トランスクリプトEnglish

Kanji 101: How Kanji Actually Work

11m 29s1,897 単語269 segmentsEnglish

全トランスクリプト

0:00

When you're in Japan, you'll see kanji,

0:02

kanji, kanji, kanji everywhere and you

0:05

feel like so intimidated to start

0:07

learning kanji or you just overwhelmed.

0:09

But in this video, we're going to go

0:11

over how the kanji works so you'll feel

0:13

less intimidated and also you'll find

0:15

the patterns of learning kanji. So let's

0:18

just dive into it. So what is kanji used

0:21

for? In Japan, we have three different

0:23

writing systems, right? Hiragana,

0:25

katakana, and ki. Do you know why we

0:28

have three and how are they used? Well,

0:30

let's say that we only have hiragana.

0:33

And look at this sentence. Oh, it's so

0:35

hard to read. Where is the word? Where

0:38

is the function words like particles?

0:40

You can't tell because unlike English,

0:42

we don't have space in between words.

0:45

So, it makes it actually super difficult

0:47

to read only with one type of writing

0:50

system. So, we do this. Now, this is

0:53

read as

0:56

>> [laughter]

0:57

>> Do you get that? When we see this, it

0:59

kind of looks like emoji. So the kanji

1:03

works like emoji. You can kind of glance

1:05

at it and get the meaning right away.

1:07

And this actually means garden. Na is to

1:11

and counter for birds. Nia is roosters

1:15

and is there is. So there there are two

1:18

roosters in the garden. So how Japanese

1:20

see it is something like this.

1:24

It's like emoji. So it's like garden two

1:27

wings and the rooster and eer. So let me

1:31

go back to the three writing systems and

1:33

how each one is used. The first one

1:35

hiragana is used for basically grammar

1:38

and also word endings and simple words.

1:41

And katakana is for foreign law words

1:43

and also ontopia like pika pika or kira.

1:48

You know pika pika is not just Pikachu.

1:50

And kanji is like a meaning at a glance.

1:53

It has both meaning and sounds. Hiragana

1:57

and katakana only have sounds, but kanji

1:59

has meaning. So, it's easier to skim

2:02

read. And a lot of Japanese learners and

2:04

also Japanese people actually say that

2:06

they prefer kanji because it makes it

2:09

easier to read. And also, a lot of

2:11

people like kanji over katakana. So, if

2:14

you've learned katakana already, you've

2:16

already done the hard part. So, good

2:18

job. Now that you know why Japanese has

2:20

three different writing system, there's

2:22

one very important thing to remember. To

2:24

be able to read and write Japanese

2:26

sentences, you do not need to know all

2:29

of the kanji. You know, Japanese people

2:31

take 9 years to learn all of the kanjis

2:33

that are actually needed to live in

2:35

Japan. When we don't know some of the

2:37

kanjis, what we use is just hiragana. So

2:40

if you don't know a word, don't be

2:42

afraid to just write it down in

2:43

hiragana. And even as an adult when we

2:45

forget how to write it, we write it in

2:47

hiragana. I always emphasize and

2:50

emphasize it to my students, but build

2:52

vocabulary first. Don't worry about

2:54

learning the kanji or knowing the kanji

2:56

first to write a sentence. Build

2:58

vocabulary first. Like in English, you

3:01

can't spell a word that you don't know.

3:03

Like for example, let's make up a word.

3:05

Maybe lighter, you know, maybe nobody

3:08

knows, right? Can you spell it? Probably

3:11

not. And do you know the meaning? You

3:13

don't know. I don't know either because

3:14

I just made it up. Just like that. You

3:17

have to know the vocabulary and the

3:19

meaning of it first to write kanji. So

3:22

the most efficient way of learning

3:24

Japanese is to learn the grammar, how to

3:26

speak, build vocabulary and also how to

3:29

write all at the same time. So yeah,

3:31

let's finally get into kanji. What are

3:33

kanji made of? Well, kanjis are

3:35

basically a pictogram. That's where it

3:37

started. It came from how it looks. So

3:39

for example this kanji is yama which

3:42

means mountain because do you see the

3:45

resemblance from this picture or this

3:47

kanji? Do you know the meaning of it?

3:49

This is actually coming from a tree

3:51

picture. Do you see the resemblance key?

3:56

And what about this one? This is a

3:59

person. There are two ways to think

4:01

about it. The first one is a person

4:03

walking. So it's the leg part. Or the

4:06

second one which I like is someone is

4:08

about to fall

4:10

and then the other person is like oh I

4:13

got you I support you because people

4:15

can't live by oneself people support

4:18

each other right so so that's the

4:20

beginning of kanji and eventually it

4:23

became a symbol or it became like a

4:25

puzzle if it's not a pictogram it might

4:28

be something that you can't really

4:29

visualize like for example u above or up

4:33

you can't really visualize the picture

4:35

when that happens

4:37

has this line, right? This is the

4:39

standard line and then something comes

4:42

above. So that's why it has the line on

4:44

top. Another example is down or under.

