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@raseru
Yea that is true. The number of kanji is huge. But 2042 is the necessary number of kanji to know+read. I hear that the list of kanji necessary to know always goes up and there is some specific kanji that is not on the list but is pretty frequent used in japan. So I'll aim for 2042-3007 kanji in terms of reading.
Also i did take a look at the list. It only says i know 740-780. I swear i know around at least 900-1000. But seeing how it's only been 5.6 months of actively using the SRS anki for sentences and doing immersion in high quantities. I'll give myself at least a full year and then test my kanji out again.
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JxPlugin stats from my vocab deck keep an accurate tally on how much I can read. It's sitting at 1810 kanji. Climbs by 5 - 10 a day. It's a brilliant way to keep track of what you know as well as how mature it's all getting.
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@mezbup
thanks. I'm going to install that in my decks then.
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@yudantaiketi
It's one of those lists that state 2042 for joyo kanji is the amount needed for reading newspapers. Other than 2042 kanji, any other one will have furigana readings on top of them. But i know the exact number doesn't always represent what's needed.
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I can't really rate my ability because I am all over the place in each area.
But my current ability isn't is important as it continually grows exponentially.
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The number of kanji you need to "read" is far lower than 2042.
95% of the characters in a newspaper are made up of the same 1000 characters.
Edited: 2010-02-09, 10:08 pm
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Bare minimum eh. Makes sense though, you would need to know+understand context of over 3000 kanji to read some high level things. Unno where i got the exact number but it's always been stated in numerous places. Plus it's been stated by the Japanese government. But i always hear that the number of kanji "necessary" always goes up each year. So 2042 isn't exact at all.
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@Womacks23
Is that true? 1000 same characters? I gotta start reading some newspapers soon then!
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That's true. Nowadays I'm encountering more vocabulary i don't know, which leads to more context i do not know yet. A newspaper is definitely made up of vocab i probably never even heard of(yet). In terms of kanji. I want to aim around 3000 kanji. But it's not the kanji, it's the vocab of those particular kanji+ there context that will take time to reach a certain high level of proficiency or fluency in terms of reading+understanding those contexts.
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@Womacks23
When you say broad enough knowledge, i presume you mean you can figure out what's going on in terms of context by knowing those "1000 characters" right?
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@mezbup.
Thanks a lot for the site, definitely going to use it for sure.
I remember when i was starting sentence all i was worrying about is long sentences! But it's always best to start small+understand the context of those kanji+their meanings in that particular sentence. And once that's done, you go onto the next until you've reached enough level to learn it passively(in terms of one context vs another)
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Sorry I was misleading. You need about 1000 kanji and the vocabulary to read a paper, and depending on circumstances, may or may not find it difficult. The moral of the story is that you don't "need" so many characters to read Japanese.
"According to a study by the National Language Research Institute, the 500 most often kanji represent roughly 80% of the kanji found in newspapers, and 94% of newspaper kanji can be covered by 1,000 characters. In accordance with this finding, mastery of the 1,200 kanji in Levels 1-3 of this text makes for a broad, adequate knowledge of kanji. If level 4 kanji are also mastered, then the only kanji remaining are those which are rarely used. In fact, study up through Level 3 (or, depending on the circumstances, up through Level 4), should give you a more or less sufficient knowledge of kanji and useful vocabulary. All you need to do for the next step is to naturally increase this knowledge by actually reading newspaper and magazine articles and books related to your interests or field of study."
Kanji in Context - Introduction
Edited: 2010-02-09, 10:40 pm
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@Womacks23
Well yea it depends on the reader. But I've been able to understand texts before that i didn't have a clue about, just by knowing 70% of the context within the sentence. But yea it's definitely a vocab thing, not so much a knowledge of kanji. Although you need both in order to get to a high level of reading, such as newspapers+news itself.
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I don't know where that 2042 figure comes from. 常用(1945) + New 常用 (191) = 2136.
That's probably sufficient for understanding mostly everything. 1000 is definitely not enough to read a newspaper. As Mezbup said, 95% doesn't mean much.
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Yea the number of kanji always grows. Unno where i got the number from, but almost every i go, always states "2042 joyo kanji". But i think 2042 would be sufficient for majority of things. But for high level texts then 3000+ kanji and there context, full knowledge+reading+understanding of them would be enough probably for most things.
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@mezbup
Thanks for the help! I'll definitely start SRSing news sites now. I think it's time to go onto the bigger game now. Anime+manga have gotten easy for me now. So it's time to move onto more mature stuff, such as novels+news.
So i'l have a crack at the news daily and i'll get back to everyone in 1 month time on my progress, in terms of news i mean. (SRS chunk of things in the news then search them up via dictionary and go on from there)
有難う!
Edited: 2010-02-09, 10:47 pm
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The Wikipedia frequency count is even more useful than the newspaper one because it encompasses so many different types of writing on many different subjects, and the statistics were pretty similar to newspapers:
These are the statistics quoted:
173 kanji make up 50% all kanji in Wikipedia.
454 kanji cover 75% of all kanji in Wikipedia.
874 kanji cover 90%
1214 kanji cover 95%
2061 kanji cover 99%
2456 kanji cover 99.5%
3489 kanji cover 99.9%
I've said this before, but you're never going to learn every single character that you will ever see, nor will you ever get to say "OK, I'm done learning kanji." The 800-1000 range should put you in a position where kanji are no longer a huge barrier to reading. Of course that doesn't mean that you reach 800-100 and stop studying kanji. You can never stop dealing with unknown kanji and readings no matter how much you study.
(As I've also said before, the Jouyou list itself is very arbitrary. Even with the new additions, there are still a decent number of kanji on there I don't know, and a good number that aren't on there that I do know.)
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I agree completey. You're never going to know every kanji out there and there context. I remember reading there is a total of 80,000 kanji. But i think learning up to 3000 kanji is definitely enough to get by anything you see(expect the rare kanji+vocab)