What They Never Told You About Kanji: 六書

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  • čas přidán 17. 10. 2017
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Komentáře • 238

  • @timw9976
    @timw9976 Před 6 lety +897

    I break immersion for your videos

    • @PlzCa1mDown
      @PlzCa1mDown Před 4 lety +12

      Does immersion work? Do you have any tips or suggestions?

    • @jameschoi9399
      @jameschoi9399 Před 4 lety +39

      @@PlzCa1mDown yep but its hard work and you dont really see any drastic output until a year later

    • @PlzCa1mDown
      @PlzCa1mDown Před 4 lety +32

      @@jameschoi9399 I live in Japan, married to a Japanese man, and i feel like it is torture being "immersive" while in a relationship. He speaks English so that's what we use, and when we use Japanese, I feel I can't express myself correctly. Any tips for immersion while in a relationship?

    • @jameschoi9399
      @jameschoi9399 Před 4 lety +4

      @@PlzCa1mDown czcams.com/video/1ZjQe5U25uo/video.html highly recommend this video a watch! He explains how he does immersion while living in a nonjapanese household with a wife and kids. Immersion can be as easy as listening to japanese while driving to work or watching anime while doing household chores.

    • @PlzCa1mDown
      @PlzCa1mDown Před 3 lety +2

      @Dougann yeah! That's actually a good idea! I seriously appreciate your reply. Living in a mixed house is so stressful so sometimes we just "Say it in __language__!" Lol

  • @pointfivepercent5260
    @pointfivepercent5260 Před 4 lety +246

    1:10 thanks for the shoutout man

    • @lesthermiranda1794
      @lesthermiranda1794 Před 3 lety +7

      😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

    • @benza8946
      @benza8946 Před 3 lety +5

      LOL

    • @ammyvl1
      @ammyvl1 Před 3 lety +5

      LOL

    • @CsMsLady80
      @CsMsLady80 Před 6 měsíci +1

      🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @robeeer2
      @robeeer2 Před 5 měsíci

      LOL

  • @DuneGuy796
    @DuneGuy796 Před 4 lety +331

    . _ .
    This just made Kanji 10,000% easier.
    Thank you.

    • @evagenesiz7802
      @evagenesiz7802 Před 3 lety +7

      yeah somewhat easier, damn i hope i've seen this video early!!

  • @SquirrelASMR
    @SquirrelASMR Před 9 měsíci +337

    I kept asking an Asian kid what these characters meant in a book he was reading, and he just kept saying "that's candy"... then I'd pick a different symbol and he'd say "that's candy" and I was so confuses because every word was candy I thought he was reading willi Wonka or something...
    now 2 decades later I realize he was saying kanji, not candy.
    But why was he just telling me everything is kanji? He's the weirdo. If someone was asking me what an English word was, i wouldn't say "that's a word" or "that's letters"

    • @spaghettiking653
      @spaghettiking653 Před 7 měsíci +62

      That's a funny story, lol. He probably wanted to just teach you his name for those funny runes that he's reading, but it never crossed his mind to actually say what they mean.

    • @saltedmutton7269
      @saltedmutton7269 Před 6 měsíci +12

      maybe it was a menu

    • @theshisho
      @theshisho Před 6 měsíci +4

      Get over it man 😂 don't say yes to vengeance

    • @iruleatgames
      @iruleatgames Před 5 měsíci +14

      It's because you were being extremely annoying. I assume you were a kid at the time too, so nothing wrong with that, lol.

    • @theshisho
      @theshisho Před 5 měsíci +3

      @@iruleatgames 😂😂😂

  • @5IRAHHHP
    @5IRAHHHP Před 6 lety +533

    i think its safe to say you know this language inside and out, and even if that may somehow be an overstatement. you have an amazing wealth of knowledge. i think that is awesome of you, and am thankful for you giving us subscribers help on getting to where youve gotten!

  • @clayhamilton3551
    @clayhamilton3551 Před 5 lety +189

    After watching this video and then going over my Anki kanji reviews, I started noticing the keisei characters a lot. There were a lot of kanji that made a lot more sense after realizing that one part represented the sound and not part of the meaning.

  • @SB-hs4yn
    @SB-hs4yn Před 6 lety +63

    Bonus points; read the wiki article about 六書 In Japanese and get some good sentences.

  • @sailor5853
    @sailor5853 Před 4 lety +39

    Oh my, that actually helped me.
    I read numerous times that kanji have sometimes characters that dictates the meaning and the pronounciation but i didn't take it seriously (maybe because I thought it was not that common and I cannot tell right and left apart instintively) but the visual proof made me see it was right before my eyes.

