Kanji Symbol Lesson
I have finally managed to work out how to blog in both Japanese and English so I thought I would post a kanji symbol lesson. In this lesson we will focus on just one kanji symbol and see how it can be used in a number of Japanese kanji compound words. Did you know that a kanji character can have several readings. A single symbol will almost aways have an on-reading and a kun-reading. The on-reading of a kanji character (音読み・おんよみ) is the Chinese based reading. Kanji originated in China, and Japan started to adopt and adapt the writing system in the 4th century. On-reading kanji often have the same or very similar pronunciation to the Chinese version of the kanji. The kun-reading (訓読み・くんよみ) is the Japanese reading of the kanji.
Watch the video kanji lesson below.
Let’s revise!
車 has two readings; くるま and しゃ. Which one is the Chinese reading?
Here are the questions and vocabulary from the video;
車をもってますか - Do you own a car?
車をもってません - I don’t own a car
車はたかいですね - Cars are expensive
車 - くるま - kuruma – car
車椅子 - くるまいす - kurumaisu - wheelchair
自動車 - じどうしゃ - jidousha - motor vehicle
自転車 - じてんしゃ - jitensha - bicycle
書庫 - しゃこ - shako - garage
駐車所 - ちゅうしゃじょ - chuushajyo - car park
車輪 - しゃりん - sharin - wheel
What did you think?





