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Accurate alternatives to EDICT? - Printable Version +- kanji koohii FORUM (http://forum.koohii.com) +-- Forum: Learning Japanese (http://forum.koohii.com/forum-4.html) +--- Forum: General discussion (http://forum.koohii.com/forum-8.html) +--- Thread: Accurate alternatives to EDICT? (/thread-5604.html) Pages:
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Accurate alternatives to EDICT? - resolve - 2010-05-27 You can get a portable PC version of the Goddess for about 16,000yen. It's in EPWING format which can be read on OSX/Linux/Windows and on the iStuff with an EPWING viewer app. Accurate alternatives to EDICT? - caivano - 2010-05-27 Groot Wrote:Thanks for the many suggestions. Caivano, an electronic dictionary sounds interesting, but as I already have an iPad, I'm not inclined to add another device to my arsenal! Still, I'm curious which one you use, and how it accepts handwriting -- do you have to use a stylus? Does it "talk" to you?I know what you mean, I have too many devices as it is :$ I have a http://www.sharp.co.jp/brain/lineup/pw-ac890/ and you use a stylus on a pad thing and yes it can talk. most handy thing is probably just the history though. I can go through later and add all the words I looked up whilst reading to anki. I'm pretty sure ipad apps would have this too. Accurate alternatives to EDICT? - Tobberoth - 2010-05-27 Groot Wrote:Thanks for the many suggestions. Caivano, an electronic dictionary sounds interesting, but as I already have an iPad, I'm not inclined to add another device to my arsenal! Still, I'm curious which one you use, and how it accepts handwriting -- do you have to use a stylus? Does it "talk" to you?和英 means J-E. It's made for Japanese wanting to learn English, but it works just as well either way. Accurate alternatives to EDICT? - BlackMarsh - 2010-05-27 Javizy Wrote:Some of the stupidest English usage I have heard has been from my girlfriend after using Eijiro's J-E lookup.One of my Japanese friends told me to my great surprise one day that he often disembarks one station early in order to jerk off before work. After getting over the inital shock of my friend's admission I wondered if ALC was to blame as I knew he often used it. Sure enough: http://eow.alc.co.jp/%E7%84%A1%E9%A7%84%E3%81%AB%E6%99%82%E9%96%93%E3%82%92%E3%81%A4%E3%81%B6%E3%81%99/UTF-8/ Accurate alternatives to EDICT? - Groot - 2010-05-28 So do all the dictionaries for the iPhone and iPad rely on the device's limited kanji recognition? The dictionaries I've used apparently use the Chinese input for the iPhone. Is Wisdom or the Green Goddess any different? Accurate alternatives to EDICT? - Katsuo - 2010-05-28 I think some EDICT-based dictionaries have their own handwriting recognition. E.g. Shinkanji-search-free (This is part of the main Shinkanji app, is free, and just demonstrates the input methods including handwriting. The complete app is 700 yen). @Is Wisdom or the Green Goddess any different? I don't think any of the well-known J-E dictionaries have their own handwriting recognition at present. Monokakido, the company that makes the Wisdom and Daijirin apps, has recently added handwriting input to the latter, so I wonder if they will extend that to their Wisdom app as well. Maybe they think the Wisdom app will be used mostly for E-J and therefore it's not so necessary. We could bombard them with begging letters. Of course if you also have the Daijirin you could write in that, then copy & paste to the other app. It's time-consuming, but would work. Accurate alternatives to EDICT? - Groot - 2010-05-29 Thanks for pointing me to Shinkanji, Katsuo. That handwriting recognition is much better! Now if only it would let me write an entire compound instead of just a single kanji -- then it would really be great. As is, I can quickly retrieve a single kanji, but then I have to wade through a long list of unsorted compounds and hope I find the right one (if it's there at all). At least Shinkanji can quickly give me a reading for the first character in a compound; but then again, I'm getting better at guessing readings anyway. It's frustrating. Heisig has given me the skill to write out 3 or 4 characters very fast, in correct stroke order; it's a shame none of these iPhone/iPad apps let me use that skill! Those that permit one to input more than one kanji ("Japanese") have bad handwriting recognition; and those that have good handwriting recognition ("Shinkanji") only permit me to write one kanji. Where's the app that lets us do both?
Accurate alternatives to EDICT? - chamcham - 2010-05-29 bucko Wrote:HAHAHHAAHAHAHAHAHAHA!!!!!!!!Javizy Wrote:Some of the stupidest English usage I have heard has been from my girlfriend after using Eijiro's J-E lookup.One of my Japanese friends told me to my great surprise one day that he often disembarks one station early in order to jerk off before work. After getting over the inital shock of my friend's admission I wondered if ALC was to blame as I knew he often used it. Sure enough: That's the funniest thing I've read all day. Wow. Imagine if Japanese girls started to use "jerk off" in the way. Scary...... :-p Accurate alternatives to EDICT? - Daichi - 2010-05-31 I dunno how good they are but http://en.wiktionary.org/ and http://ja.wiktionary.org/ . Since they are wiki based, they could only get better over time. Accurate alternatives to EDICT? - pm215 - 2010-05-31 Daichi Wrote:I dunno how good they are but http://en.wiktionary.org/ and http://jp.wiktionary.org/ .Well, jp.wiktionary.org says "this wiki does not exist yet" so it can scarcely become less useful :-) In any case, EDICT has a fairly easy to use process for submitting corrections and new entries, so it also gets better over time, and it has a huge head start here... Accurate alternatives to EDICT? - Daichi - 2010-05-31 pm215 Wrote:Well, jp.wiktionary.org says "this wiki does not exist yet" so it can scarcely become less useful :-)Doh, that's cuz it's http://ja.wiktionary.org . But anyway, the Japanese one gives you definitions in Japanese. You can type japanese (or just about any other language) words into the English wiktionary for english definitions. |