  • @spaghettiking653
    @spaghettiking653 Před 7 měsíci +22

    2:37 For the record, this rule never was hard-fast, rather it was always a mnemonic device that may happen to be slightly off. For example, 軍 was 'kun' in Old Chinese, but 揮 was 'qʷʰər' or 'qʰul', so you can see they are quite different, despite sharing a phonetic component. The manifestation of this in modern Japanese is even clearer, namely ぐん vs き. Apparently totally unrelated. So these differences in the original pronunciations can add up!

  • @DopeSpace9
    @DopeSpace9 Před 6 lety +65

    I liked that touch at the end where you classified 終。 Great vid.

    • @kingo_friver
      @kingo_friver Před 2 lety +2

      But I believe 終 isn't a 形声文字 but a 会意文字, and also believe neither 糸 nor 冬 is pronounced "syu". It is obscure how 糸 + 冬 can mean 終 but my guess is, if you have enough 糸 (yams/fabric) you will survive until the end (終) of 冬 (winter).

    • @davidzwb
      @davidzwb Před 2 lety +1

      @@kingo_friver By checking dictionary, I guess It's a mixture of 形声, 指事 and 会意 , in Chinese 終 reads zhong while 冬 reads dong, they have similiar parts. Also 冬 was originally a pictograph of a thread with both end knotted and through 指事 to mean the end, later it's used to mean winter(as the end of a year) while 終 is created to mean the end through 会意.

    • @kingo_friver
      @kingo_friver Před 2 lety

      @@davidzwb Sounds more true. Mine looks stupid after seeing it lol Thank you!

  • @Streetsweeper12
    @Streetsweeper12 Před 6 lety +37

    That tip was really useful in regards to guessing the pronunciation of certain kanji. Thx

  • @tatyanaiysckaya7579
    @tatyanaiysckaya7579 Před rokem +2

    Thank you so much! This now makes so much more sense and shows on what to pay attention when learning a new kanji!

  • @JordynX096
    @JordynX096 Před 6 lety +2

    Glad to see that you're making videos!!

  • @languagepepe2855
    @languagepepe2855 Před 6 lety +60

    This is weird; you haven't uploaded in quite a while but I just finished your 3hr AJATT video and find a new upload straight away haha

  • @GataZGinkgo
    @GataZGinkgo Před 6 lety +5

    big ups for BBNG, glad I discovered your channel

  • @letsgetfunky8493
    @letsgetfunky8493 Před 4 lety +6

    Holy god, this makes so much easier kanji. Im gonna try it eventhough i wasnt doing like that. I was learning summarising kanji like 1+1 with the most easy ones (and making histories or remembering of some kind of anime), but I didnt know there are radicals for the most complex kanjis. Thanks a lot dude, this get me out of just remember repetitive. Also before learning japanese, I was applying your method but indirectly (I didnt notice until you explain it in you channel). BIG LIKE to this video.

  • @AkasakaS2000
    @AkasakaS2000 Před 4 lety +55

    I must say I am really impressed with the depth of your level of kanji knowledge. In Hong Kong/Macau/Taiwan we learned the (nearly) the same kanji and we all learned 六書, but no one really remembers it after high school.

    • @hisokabeatbox9053
      @hisokabeatbox9053 Před rokem +5

      This kinda stuff is in introductory textbooks that noone here seems to read lmao

    • @Recard109
      @Recard109 Před 6 měsíci

      NO, not really . For me, as an Taiwanese can I truly distinguish between the kanji and know how to define it by 六書 rules.

  • @VexedVII
    @VexedVII Před 3 lety +1

    Wow I’m so glad I discovered this video, thank you

  • @hasrihashim9136
    @hasrihashim9136 Před 6 lety +4

    damn. awesome info man!

  • @yun0ny4
    @yun0ny4 Před 5 měsíci

    I have been on the kanji grind lately and i cannot believe i didn't know this absolutely life changing information before. thank you so much

  • @tacticolfire
    @tacticolfire Před rokem +5

    0:18象形
    0:40 指事
    1:13 会意
    1:44 形声
    5:22 広辞苑

  • @RealJohi
    @RealJohi Před 2 lety +1

    love your music choice!

  • @percyk6884
    @percyk6884 Před 3 lety +1

    finding this channel has been the best thing that has happened to me all year. incredibly useful.

