![]() ![]() China's numbers keep rising, from hopeful and happiness index, and quality of life, economy, GDP per capita, even life expectancy, where China has recently overtaken USA already.Ĭhina is rising in all metrics that matter. USA and most of the west had like 40% or less, and declining. It was top 3 with Switzerland and Norway. When asked the question if your country had the right amount of democracy, China was ranked first with 71% of Chinese agreeing. This is incredible.Īlso in a recent democracy index/poll done by Latana, a European/Swiss agency, China ranked first in the world when it came to democracy as rated and ranked by their own people(which is all that matters, since no one would care what Chinese ranked USA democracy or vice versa). ![]() China's government enjoys a 95-98% approval rating(95% from 2003-2016 Harvard study, and 98% from poll done after covid). Most of the language data and media files used in Kanji alive are freely available under a Creative Commons CC-BY license.Corruption is hard to judge or rank objectively or compare between different countries.īut all that matters is what the people think and feel. Tip: If you’d like a copy of the radicals tables in a format better suited for printing or if you’d like to re-use this data in another application, please visit our open-source repository on GitHub. For these reasons we created Japanese Radicals, an open-source font derived from Source Han Sans with 60 custom glyphs which add support for every Japanese radical and variant. The font is freely available for private or commercial use. Placing your mouse pointer over any position symbol in the radical table reveals its Japanese name.įonts: Many of the radical characters shown on this list are not supported by the Japanese fonts widely used on Windows, OS X or Linux (some not even in Unicode). To avoid ambiguities amongst the different kinds of “enclosed” radicals, search for these in hiragana. ![]() For example, to view all radicals in the “hang down” position, type たれ or “tare” into the search field. Use the radical positions table as a reference. Tip: You can also use the table’s own search field to search/filter radicals by position. Clicking on the “a variant of.” link scrolls the page to the original version of that radical. This is also a good way to focus on just the most important radicals. Alternatively you can click on a column heading to sort the entire table by that heading. However you can also focus on a specific stroke number or look for individual radicals by using the “Search” field at the top of the table. Tip: By default, the radicals in the list below are presented in ascending stroke order. Please consult our User Guide to learn about additional search options. With our web application ( ) you can search for kanji by radical name, stroke, meaning or position using the Advanced Search syntax (for example, rjn:miru or rjn:みる to search by Japanese name, rs:7 to search by stroke number, rem:see to search by English meaning, and rpos:かんむり or rpos:tsukuri to search for kanji by the position of the radical). Radicals which wrap around the bottom of a character As a result they do not fall into any one of the seven categories. In those cases, the kanji and the radical are one and the same, and thus the position of the radical in the kanji is irrelevant. ![]() Please note that some kanji are also radicals in and of themselves (such as 大, 日, 月). Radicals are categorized into seven main groups according to their position within a kanji. That is why you will find differences in the Japanese names for the radicals on different websites and dictionaries. But there are certain commonly-used names. There are no official Japanese names for radicals. Not all 214 radicals are in use in current Japanese but you will soon become familiar with the most important ones and their variants. The meaning of this kanji is “to hold”.įor this reason it is very important to learn each kanji’s radical, as well as the meaning(s) of its radical. The meaning of this kanji is “poetry, poem”. 詩: The radical of this kanji is 言 (words, to speak, say). 時: The radical of this kanji is 日 (sun, day, time). Note how each radical imparts its meaning to the kanji: The left part of these kanji is their radical. The right part of these three kanji is the same but the left part is different. Please take a look at the examples below. Each radical has a meaning(s) and lends its meaning(s) to the kanji of which it is part. There are 214 historical radicals derived from the 18th century Kangxi dictionary.Įvery kanji without exception only has one radical / 部首 (ぶしゅ). 部 (ぶ) means a group and 首 (しゅ) means a chief (head/neck). Kanji are classified in kanji dictionaries according to their main components which are called radicals (roots) in English and 部首 (ぶしゅ) in Japanese. ![]()
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