Kanji Introduction :
A complete writing system in Chinese characters appeared in China 3200 years ago during the Shang Dynasty, making it what is believed to be the oldest “surviving” writing system (Sumerian cuneiform is the oldest known writing system originating about 3200 BCE). The Shang Dynasty oracle bone inscriptions were discovered at what is now called the Yin Ruins near Anyang city in 1899. However, due to three millennia of evolution, linkages to the modern Chinese writing system are decipherable only to linguistic archaeologists. Earlier Neolithic signs inscribed on tortoise shells and carved on cliffs date back as early as the 7th millennium BC. These pictographs may be the precursors of the modern Chinese script, although no link has been conclusively established so far.
The number of Chinese characters contained in the Kangxi dictionary is approximately 47,035, although a large number of these are rarely-used variants accumulated throughout history. Studies carried out in China have shown that full literacy requires a knowledge of between three and four thousand characters.
In Chinese tradition, each character corresponds to a single syllable.
The Japanese term Kanji literally means "Han characters". Kanji characters were first introduced into Japan when goods were shipped from China. The characters are based upon written Chinese words, as there was no written Japanese language at the time. This occurred just after the time of Christ, approximately 57 AD.
The same Kanji character can sometimes be written in two different ways, Kyujitai which is the "old character style" and Shinjitai or the "new character style.
Because of the way they have been adopted into Japanese, a single kanji may be used to write one or more different words (or, in most cases, morphemes). From the point of view of the reader, kanji are said to have one or more different "readings". Deciding which reading is meant will depend on context, intended meaning, use in compounds, and even location in the sentence. Some common kanji have ten or more possible readings. These readings are normally categorized as either on'yomi (or on) or kun'yomi (or kun).
Abigail - Kanji Name Abigail is a very popular female first name and a very rare surname. It is of Hebrew origin, and its meaning is "father of exaltation". |
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Anthony - Kanji Name Anthony is of Latin origin. English form of the old Roman family name Antonius, probably of Etruscan origin. |
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Britney - Kanji Name Britney is a name of popular modern variant of Brittany. Britney is also a very popular female first name and a very rare surname in America. |
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Ethan - Kanji Name Ethan is of Hebrew origin, and its meaning is "firmness, steadfastness, constancy". |
Hannah - Kanji Name Hannah is of Hebrew origin, and its meaning is "favored grace". This is a flora design for Hannah in Kanji |
Isabella - Kanji Name Isabella is a variant of Isabel. It is of Spanish and Latin origin. Henry James named the heroine of his "Portrait of a Lady" Isabel Archer. |
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James - Kanji Name James is a very popular male first name and a very popular surname. It is of English origin. Variant of Jacob (Hebrew) "he who supplants". |
Jeremy - Kanji Name Jeremy is variant of Jeremiah, in use since the Middle Ages. Modern use may have been inspired by a character named Jeremy on the 1960s TV series "Here Come the Brides". |
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Joshua - Kanji Name Joshua is of Hebrew origin, and its meaning is "Jehovah is salvation". Short form of Jehoshua. |
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Linsay - Kanji Name Linsay is a variant of Lindsay. It is of Old English origin, and its meaning is "Lincoln's marsh; island of linden trees". |
Logan - Kanji Name The boy's and girl's name Logan is of Gaelic origin, and its meaning is "hollow". From the word "lag". In Chinese, the name means "little hollow". |
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Olivia - Kanji Name Olivia is of Latin origin, and its meaning is "olive tree". Coined by Shakespeare as the name of a much-wooed aristocrat in his play "Twelfth Night". |
Ryan - Kanji Name Ryan is of Gaelic origin, and its meaning is "king". Also possibly (Gaelic) "water". |
Robert - Kanji Name It is of Old German origin, and its meaning is "bright fame". A favorite name for boys since the Middle Ages. |
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Sophia - Kanji Name Sophia is of Greek origin, and its meaning is "wisdom". This design constructed by calligraphy strokes from Kanji character. |
William - Kanji Name William is of Old German origin, and its meaning is "will helmet, protection". For a long time after the Norman conquest in AD 1066, three out of four English boys were given some form of the conquero |






























