dhanyavaada Wrote:Maybe I am so slow because I enjoy this learning method so much, fearing that it will once end ... I seem to be more interested in the path than in the result.
Taking your time is fine, but don't worry about running out after 800 characters under your belt (nice accomplishment, BTW!) - the real path doesn't end with RtK.
According to:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kanji
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hanzi
2,928 人名用漢字
6,335 JIS X 0208:1997, the most recent version of the main standard
85,568 Hanzi Zhonghua Zihai Dictionary (Chinese)
That's if you are only interested in Kanji. If you want to learn real Japanese vocabulary (熟語), I'm sure there are tens of thousands of those to learn.
Also, note that it may seem odd to add the Chinese Hanzi there, but in actuality, it's perfectly legal to "coin" new Japanese words by using Hanzi. You will see it done in popular literature from time to time, but I'm sure you can ask a Japanese scholar how it can be done in a systematic way.
I sometimes jest about how mixed up Japanese can be, but it's often just a consequence of how flexible Japanese can be at absorbing foreign words.
In short, it would be pretty hard to "run out" of characters, so don't worry about reaching the end of the road until you get into the deep thousands or tens of thousands of characters...
One other short note: if you find that you enjoy studying Kanji more than actually learning Japanese, then consider learning Mandarin... ...knowing characters is a much larger part of learning Chinese (in comparison to Japanese), and Chinese readings are much more systematic (monosyllabic) and cleaner (usually just one reading) than Japanese.
Edited: 2008-11-07, 2:27 pm