Joined: Jan 2010
Posts: 247
Thanks:
0
I understand that the standard ultimate source for kanji in the 15-volume 大漢和辞典, but this source is pretty much out-of-reach for me at the moment (in more ways than one).
For the meaning of extremely rare kanji, what online resource comes closest to the 大漢和辞典? (It doesn't have to be free.)
At the moment, I'm looking for the meaning of 鬳. If anyone knows of a source that gives an actual meaning for it, please let me know. (EDICT gives pronunciations for it but no meanings.)
TIA!
Joined: Mar 2007
Posts: 3,851
Thanks:
0
KANJIDIC's (EDICT doesn't have kanji definitions) definitions are pretty much worthless. I use 漢字源 for all of my lookups and it hasn't failed me yet. If you want a bilingual dictionary the best one is the big brother of the Kodansha learner's dictionary: NTC/ Kenkyusha New Japanese-English Character Dictionary (NJECD).
Edited: 2010-05-13, 12:20 pm
Joined: Feb 2007
Posts: 915
Thanks:
5
I don't know a suitable on-line dictionary, but as for that character 鬳, the KanjiGen (in my denshi jisho) suggests it is a "good quality three-legged food-steaming utensil".
Joined: Mar 2007
Posts: 3,851
Thanks:
0
Err, that's not really a story.
I can't give any input on that specific character since it seems to not even be encoded in S-JIS, so I am unable to look it up in my EPWING dicts (nor are most other Japanese software programs able to make use of the character since Japan is slow at implementing unicode).
It seems to be a Chinese hanzi that is given some use with proper nouns in Japanese (referring to Chinese arts) though.
Edited: 2010-05-13, 11:40 am
Joined: Aug 2008
Posts: 676
Thanks:
0
I'm kind of curious as to how you encountered that character in the first place.
Joined: Feb 2007
Posts: 915
Thanks:
5
鬲 by the way, is radical number 193, but it isn't treated as a unit or named in RTK. Meaning is "three-legged food-steaming utensil" (for story-building maybe call it "tripod" for short). Among the Joyo kanji it also appears in 融 and 隔.
So 鬳 = 虍 + 鬲. "Tiger" add the sense of high quality.
Joined: Aug 2008
Posts: 3,289
Thanks:
0
If you're good enough at Japanese, Kanjigen is definitely what you want to use when it comes to kanji. I use it mainly for understanding the difference when a word can be written using several kanji, but kanjigen contains it all.
Joined: Oct 2009
Posts: 3,944
Thanks:
11
No, the Kanjigen is all Japanese. (The character doesn't seem to be in my denshi jisho...) I don't know of any resources that give meanings of very rare characters in English. I think the general assumption is that if you can't read Japanese you probably don't need to know what they mean.
Where did you encounter this character?
Edited: 2010-05-13, 9:35 pm
Joined: Feb 2007
Posts: 915
Thanks:
5
Are you asking how I found the character in my denshi jisho? I used multi-radical look-up, i.e. typed in かなえ & とら (for 鬲 and 虍) which gives seven possibilities including 鬳.
Edited: 2010-05-14, 9:11 am
Joined: Oct 2009
Posts: 3,944
Thanks:
11
What denshi jisho do you have? Does it have characters beyond the JIS1 and 2? I tried かなえ and とら also, and the only result I get is the old form of 献. I tried stroke count and other methods to and I couldn't get it to come up.
Joined: Mar 2007
Posts: 3,851
Thanks:
0
The official iphone kanjigen app from logovista has JIS1-4 (kanjigen 4th edition)
My denshijisho is the same (Casio dataplus 3 XD-GW6800)
My EPWING is considerably older (1993) so only has JIS1-2
Edited: 2010-05-14, 10:13 am