After searching a bit and not finding one, I made a deck containing JLPT1 words that are usually written with hiragana and katakana alone. After learning the kana, I wanted to drill myself on real words, and it seemed like it would be best to study useful words that were not usually written with kanji.
You can find it here:
https://ankiweb.net/shared/info/430037146
I took this list, and removed everything that had a kanji entry: http://www.tanos.co.uk/jlpt/jlpt1/vocab/combined
This left about 1000 words, about 500 hiragana and 500 katakana, with a few mixed ones (mostly katakana verbs + る).
Unfortunately, I have no way of actually checking if it's accurate. I've checked a bunch of them by looking them up on jisho.org, and most of them have the "usually written with kana alone" annotation, but some don't, like "あかんぼう", which jisho.org lists as "赤ん坊". Also, there are some weirdos, like "ぶどう", which I can't find anywhere written in hiragana.
Are there any kind souls out there who have a good grasp of written Japanese who would like to help me in checking that the words on it are actually usually written in kana?
Also, even just checking the first couple dozen to make sure that at least it's not totally wrong would be super helpful :–)
You can find it here:
https://ankiweb.net/shared/info/430037146
I took this list, and removed everything that had a kanji entry: http://www.tanos.co.uk/jlpt/jlpt1/vocab/combined
This left about 1000 words, about 500 hiragana and 500 katakana, with a few mixed ones (mostly katakana verbs + る).
Unfortunately, I have no way of actually checking if it's accurate. I've checked a bunch of them by looking them up on jisho.org, and most of them have the "usually written with kana alone" annotation, but some don't, like "あかんぼう", which jisho.org lists as "赤ん坊". Also, there are some weirdos, like "ぶどう", which I can't find anywhere written in hiragana.
Are there any kind souls out there who have a good grasp of written Japanese who would like to help me in checking that the words on it are actually usually written in kana?
Also, even just checking the first couple dozen to make sure that at least it's not totally wrong would be super helpful :–)
Edited: 2014-04-23, 4:02 pm
