Hey guys,
For those who don't know, "Hiragana Times" is a monthly Japanese magazine that has all articles translated into English AND Japanese(with furigana over every kanji). The magazine itself costs $60/year for the digital edition with includes MP3 files(great for listening practice) for certain articles in every issue. But they do hae a couple of sample pages on their website every month.
The best part is that since it's a PDF, you can actually copy and paste all of the kanji text. So I'm starting my own project to copy/paste all the kanji text and enter them through Jim Breen's translate words page. It automatically creates a vocab list (with word, pronunciation, and meaning) for any text that you paste inside the box.
So I'm starting my own project to create vocab lists for articles(maybe just the sample pages for now) and enter them into Anki. So I'll know ALL the kanji and words that appear in any article I read. Study the kanji and vocab and then read the article knowing all the kanji/vocabulary. An ideal vocab builder IMHO.
I doubt I can actually type in all the sentences, since you're supposed to buy the magazine to read the content.
Anyway, I'll post the Anki file late tonight.
For those interested, here are links to the sample PDFs and MP3 for this month's issue.
http://www.hiraganatimes.com/hp/magazine...nth-E.html
P.S. From my experience, after a few months they just started sending me the magazine anyway(even though I only ordered the digital copy). Not sure if this was a mistake or not.
For those who don't know, "Hiragana Times" is a monthly Japanese magazine that has all articles translated into English AND Japanese(with furigana over every kanji). The magazine itself costs $60/year for the digital edition with includes MP3 files(great for listening practice) for certain articles in every issue. But they do hae a couple of sample pages on their website every month.
The best part is that since it's a PDF, you can actually copy and paste all of the kanji text. So I'm starting my own project to copy/paste all the kanji text and enter them through Jim Breen's translate words page. It automatically creates a vocab list (with word, pronunciation, and meaning) for any text that you paste inside the box.
So I'm starting my own project to create vocab lists for articles(maybe just the sample pages for now) and enter them into Anki. So I'll know ALL the kanji and words that appear in any article I read. Study the kanji and vocab and then read the article knowing all the kanji/vocabulary. An ideal vocab builder IMHO.
I doubt I can actually type in all the sentences, since you're supposed to buy the magazine to read the content.
Anyway, I'll post the Anki file late tonight.
For those interested, here are links to the sample PDFs and MP3 for this month's issue.
http://www.hiraganatimes.com/hp/magazine...nth-E.html
P.S. From my experience, after a few months they just started sending me the magazine anyway(even though I only ordered the digital copy). Not sure if this was a mistake or not.
Edited: 2009-05-20, 9:47 am
