6 Reasons Why Kanji is Necessary

I’ve been really surprised lately. I’ve gotten a few emails from people that ask me why kanji is necessary. “Kanji is sooo hard” they say. “Why do Japanese bother learning kanji when they could just use a phonetic alphabet? I mean, they have hiragana already, why would you need kanji when hiragana does the same thing? It seems old fashioned!”

If you’ve studied Japanese for a while, you probably know the answer. Sure, hiragana is pretty convenient when you are first starting out. Why write 寿司 (sushi) when you could write it much more simply, すし? Gosh, look at all those strokes, look at all that extra time! Both versions are two characters long, but it’s obvious that the second is easier.

Alright, I’ll admit, writing everything in hiragana would be faster…but would it be easier? Here is why you need to learn kanji, and have to use it. Learn to love kanji, folks.

1. Once you start writing sentences, hiragana is no longer readable. For example, I’ll write two identical sentences. One with hiragana only, and one normally.今日、寿司を食べに行きますか?

きょう、すしをたべにいきますか?

Do you notice the difference? The second sentence is very difficult to read. There is nothing separating the words from each other. In Japanese, there are no spaces between words, so kanji helps break words apart, making it easy to read. As I’m sure you can imagine, long sentences would get even more difficult to read, and when you don’t know where one word begins and another one ends, reading errors can occur. You could be thinking that one word is another by combining the back end of one word to the front end of another…then where would you be?

2. Kanji gives meaning to words. This sort of follows the same concept as English synonyms. In English, you just take the context and work with it. In Japanese, kanji helps give meaning to words. Let’s take the example of the word “Kanji,” since that’s what we’re working with. If you wrote kanji in hiragana, it would be more difficult to understand its meaning. If you wrote it in kanji, you could tell the difference. For example:

かんじ → 漢字
かんじ → 感じ
かんじ → 幹事
かんじ → 監事

…And the list goes on. There are many many more examples out there, but as you can see, kanji really helps to bring context to words.

3. It looks nicer when you write in kanji. Sure, this is just my own opinion, but I really think it’s true. Kanji can be very beautiful. It has a soft spot in my heart, even if the rest of my heart hates it. Japanese parents tell their kids they have to learn to write beautifully, otherwise people will judge them on their handwriting. People must think I’m a slob that makes a lot of mistakes…or a twelve year old.

4. Kanji is easier to read. “What??” You say. “Impossible!” Okay, so it’s true. Having to learn how to read kanji sucks. In the long run, though, it makes you an incredibly fast reader. I always wondered how my Japanese friends could read things so quickly. One day it hit me. Since each kanji has it’s own meaning, once you know kanji well, you can skim over things, basically one kanji at a time, and get the meaning of a sentence very quickly. You don’t have to read all the hiragana (though I’m sure people do read it, otherwise it would be unnecessary). Instead, you can understand the meaning of something just by jumping from kanji to kanji.

5. Kanji Takes up less space. You know those darn 10 page papers you have to write in English class? Psshh, you could write a 7 page paper if you were writing it in Japanese, especially if you were typing it. Typing in Japanese makes things so much easier. Kanji takes up less space than just writing in hiragana. Often times, two or three characters will be condensed into one kanji. It’s so efficient.

6. It could be worse. At least there is hiragana. For example, Mandarin Chinese is only kanji. I remember trying to learn that. Feel fortunate that you are learning Japanese, because really, it could be a lot harder.

So there you have it. Learn your kanji and learn it well. Besides, kanji is friggin’ cool. You’ll thank me when you’ve become a speed reader.

  • irene

    one week I hate kanji, the other week I love kanji… it’s a tough relationship!
    but it’s all very true what’s written here though. it’s hard work but in the end it’s so worth it.