4:48

There's this standard line again and

4:50

there's this stroke going down because

4:52

it's under. And then here comes the

4:54

puzzle one. The puzzle one is the fun

4:56

one. Let's bring up these two kanji

4:59

again. Kito, person and tree. And we put

5:03

these together. And now a person is by

5:06

the tree resting. So this kanji means to

5:10

rest. Oh, now you're seeing the pattern

5:12

like a puzzle. And the last one is

5:14

radical plus sound. Now before we get

5:17

into that, what is a radical? A radical

5:20

is a hint of meaning or category. For

5:23

example, if it has a person radical,

5:25

it's something related to humans. Or if

5:28

it has a hand radical, it has something

5:30

to do with hands or hand movements. Or

5:34

if it has the water radical, it had

5:37

something to do with water. Here's an

5:39

example. This is sun kanji and sun

5:42

radical. And if it goes with the blue,

5:45

which controls the sound, it means

5:47

sunny. H. Now let's put water radical

5:52

plus blue. This means clean. Because

5:56

when water is blue, that's clean water.

6:00

Or if [clears throat] it goes with a

6:02

word radical and blue that means to

6:06

request.

6:08

And then lastly when it has a heart

6:11

radical with blue that means feeling

6:14

like you know feeling blue. So these

6:16

radicals give a hint of meaning. So

6:19

that's how radicals work. Now see the

6:21

patterns. I was showing the radicals on

6:23

the left side but it doesn't just appear

6:25

on the left side. It can be on the

6:27

right. It can be on the top. It can be

6:29

at the bottom and also it can go around

6:32

it. It depends on the radical and the

6:34

kanji itself. Now if you've learned

6:36

kanji or if you know more about kanji

6:38

you might think ah that's not the reason

6:40

why we think kanji is difficult. It's

6:42

because kanji has multiple readings.

6:45

Mhm. So kanji has a meaning and sounds

6:49

multiple readings for single kanji. And

6:52

there are two types of readings. One is

6:54

oyomi which is Chinese reading and the

6:56

other one is kyomi which is Japanese

6:59

reading. So kunyomi why do we have to

7:02

well oyomi Chinese reading is how

7:05

Chinese pronunciation sounded to

7:08

Japanese ears back then and the kunyomi

7:10

the Japanese reading is the original

7:13

Japanese words. To explain why we have

7:15

two different types of reading we have

7:17

to go back in history. Japanese people

7:19

found kanji, Chinese characters in

7:22

China. And Japanese people thought,

7:24

"What a beautiful writing. Can we use

7:26

that?" Because back then, Japanese had

7:29

our own spoken language, but we didn't

7:31

have the writing system. So, we wanted

7:33

to use something to write, but we

7:35

couldn't invent it. Beautiful kanji next

7:37

door. So, can we use it? That time,

7:40

Japanese people learned that each

7:42

character has a meaning and sound. So,

7:45

this is what happened. Whoa, what a

7:47

beautiful writing. What is that? Oh,

7:49

this is

7:55

H. What does that mean?

7:58

But well, it means mountain. Oh,

8:00

mountain. Mountain is sun. Okay. Okay,

8:03

we're going to use that.

8:06

But wait, we already have a word that

8:09

means mountain, which is yama.

8:13

You know what? We're going to use them

8:14

both. So that is the beginning of a

8:18

nightmare.

8:18

>> I say nightmare because I personally

8:20

didn't like learning kanji growing up.

8:22

>> So I see your struggle. So that's why I

さらにアンロック

無料でサインアップしてプレミアム機能にアクセス

インタラクティブビューア

字幕を同期させ、オーバーレイを調整し、完全な再生コントロールでビデオを視聴できます。

無料でサインアップしてアンロック

AI要約

動画コンテンツ、キーポイント、および重要なポイントのAI生成された要約を即座に取得します。

無料でサインアップしてアンロック

翻訳

ワンクリックでトランスクリプトを100以上の言語に翻訳します。任意の形式でダウンロードできます。

無料でサインアップしてアンロック

マインドマップ

トランスクリプトをインタラクティブなマインドマップとして視覚化します。構造を一目で理解できます。

無料でサインアップしてアンロック

トランスクリプトとチャット

動画コンテンツについて質問します。AIを利用してトランスクリプトから直接回答を得られます。

無料でサインアップしてアンロック

トランスクリプトをもっと活用する

無料でサインアップして、インタラクティブビューア、AI要約、翻訳、マインドマップなどをアンロックしてください。クレジットカードは不要です。