  • @DengueBurger
    @DengueBurger Před 3 lety

    one of the single most helpful videos on kanji

  • @elizakeating8415
    @elizakeating8415 Před 8 měsíci +11

    As a Chinese leaner for whom hanzi have become pretty second nature and are very well suited to the language I'm learning, I feel so sorry when I look over at Japanese learners who are expecting Kanji to make sense at face value - videos like yours are so important for helping people overcome that barrier, and I wish this concept was better taught in Japanese education circles.
    Also interestingly, I always assumed that the phonetic elements of characters were easier to identify in Chinese than Japanese, and of course given the prevalence of kunyomi readings in Japanese that is largely true, but although Japanese onyomi is phonetically limited, its in some situations much closer to middle Chinese than Mandarin chinese is, which has had some wild sound changes. The example of 講 and 構 that you mentioned happens to be a perfect example, because in Mandarin they are pronounced jiang3 and gou4 respectively, a far cry from the neat phonetic consistency that's preserved in Japanese!

    • @TheMexikanKaktus
      @TheMexikanKaktus Před 7 měsíci +5

      Actually in this case the Mandarin pronunciation reflects Middle Chinese more closely, since Japanese borrowings simplified the -ng ending and 講 came to sound like 構 in Japanese. These two characters weren't even perfect homophones in Old Chinese, which shows that the system had it's flaws from the very start.

    • @cuddledog142
      @cuddledog142 Před 7 měsíci +1

      Dude I studied Chinese up to HSK 5 and looking at Japanese Kanji I can recognize most instantly but I don’t know how the fuck people memorize the readings… multiple pronunciations, multiple syllables for one character, no real pronunciation “hints” in the characters…. Literally it’s such a turn off, it almost makes me want to give up on Japanese lol

    • @honjorwang3339
      @honjorwang3339 Před 6 měsíci

      普通话比日语更接近古汉语,日语只是假借汉字,

    • @K0rp0
      @K0rp0 Před 6 měsíci +1

      @cuddledog142 - the WaniKani learning method really helps. Focus on the most common onyomi and kunyomi reading first, then learn alternative readings with vocabulary else they never stick. The most useful/most common readings will repeat over and over and stick in your mind, the rest you learn through exceptions. It really helps.

    • @cuddledog142
      @cuddledog142 Před 6 měsíci

      @@K0rp0 Thanks for sharing man :)

  • @kinarast
    @kinarast Před 3 lety +1

    OMG DUDE THANKS MAKES SO MUCH SENSE

  • @bryanchristopher75
    @bryanchristopher75 Před 5 měsíci

    Thanks for sharing this information👍
    This is very usefull

  • @DengueBurger
    @DengueBurger Před 4 lety

    Dude this was such a good video

  • @OrangeC7
    @OrangeC7 Před 4 lety +38

    Me at the end of the video: "Oh too bad I'm not good at Kanji yet"
    Me when a tip is put at the bottom of the screen: "Oh. Too bad I'm still not good at Kanji yet"

  • @thevillianess4266
    @thevillianess4266 Před 2 lety

    Thank you soo much for solving my probelms...it helps alot!

  • @owenlogue4634
    @owenlogue4634 Před 2 lety +2

    wow thanks for the video, it explains a lot, I always thought it was weird how many homophone sounds there were for kanji that look similar haha (I remember 儀 and 義 etc. coming up a lot), I thought that would have made it hard for someone who hadn't done rtk but turns out there's a reason

  • @Fire-Manz
    @Fire-Manz Před 4 lety +24

    I'm starting to learn Japanese and chose to seek how kanji is and this made it more simple for me as a introduction. I am hoping I can become a translator later in life so I can translate many things in the future!
    Other words, MORE CONTENT!

    • @denyl_6987
      @denyl_6987 Před 2 lety +2

      How’s it going now?

    • @ellipsis3522
      @ellipsis3522 Před 2 lety +1

      I hope you are learning kanji by reading text and not in isolation...

    • @arnelarboleda2870
      @arnelarboleda2870 Před 7 měsíci +1

      How about now?

    • @Fire-Manz
      @Fire-Manz Před 7 měsíci +1

      @@arnelarboleda2870 Pandemic hit hard so ... not really. Good news, family is doing well now(mother gotten cancer and I had the rona a few times) so hopefully after the holidays I start over.

    • @arnelarboleda2870
      @arnelarboleda2870 Před 7 měsíci

      @@Fire-Manz cool, btw im starting this year and given myself a 5 year timeline for spoken Japanese.

  • @holotape
    @holotape Před 6 lety

    Thank you!

