I know this topic is old, but I wanted to share my experience with Kanji and was interested in the experience of other autistic ppl..
UndercoverAlien wrote:
I'm studying japanese but why so many kanji signs to learn!??
isn't it a bit sick to learn 50000 kanji signs (and no i didn't mistyped
really 50000 kanji characters in total (i even tend to read somewhere
it where 80000+)) how is that even possible, i whant to learn japanese
but i can't learn so crazy much... also seems likethey learn only 1945
of them in school but its still to much, waay to much
You really don't need to know 50.000 Kanji. Currently the japanese kids are learning 2136 Kanji at school and newspapers and magazines are using those as guidline. So you can easily survive in Japane just knowing those 2136.
Even in Japan, just a very view Japanese ppl know all Kanji and there are rare Kanjis hardly ever used who even most Japanese ppl won't have ever seen.
At the beginning I thought it's highly komplex learning Kanji, but I figured out two things really fast:
a) learning Kanji is not that much different, than learning vocabulary.
b) I learn Kanji even faster than vocabulary.
So very often I picked up the meaning of the Kanji very very fast, but need a lot longer to remember the Japanese vocabulary to it.
Yesterday I looked at 30 random Kanji in the morning for just a view minutes and looked at them this morning again and I was suprised that I still recognised every single one of them. What you have to know is, that I need a lot longer to learn vocabulary. So I propably could learn easily the meaning of 50-100 Kanji a day. I haven't tryed it so far, but some Kanjis I even picked up subconsiously. So even now in the beginning, my knowlege of Kanji is far better than this of the Japanese vocabulary.
Some ppl are visual learners and others are auditive learners.
I have to say, that I'm dyslexic, so I thought at the beginning learning Kanji would be highly difficult for me, but the oposite is the case, because I don't have to remember any random spelling, for me the Kanjis are like little pictures with a meaning to it and most of the time those are highly logical to me.
So it really depends what type of learner you are...!
---------------
edit:
twoshots wrote:
Although the most complicated Chinese character still in use:
.svg/120px-Bi%C3%A1ng_(regular_script).svg.png)
is cooler looking,
Made up of 58 strokes, the Chinese character for "biáng" is one of the most complex Chinese characters in contemporary usage, although the character is not found in modern dictionaries or even in the Kangxi dictionary.
_________________
"I'm astounded by people who want to 'know' the universe when it's hard enough to find your way around Chinatown." - Woody Allen