  • Jak

    I agree, especially with #2. I’m still a beginner, but knowing what little kanji I do makes it a whole lot easier to read. Because then, sentences become like pictures and you just glance at them at understand the meaning of the word, rather than having to read each character if it’s kana. Even if I can’t remember how to pronounce a kanji sometimes, I still know what it means.

  • Livvi_Spatula

    How many kanji are there, really? I know for Chinese there’s about 74056 billion….

  • http://www.tofugu.com koichi

    yeah, that’s about the right number.

    Really, though, I don’t know if there is any set “number of kanji.” I’ve heard so many different estimations…ranging from the tens of thousands down to the thousands. Of course, then you have to look at things like “are they talking about kanji you need to get by,” or are they talking about all kanji, or blah blah blah. I bet it’s in the tens of thousands, but you only need to know one or two thousand to get by comfortably. I’m sure someone else knows better than me, though.

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  • St

    7. Using more obscure kanji makes you seem more erudite.

    8. Using kanji is more respectful towards the native speakers. I know this is nowadays a very unfashionable way of looking at it, but I fundamentally disagree with those people who claim that the proper usage of kanji (or grammar, or idiom, or whatever) isn’t important because what really matters is that you “can get your point accross”. I believe that it is a basic sign of respects towards the native speakers of any language that you show you are willing to take the hard road when it comes to learning their language.

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  • JohtoKen

    I can infer that this applies vice-versa to other languages such as English.

  • eLsa

    Having a Chinese background, i personally like kanji because MOST of the time the Chinese and Japanese characters have the same meanings, so it’s easier to remember =P

  • http://www.youtube.com/user/CHESTERlikesSUBARU Chester_King

    One of the biggest complaints I hear about learning English is that so much of the language isn’t spelled phonetically.

    ief it wouz then moer piipel kuud lern it aend wii wuud all bii hapii.

    I know that learning Kanji as well as a native speaker will never happen for me but I’ll enjoy the process nonetheless… I’ve accepted without question that that is simply the way the Japanese language is written and understood.

    But everybody here knows that Spanish is the best language in the world, ? NO ?

    Good article

    .

  • WOTDsctoo

    I open the article:
    “Wow six reasons!? I’ve never heard of this many!”

    Then two of the reasons are it looks pretty and it could be worse? XD Ehhh, I guess it’s true though.

    But I have never thought/heard of the low readability of hiragana. This makes sense, and has provided a new perspective! :)

  • fredydb327

    YAY!
    Kanji!
    I think you’ve covered this before, but not with as much detail! Good article! This sucks to study all this kanji! But FAITO right? I heard Gokusen 3 is out. Ha!!! (Gokusen is not written in Kanji! Ohhh….)
    Also, once you actually learn it does feel good! I like just finding out random words that I can read in hiragana out there and recognize.
    As for the speed thing, I heard that reading in pictural or symbolic languages is much faster than reading alphabet based languages because the brain processes symbols much faster than it does reading and putting together letters.

  • fredydb327

    ¡Las lenguas foneticas son las mejores! (Phonetic languages are the best!) :D
    I remember when I was first spelling in school, I would think of English words in Spanish…
    “Because: ‘be-kah-u-se’” “people: peh-o-pleh”

    Spanish is cool! It’s a cool language and I’m glad to have learned it first!
    English is cool too, but it’s so wierd honestly. I’m not sure if I could handle if I wasn’t in an English speaking country.

    Japanese… is cool! ha. Phonetic language as well! All pure languages rock.

    Chinese and Vietnamese… Tonal languages… wow… hahaha. They’re kinda cool but just very difficult to pronounce. I’ll stick to just counting in Vietnamese, which is all I can do. I’ll try and learn Chinese later… like later, later and not right now, right now.