  • @five-toedslothbear4051
    @five-toedslothbear4051 Před 6 měsíci

    Thank you! I’m studying Kanji about three different ways right now, and none of them have really gotten as far into how Kanji are put together as this video has.

  • @Riurelia
    @Riurelia Před 4 lety +4

    0:50
    This reminded me of something. The French youtube channel Le Rire Jaune mentioned how 1, 2, and 3 in Chinese is just one, two, and three lines, then jokingly said that 10,000 is written with 10,000 lines.

  • @drepen5946
    @drepen5946 Před 4 lety +8

    I'm Japanese but have never learned this system in my life.

  • @Phantom_madman
    @Phantom_madman Před 6 lety +4

    Hey matt you actually made the video haha awesome

  • @tenchi19134
    @tenchi19134 Před 6 měsíci +1

    You just made kanji way easier.
    This video feels like my textbooks had an important page torn out and this is that missing important page.

  • @charondolls
    @charondolls Před 3 lety

    Another nice jazz music

  • @bioniclegoblin6495
    @bioniclegoblin6495 Před 3 lety +4

    The pronunciation principles never made perfect sense in the sense that the pronunciation would be unambiguous. However, they did make more sense, because later on some of the sounds and (especially) sound combinations moved farther and farther apart from each other.
    For Example:
    艮跟根, 懇, and 很狠恨痕 are all -en with slightly different velar consonants at the beginning (g/k/h), as well as four different tones. 銀 yín and 眼 yǎn* used to start with a velar consonant as well: the velar nasal ŋ (≈ng) - but that got dropped in Mandarin. Like 眼 yǎn, 限 xiàn and 艱 jiān also had a vowel that was somewhat different to the one in 艮. The two vowels moved apart, and when the vowel of 眼/限/艱 shifted, it triggered a sound shift in the preceding consonant, thus making the difference even more prominent.
    In Cantonese however, 艮, 銀, 限 etc. still sound quite similar to each other.
    *yan and -ian are pronounced roughly like how you would pronounce "Yen" in English

  • @davekachel
    @davekachel Před 4 lety +1

    This is some serious knowledge o_o

  • @KabooM1067
    @KabooM1067 Před 6 lety +1

    WOW. Where do you learn this stuff? This is so interesting. It'll actually make guessing the meaning without knowing the kanji a bit more plausible.

  • @garrettwgg
    @garrettwgg Před 6 lety +1

    All the thumbs up

  • @bobnotthesponge3761
    @bobnotthesponge3761 Před rokem +3

    you explained so good and made memorizing kanji so much easier that i was like "aaaaaahhhhhhh so that's why" through the whole video

  • @vitusk8
    @vitusk8 Před 6 lety

    Great explanation. Kanji is really intimidating initially, so this should be very helpful for beginners.

  • @opauloantonio
    @opauloantonio Před 6 lety +5

    very informative, thanks for the video! could you please provide more info about koujien? is it a desktop program or a website (or maybe both) ? I couldn't find it on Google or maybe I just didn't pay enough attention to the results...

    • @mattvsjapan
      @mattvsjapan  Před 6 lety +4

      If you watch my video titled "AJATT Tips: How to Make Sentence Cards", I explain how to obtain a desktop version of koujien. There is no online version as far as I know of.

  • @citrusblast4372
    @citrusblast4372 Před 5 měsíci

    2:10 damn Mayan hieroglyphs work like that too

  • @shiuryuu
    @shiuryuu Před 6 lety +11

    This concept is covered in RTK2 (the one that everyone ignores) and Heisig gives a thorough treatment for learning the phonetic components of 形声-class characters.
    Also, if it's of any interest to you, the book Difficult Characters edited by Mary S. Erbaugh has an article written by Sachiko Matsunaga, "Are Chinese Characters Ideographs?" (Chapter 4), that discusses this topic. To quote some statistics from the article, the number of characters that work like this for Chinese is 90% and for Japanese is 66% (close to the number you mentioned).
    The difference can be explained by realizing that this trick for remembering character readings only works if we're talking about the on'yomi of the character. That is to say, the difference it proportional to the number of loan Chinese words vs. native Japanese words used in contemporary Japanese.

    • @BobbyJ529
      @BobbyJ529 Před 5 lety

      is it covered in rtk2 in depth enough to warrant a purchase?

    • @spaghettiking653
      @spaghettiking653 Před 7 měsíci

      @@BobbyJ529 Doubt, pirate it instead

  • @sandra-ronjacalhoun9503
    @sandra-ronjacalhoun9503 Před 3 lety +4

    Your note on 我 was very interesting, as I (Chinese learner) so far only have come to know it as "I" as in "I am". It is pronounced wo3 in Chinese so.

