![]() ![]() I have one J-J dictionary installed, for example. It’s also excellent because you can customize the dictionaries you have installed. I use it quite literally every single day. But even without adding the words to Anki, Yomichan is an excellent tool for browsing twitter or reading Japanese news pages or navigating Japanese web pages in general. So I don’t add new cards from manga that I’m reading or from other sources, because I don’t want to overwhelm myself. I’m sticking to only mining words in one particular genre/subject area right now (pro wrestling), which is the main reason I’m learning the language. It’s not always a simple process, because some people only like to add especially common words (or in my case, I only add words if I know all the kanji in them), so there’s a decision process you still have to go through when adding cards, but it does make it very, very easy to add new words on a whim, which you can delete later if you don’t end up needing them in the deck, and the whole process is very quick and painless. Thoughts? I’d love to know if there’s anything I didn’t think about that would make this a bad idea, or if there’s perhaps a better way to accomplish what I’m trying to do. The reason core decks haven’t worked that well for me is because I would keep running into words with kanji I didn’t know yet and that made remembering them much harder. I know core vocabulary Anki decks exist, but to my knowledge there’s no way to temporarily filter out cards with kanji you don’t know, and I’m feeling stubborn about not wanting to study a word until I’ve already learned all its included kanji. I know that there are a lot of vocabulary words out there, so I could see a deck like this growing to be quite large. I’d like to avoid redundancy, but at the same time it feels weird to wait to study a useful word that you know the kanji for. Aren’t taught by WK or are for some reason held off until many levels after the point where you would know all the component kanji.I wouldn’t add 大学 if I knew 大 but didn’t know 学 yet.) All the kanji in the word are ones I already know (e.g.Are considered to be “common” words (Jisho has this tag).Are not usually written in only kana (I don’t see much point in learning the kanji writing if you’re rarely ever going to see it in the wild).The general idea is that once I’ve Guru’d a kanji, I would consult a dictionary like Jisho and find vocabulary words with that kanji that fit some criteria: Added more audio and improved audio for some cards.With the knowledge that Wanikani doesn’t teach every common vocabulary word that uses kanji (it’s my understanding that the vocabulary is mainly for reinforcing readings,) I’ve been pondering the idea of gradually building my own Anki deck to supplement WK’s vocabulary list. Made some changes to make it easier to read the explanations. Hope this list helps you understand more Japanese Anime ^_^ There was some noise and stuff in the audio, but I fixed that using Audacity. You should be able to read Hiragana to use this Anki deck. This list is Easy for anyone who watches Anime, these words are so common in Japanese animation that you might already sort-of know what some of them mean.Īlmost 111 Words with Kanji, Hiragana, Meaning, Explanation and Audio (some words don’t have audio yet). Since, I am really insecure about my self image, I decided to put in some effort. I decided to make an Anki list out of it, but in order to justify putting some effort in it, I thought about sharing it afterwards. ![]() So, looked online for such lists and found Yale University’s Anime Club’s list of 100 Most Essential Words in Anime. Fellow Textfugu people, I wanted to make a list of the most reoccurring words in Japanese anime. ![]()
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