There are two basic ways to find a kanji, via some reference
(its encoding, or perhaps its index number in one of various dictionaries),
or by describing some aspect of the character.
- Via SKIP Pattern
--
If you want to find a character that you can see, but don't know how to
pronounce, I highly recommend Jack Halpern's SKIP method. It is the method
I use most often, and feels very natural.
In the search form, enter the pattern of the character you want.
If you can't count the strokes properly, you can give filename-like
patterns, a'la ``1-8-*'' and ``1-[678]-3''.
- Via Reading
--
You can list multiple readings for the target characters, separated by
spaces or commas. Note: there is no ``fuzzification'' of the reading --
if you enter ``ko'', you'll not find ``kou'' readings. Letter case
does not matter, however.
You can be very specific with your request. For example, if you give a
reading with a period in it, it marks where
okurigana begins. Therefore, ``ka.eru'' would
find
but not
, while ``kae.ru''
would do the opposite. If you want a reading without okurigana, end it with
a period. ``kaeru.'' would find
.
If there is no period, it will ignore okurigana differences. ``kaeru''
would find all three of the above (and more).
- Via Number of Strokes
--
If you know the total number of strokes, you can enter it here. Note that
if you are searching via the SKIP pattern, it makes little sense to enter
the number of strokes since that information is encoded in the pattern
itself. You can use the filename-like patterns here as well.
- via radical number
--
for when you know the standard radical number
(as given in most kanji dictionaries,
although not Spahn and Hadamitzky's). You can use the
filename-like patterns here as well.
- via the four-corner code
--
the four corner system code, which is apparently popular in china.
you can use the filename-like patterns here as well.
- via pinyin readings
--
you can list multiple pinyin (Chinese) readings, separated by spaces
or commas.
- via korean readings
--
you can list multiple korean readings (using the Republic of Korea's
Ministry of Education style of romaji), separated by spaces or commas.
- via general english tags
--
the database has some english tags associated with some characters.
the coverage is spotty. you can list multiple words, separated by spaces
or commas.