    • @jonathancastro8487
      @jonathancastro8487 Před 2 lety +1

      Wǒ is Wo3? Which o e are the others ó ò and ō?

    • @spaghettiking653
      @spaghettiking653 Před 7 měsíci

      @@jonathancastro8487 ō is o1, ó is o2 ò is o4. And o (no tone) is o0 or o5 depending on your preference.

    • @jonathancastro8487
      @jonathancastro8487 Před 7 měsíci

      @@spaghettiking653 Thank you sooo much, I've never understood that

    • @spaghettiking653
      @spaghettiking653 Před 7 měsíci

      @@jonathancastro8487 It's okay, I didn't really do much :) you should go to Wiktionary, which is where they show those transcriptions (alongside the original characters of course). I think their coverage of Chinese is very interesting (you also get to see the transliterations of the other Chinese languages).

  • @hell2freelance533
    @hell2freelance533 Před 5 měsíci

    Wow!

  • @andrzejdzirba
    @andrzejdzirba Před 4 lety +9

    this dictionary you show at the end - is there an online version?

  • @esraaabdulla5437
    @esraaabdulla5437 Před 4 lety

    Oh my God. What do you do for a living? That's amazing!

  • @isaacharrison450
    @isaacharrison450 Před 4 lety +7

    Hey Matt, I thought this was pretty interesting!
    I've finished the RRTK Deck not too long ago and am about halfway through the N5 Tango deck. But I'm finding myself struggling with remembering pronunciation. I'm sure you considered this when developing MIA, but would it not be more efficient to also add the part of the 形声 characters that indicate their pronunciation to the RRTK deck along with audio? The only reason I can see why this wouldn't work is perhaps because of the many potential different readings - and that it would get in the way of in-context acquisition.
    I'd really like to hear your thoughts!

    • @teatime2688
      @teatime2688 Před 3 lety +3

      Cure Dolly goes over the most common of these. learnjapaneseonline.info/2014/12/06/the-key-to-japanese-kanji-pronunciation-meet-the-sound-sisterhoods/
      I think MIA should include something like this since it seems very helpful and doesn't take very long to do.. There's only 90 cards which you can bang out in a week doing 10-15 a day. Or just in 1-2 days since they arent that hard to remember.

    • @xXJ4FARGAMERXx
      @xXJ4FARGAMERXx Před 3 lety +6

      I feel like the problem is that they aren't 100% reliable, so your best bet is just to learn readings in context, because trying to learn which ones have which reading has the same problem as trying to learn when to use which onyomi with which words.

    • @x123Juancho123x
      @x123Juancho123x Před 3 lety +2

      I'd suggest making mnemonics for pronunciations. Try to think of something that kinda sounds like the word and that correlates to the meaning (or use it in a phrase that contains the meaning of it). Here's a great example of that: www.reddit.com/r/LearnJapanese/comments/fcfqak/heres_a_mnemonic_i_use_to_remember_the_word_for/
      Sometimes I think of 2 words in which the first 2 letters of each make up the pronunciation of the word I'm learning, while the rest of the phrase tells the meaning. You can also use other Japanese words or even names. It can be hard sometimes and many of my mnemonics are stupid as hell, but I still find that it makes it much easier to remember.

    • @isaacharrison450
      @isaacharrison450 Před 3 lety +1

      @@teatime2688 Thank you for this! While I understand that it isn't 100% reliable (sort of in response to those who are against it for not being a consistent rule), this relationship between sounds and radicals makes a lot of sense!
      It seems very similar to the concept of mnemonics used in RTK too. Even If it isn't 100% consistent, that doesn't seem like a problem, as the things I learn from in-context immersion/study will eventually help build up this subconscious archive of intuition "rules" and how things interact with one another within the language. Like Matt had stated in the OG version of MIA (now Refold?), the point of this kind of kanji study/revision is to be quick and messy - what sticks will stick, and what doesn't will eventually be learned though immersion. I won't need to focus too heavily on learning grammar rules etc. as I'd gain the intuition from the immersion.
      I think my only possible concern for this would be potentially building bad habits that I'd need to fix. Perhaps that wouldn't be an issue depending on how I study it and how religiously I follow the rules.
      SO as a starting place to help speed up my ability to recognise the pronunciations of words even if it's only like 65%, it's still better than the 10% I'm understanding right now :')
      I'll definitely make use of this tool! Thanks and all the best!

