book is helpful if you know what you are looking for (by looking back in the glossary for the corresponding Japanese romanji term), it's too much to just to go through and try to learn all of the words, unless you're looking for words you like, like love or whatever. Also, the pneumonics aren't the best in the world, but believe it or not it is actually more helpful to me with my kana then the kanji. While this may be a helpful addition to your collection, I'd say research a bit more before buying this book. If you do, just note that you'll definetly need more than this book if you want to become good at Kanji.
  Good for Learning Japanese, but Not Chinese August 30, 2008 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
I am a student of both Japanese and Chinese. When I came across this book, I thought it would be fabulous to kill two birds with one stone since the description said that it had both Japanese and Chinese pronunciation. It does have pretty helpful Japanese pronunciation (although there should be hiragana to make it less confusing) but the Chinese pronunciation is from 2,000 years ago. How helpful is Chinese pronunciation from 2,000 years ago to a student learning modern colloquial Mandarin Chinese? I find the description to be very misleading since it has convinced many people that the pronunciation is modern Chinese.
Despite not being able to use this as a study aid for Chinese, it's still very helpful in learning Japanese. I don't use this as my primary way of learning kanji because the number of pictures can be overwhelming and confusing but it's a good reference guide. When using this book, just make sure to pace yourself.
  Good for beginners, but soon becomes limiting July 19, 2008 This is a fun book to flip through, perhaps with younger learners of Japanese, but the visual method espoused by the author becomes somewhat forced and cumbersome for serious adult learners. A more thorough and systematic approach that breaks Kanji down into radicals such as the book by Henshall or Heisig is more useful.
Nathan Dummitt author of Chinese Through Tone & Color
  A good source for learning the Japanese writing system June 18, 2008 This book is really helpful for remembering Kanji, and it's got a section at the beginning for Hiragana and Katakana as well. Its mnemonics are creative, helpful, and an original way that makes 1,985 joyo kanji not seem so bad (though I think that this book doesn't have every single one of them.) I recommend this book to anyone learning Kanji for whatever reason.
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