Vocabulary dictionary

Kanji dictionary

Grammar dictionary

Sentence lookup

test
 

Forums - Recommendation for Kanji study vectors?

Top > renshuu.org > Questions about renshuu



avatar
ovander
Level: 390

Hi, renshuu recommends three study vectors so as to not get too bogged down in quiz questions. I’m wondering which 2-3 would be best to study. Should I go Kanji Meaning + Kunyomi + Onyomi readings, or Kanji Meaning + Radical? Or another combination?

0
1 year ago
Report Content
avatar

I have two kanji schedules with different vectors. The main one has meaning, on’yomi and kun’yomi. The other, which has many fewer kanji, has radicals, stroke counts and character writing. I find that this works fairly well for me.

1
1 year ago
Report Content
avatar

I'd say, it depends on your goals and your available time. Radicals are a help sometimes, but meanings & readings are more important in my opinion.

1
1 year ago
Report Content
avatar
ovander
Level: 390

I have two kanji schedules with different vectors. The main one has meaning, on’yomi and kun’yomi. The other, which has many fewer kanji, has radicals, stroke counts and character writing. I find that this works fairly well for me.

Interesting. How did you go about choosing which kanji make it to the radical subset?

0
1 year ago
Report Content
avatar

I started with Kanji Kentei - and worked up from there.

0
1 year ago
Report Content
avatar
Level: 668

You may want to keep an eye on which terms you see the kanji with, then check the dictionary and see if it's a kunyomi or onyomi reading and study from there. Consider making one schedule for kunyomi readings and another for onyomi readings if your terms do not encompass most of the common readings. I only recommend doing this because I toggled both kunyomi and onyomi on for my main kanji schedule and had a lot of issues with unusual readings popping up in the quizzes. (e.g. I knew the kunyomi reading but not the onyomi, so the question made no sense.)

You may want to approach radicals and stroke order AFTER you have a lengthy vocab including the kanji and a good grasp on their uses. Stroke order likely comes with repeated kanji drawing practice, while radicals usually make more sense when you already know the kanji by heart. (Some radicals are blatantly obvious while others are less obvious, so you can make radical studies easier by starting with the simplest kanji and working up from there.)


1
1 year ago
Report Content
avatar
Anonymous123
Level: 1432

I do: Onyomi Readings, Kunyomi readings, Kanji meaning

And then for my Vocab schedules I use fill in the blank questions, where I write out the kanji using the hand-writing input tool, so I can get practice writing the kanji.


1
1 year ago
Report Content
avatar
ovander
Level: 390

Oooo maybe I’ll try this. I was trying to figure out an easy way to take the kanji I’m studying and do reviews of writing practice to drill the Mnemonics and meanings. Idk what the best way is to go about doing exactly that though. I tried duplicating my main kanji schedule and setting it to only quiz Writing but it tried to teach me kanji I hadn’t yet got to on my main schedule.

0
1 year ago
Report Content
avatar
Level: 668

I tried duplicating my main kanji schedule and setting it to only quiz Writing but it tried to teach me kanji I hadn’t yet got to on my main schedule.


Have you tried setting the schedule to prioritize the review first? If you click the gear next to the schedule name and scroll down, there should be an option that looks like this:


0
1 year ago
Report Content
Getting the posts




Top > renshuu.org > Questions about renshuu


Loading the list
Lv.

Sorry, there was an error on renshuu! If it's OK, please describe what you were doing. This will help us fix the issue.

Characters to show:





Use your mouse or finger to write characters in the box.
■ Katakana ■ Hiragana