  • @sheepcommander_
    @sheepcommander_ Před 5 měsíci

    nice

  • @CodeProvider
    @CodeProvider Před 5 lety +4

    idk why i just foujnd your channel now. tkyosam mentioned u

  • @exploshaun
    @exploshaun Před rokem +1

    I learned this from Chinese class and forgot all of them.

  • @fratervital793
    @fratervital793 Před 6 lety +4

    Matt, what's your opinion on Kenneth G. Henshall "The Complete Guide on Japanese Kanji"? It actually explains this topic as "Formational Principles of the Chinese Script". The reason I brought this because I'm using kanji etymology from this book as a "story" for remembering the kanji. I'm feeling that this way I can actually understand the origin and evolution of each kanji - sometimes in a non-verbal way like an idea or image.
    If we take 銅 as an example: "Has 金 "metal" and 同 "same" as phonetic with associated sense generally taken as "red" (Mizukami also notes alternative interpretations "flow through" and "cavity, cave"), to give "red metal" i.e. "copper".
    So it's not like they randomly take 同 and call it a day - they choose this homophone because of some phonetic association with "red".
    I can see why the usual "take a kanji and make up your own story" way worked in the past - when all you have is just a list of this "alien language" symbols and your goal is to load them in your head - you probably can't do anything else. But now, when we have access to etymology researches - why don't incorporate this stuff into your learning process from the day one?
    Do you know people who went similar way? Because I'm a beginner (5xx RTK at this moment) and maybe I just can't see some potential difficulties or pitfalls of this approach.

    • @mattvsjapan
      @mattvsjapan  Před 6 lety +4

      I also thought to take that approach, but ended up giving it up for the following reasons. In case you gave of 銅, what you are talking about works pretty nicely, but more often than not this is not the case. For example take "染". originally this character comes from "氿" and "木", but 氿 does not exist in modern Japanese. That means that learning the etymology of this character would mean memorizing a whole new character that is no longer even used. But that is still one of the more simple cases. Due to corruption over time, many current characters do not resemble their original etymology at all. Check out the etymology for 鬱: www.reddit.com/r/LearnJapanese/comments/77c0p6/what_they_never_told_you_abou_kanji_%E5%85%AD%E6%9B%B8/dolhc0z/
      Not to mention that the etymology of many characters is either unknown or still debated among scholars. After looking into it, I came to the conclusion that trying to learn the modern day kanji based on their etymology would be MUCH more work than simply making arbitrary heisig-style stories. And the other half of the issue is that ultimately, unless you are an academic scholar of kanji, knowing the etymology of characters is completely useless. Japanese people themselves do not know them, and I can't think of a single situation in which knowing them would come in handy besides being able to showing off obscure knowledge. In the situation in which you have a "close to the original etymology but slightly difficult to remember" story, vs a "completely arbitrary etymology-wise but very easy to remember" story, if your goal is simply native like fluency in Japanese, it makes more sense to me to choose the second one.

  • @sushee.3928
    @sushee.3928 Před 2 lety +1

    Godmode

  • @carmcam1
    @carmcam1 Před 6 měsíci

    Kanji is a pain to learn, but i enjoy looking for patterns that is why I enjoy learning it as well.

  • @silvershot970
    @silvershot970 Před 6 lety +4

    So this explains what I see in 広辞苑 qolbori when I search for kanji.

  • @gerardjacquemier5137
    @gerardjacquemier5137 Před 4 měsíci

    Explication remarquablement claire!

  • @judaronen
    @judaronen Před 3 lety +1

    BTW, Wiktionary has relevant information about this under the ‘Glyph origin’ section of the Chinese parts.

    • @spaghettiking653
      @spaghettiking653 Před 7 měsíci

      These are a total godsend for learning kanji. True treasure they exist man

  • @kirby7379
    @kirby7379 Před 5 měsíci

    Wow I just deeply learned something fuck

  • @hritesh7
    @hritesh7 Před 2 lety

    銅its make sense with meaning like 金 is gold and 同 same that means metal looks like gold is copper.

  • @kinarast
    @kinarast Před 3 lety +2

    Even when it's a 形声, I still tried to make sense of the kanjis 😂

  • @Blue0_o
    @Blue0_o Před 7 měsíci +1

    How/Where can i practice and study the remaining 62.5% of the kanji the way it was explained in this video?

  • @JanusXX
    @JanusXX Před 4 měsíci

    It a riddle you have to solve in order to read

  • @Zothiqueness
    @Zothiqueness Před 2 lety +1

    ARE YOU FUCKING KIDDING ME!?

  • @ChronicleLP
    @ChronicleLP Před 2 lety

    This is actually eye-openingly mind-blowing! 👁👃🏼一
    ... or mind-blowingly eye-opening? 一👃🏼👁

  • @SM-un9nz
    @SM-un9nz Před 4 lety +1

    Ik it's a bit old but is the 広辞苑 free to use? And where can i find it

  • @user-uj5gf3ix7z
    @user-uj5gf3ix7z Před 6 měsíci

    Learning is a long process,if you learned a enough time,then it will be remembered naturally, even native will forget a bit of kanji

  • @katsubokatsubo1562
    @katsubokatsubo1562 Před 2 lety +2

    これなぁ、小学校でやるけど結局覚えてないんよなぁ。

  • @ririj1234
    @ririj1234 Před 6 lety +8

    Sooo, would you recommend learning kanji in steps via these 4 categories?!

    • @mattvsjapan
      @mattvsjapan  Před 6 lety +10

      no: czcams.com/video/TgRte6oSoF8/video.html

  • @myartchannel8205
    @myartchannel8205 Před 4 lety

    Alsi if you can spot the sounds, wouldn't they tell you the meaning of each character in isolation?

  • @6kmanu
    @6kmanu Před 6 lety

    hey dude personally what do you think is the best way to learn kanji? and about this immersion thing where you read 10,000 sentences everyday, do you have to know kanjis before you try it or you just have to suck it up and eventually you will get used to it?

    • @mattvsjapan
      @mattvsjapan  Před 6 lety +4

      Guess what, I actually have a video called "Why RTK is the best way to learn Kanji". Oh and also guess what, I have a video called "How to Learn Japanese | AJATT Overview/Timeline".

    • @6kmanu
      @6kmanu Před 6 lety

      Thanks i''ll check that out!

  • @gauthamvadlamudi3500
    @gauthamvadlamudi3500 Před 4 lety +1

    Can anyone tell where can we find these details of types of kanji, how different kanji are used for and how their pronounciation can be known for a English speaker.

  • @TheKittenKait
    @TheKittenKait Před 4 lety +1

    I was so surprised to hear this! They didn't even tell us that when I studied in Japan!
    But one question, when you have a kanji that consists out of three parts, how do you figure out which one defines the pronounciation? For example if you have 怒?

    • @tmfan3888
      @tmfan3888 Před 4 lety

      This is tricky, you must first know most of the "meaning-defining radicals"(部首)。these MDRs usually dont define the pronunciation. After removing the MDR, the "remaining radical" (only regard it as a single radical at this point)(偏旁)defines the pronunciation. This "remaining radical" now can be classified into either会意or形声。if it's会意then it defines the pronunciation, if it's形声then you need to further divide it into 2 smaller radicals and decide which defines the pronunciation.
      Im writing this in a HKer's perspective, but六書in JP kanjis are more or less similar in principle, though they also invented some new kanjis which also fit into these 6 categories.

  • @diegocastillo5400
    @diegocastillo5400 Před 2 lety

    3:15 does 形声 explanation about meaning/pronunciation supposed to work where the radical moves from left to right as in 静 and 晴? Both onyomi are SEI.

    • @cumonodalio3938
      @cumonodalio3938 Před 11 měsíci

      yes, because 青 onyomi is SEI, and radicals could be at anywhere.

  • @user-uj5gf3ix7z
    @user-uj5gf3ix7z Před 6 měsíci

    漢字萬歲,感謝日本人的發揚

  • @kingo_friver
    @kingo_friver Před 2 lety +4

    I wanted to hear your own narration at the beginning, not in that bland machine voice. Your voice is awesome both in English and in Japanese.

  • @jaspermatt1
    @jaspermatt1 Před 6 lety +1

    What program do you use to view the Kojien 😇?

    • @mattvsjapan
      @mattvsjapan  Před 6 lety +3

      It's called, "qolibri", watch my video "AJATT Tips: How to Make Sentence Cards (SRS)" to learn how to set it up.

    • @jaspermatt1
      @jaspermatt1 Před 6 lety +2

      MATTvsJapan brilliant thank you!

  • @goodlyricsmixsongsikuze6622

    do you have without music version

  • @Alex43198
    @Alex43198 Před 5 měsíci

    Does anyone know where to get the dictionary online?

  • @leocomerford
    @leocomerford Před 3 lety

    1:50 So it wouldn’t be too badly wrong to think of the _kanji_ as meaning “the metal, _do_ “?

  • @in2it85
    @in2it85 Před rokem +1

    *who ever created Kanji was a Sadist.*

  • @chillepics4752
    @chillepics4752 Před 5 měsíci

    more like pictogram way of remembering kanji's

  • @honjorwang3339
    @honjorwang3339 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Kanji don’t have 六書.It just was borrowed Chinese characters from China.

  • @shinkikomori7386
    @shinkikomori7386 Před 7 měsíci

    oh ym fucjign god the whole keisei thign is the coolest fucking thing

  • @roryjamieson8439
    @roryjamieson8439 Před 3 lety

    Hey why has no one told me this?! lol

  • @DengueBurger
    @DengueBurger Před 3 lety

    I remember I used to not understand/pay attention to that intro definition lol, now I understand it

  • @user-lp9cd7bd4n
    @user-lp9cd7bd4n Před 2 lety

    Three semesters Japanese in 5 minutes

  • @WolfLink64
    @WolfLink64 Před měsícem

    Nice but that still doesn't explain why sunrise plus moon, 胆, means gallbladder lol.

  • @kokopelli121123
    @kokopelli121123 Před 2 lety

    What about the rare instances like 蚊, where the first kanji gives you the vague idea, and the second gives you the sound the animal makes :)

    • @ketchup901
      @ketchup901 Před rokem

      The onyomi for that is ブン :)

    • @kokopelli121123
      @kokopelli121123 Před rokem

      @@ketchup901 Do you know a word that uses 蚊 with the ぶん reading? I'm fairly certain the origin really is the sound a mosquito makes, but it would make sense that if 蚊 needed to be given an on'yomi reading in a word ぶん would be picked.
      edit: Actually not that certain. A Japanese person explained it this way to me, but on further research I don't think it's an accurate origin story. Too bad :(

    • @ketchup901
      @ketchup901 Před rokem

      ​@@kokopelli121123 I didn't know any, but I looked it up just now and it seems that there are a few obscure ones. 蚊虻 (ぶんもう) , 蚊雷 (ぶんらい), 蚊母鳥 (ぶんぼちょう), 聚蚊 (しゅうぶん).
      But it doesn't really matter if there's an actual word using that onyomi because kanji weren't "given" onyomi, they were imported from China where they already had a reading. However, it could actually be that 文 was chosen as the phonetic component because of the sound mosquitoes make. This is what 漢字源 says.
      《解字》会意兼形声。「虫+音符文(こまかい模様)」。あるいは「もんもん」という羽音をまねた擬声語か。
      So to answer your original question it would be a combination of 会意 and 形声, which is actually pretty common in general.

    • @kokopelli121123
      @kokopelli121123 Před rokem

      @@ketchup901 There actually are some characters that were given on'yomi, for example, 働. This kanji is native to Japan (rather than China), but was later given an onyomi reading. Most characters invented in Japan have no onyomi however like 込 and 峠.
      Anyway, I was way off about 蚊. I was given a verbal origin story for it and never looked it up.

    • @ketchup901
      @ketchup901 Před rokem

      @@kokopelli121123 Yeah yeah, you're right that there are some characters that were made in Japan.

  • @ken-cf7tf
    @ken-cf7tf Před 4 lety

    background music is too loud

  • @Happy-_
    @Happy-_ Před 6 lety +3

    so... rtk 2?

    • @mattvsjapan
      @mattvsjapan  Před 6 lety +8

      naw, skip it. learn how to read kanji in context through learning words. just try to keep an eye out for these kinds of patterns

  • @shinkikomori7386
    @shinkikomori7386 Před 7 měsíci

    sorry but this is so fucking cool

  • @steve5123456789
    @steve5123456789 Před 6 lety +1

    3.45 What about the function of the second kanji in it? What does that do, and what roll does it serve?

    • @ChickenSundae
      @ChickenSundae Před 6 lety

      The kanji on the right 演means perform ~ and kou 講 has the meaning of speak because of the particle 言. It does this because it is 形声. So what does perform + speak get you? Lecture. Which is the meaning of 講演

  • @obscurus1344
    @obscurus1344 Před 4 lety

    is there a list of all the shoukei kanji anywhere?

  • @solarrain1176
    @solarrain1176 Před 7 měsíci

    "But because pronunciation change over time...and we are learning Japanese not Chinese..."
    Actually, Chinese is 10 times more messy. For example, Many kanji that have 工 in them(e.g. 工 江 紅 肛 ) have the same pronunciation( Kō) in Japanese, but in Chinese they are all pronounced differently(工gong 肛gang 紅hong 江jiang).

  • @Carrymejane
    @Carrymejane Před 5 měsíci

    Bruh u broke the subtitles