    Speaking of all these langauges, whatever happened to that Rosetta Stone Article? :)

  • http://youtube.com/profile?user=chokudori クリス

    Don’t know how many are used in Japanese, but the book I’m using to study kanji provides 1,945 commonly used characters, 1,006 of which are the ones taught in the six years of elementary school. If there’s more, I think I’ll be fine sticking with the first thousand or so…

  • insomniacgamer

    kanji is the most important thing to learn in japanese IMO it can make or break you in your japanese abilities… a lot of teachers say to learn hiragana/katakana 1st before studying japanese but i would go ahead and say learn jouyou kanji using Heisig’s Remembering the Kanji books before you even begin to learn japanese period. ( kanji.koohii.com is a great website that uses Heisig’s techniques BTW) if you learn kanji 1st then you can apply the kanji to your vocabulary as you encounter them instead of just learning everything in stupid kana and having to backtrack everything you learned again to apply kanji to those words because you put off doing it for so long… if you learned the vocabulary in kanji the 1st time around you could just be further reinforcing the kanji in your brain with kanji heavy sentences as you progress!!! i think college courses that expect you to only have learned 500 kanji after 2 years of study are just retarded…. you can never become fluent that way >< kanji isn’t that hard to learn anyways if people would stop complaining all the time… sheesh…

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  • Livvi_Spatula

    Well, that’s heartening. Though why I’m worrying about kanji when I can’t keep half the hiragana straight is a mystery.

  • futatsuki

    OMG KANJI…… there is still just too much kanji to memorize….. I am gonna be learning kanji soon after my finals this year. Kanji letters are and art to me, they look nice and they somehow symbolize that they means. Lots of people may complain that there are just too much to remember as there are different strokes. Koichi, i was wondering if i could get an invitation for mixi??

  • http://caitlinomara.com Caitlin

    I love kanji too but I tend to get frustrated with the 16+ stroke kanji. Hand cramps. I also find that it’s affected the type of writing tools I like…0.7 pens out, 0.5 or smaller in.

  • http://www.anti-grau.nl GEWALT

    Amen to that. I am slacker with Kanji these days. But when you know them, it makes reading so much easyer.

    Kanji!

  • Vier

    I agree completely with all the points. One more important aspect though, is that in order to build a vocabulary, Kanji is the key aspect. It would be almost impossible at average studying progress to have a wider lexicon without them due to homonyms, incredibly similar readings, and compound kanji words made up of 3-4. I don’t know, maybe someone can, but I could never memorize 大統領選 just by hearing it or spelling it in roman letters.

    With kanji you won’t plateau in your studies.

    PS Plus, even if you are a bit low on speaking skills, you can still impress with your kanji knowledge =) Its your secret weapon.

  • insomniacgamer

    kanji are really easy to write if you break them down into primitive elements ><

  • buratto

    I think kanji are amazing, not only they are needed for the reasons mentioned above, they are also pleasant to write once you know them. Or is it just me who thinks so? (artist mind)

    Instead of being overwhelmed by 2015 kanji and thousands more of combinations, its essential to just relax and learn them as they come, just a few kanji a day. Then eventually it will all be fine

  • http://stephenshores.org Stephen

    Very good points all. Kanji rock.

  • http://www.michaelburnner.com oo0speed0oo

    fredydb327 – I agree with you, but i never found english to be wierd. I grew up with spanish but never really learned it, just heard it spoken, and I just winged it in class and I always passed.

    insomniacgamer – I agree with you 100%, I’m learning kanji and i’m up to 135 symbols and I see them everywhere, and its easier to hiragana later when u knock out 2,000 symbols lol.

    クリス – What book are you using? I’m using “Heisig – Remembering The Kanji”

    I’m using the http://www.alljapaneseallthetime.com method to learn japanese anyone else using it?

  • insomniacgamer

    yeh the AJATT method is awesome… if you know the kanji, japanese is just as easy to learn as spanish IMO oo0speed0oo you should use kanji.koohii.com to help you with the heisig stories if you aren’t already… they have a lot of user submitted kanji stories for 3007 kanji there ^_^

  • http://www.michaelburnner.com oo0speed0oo

    thanx insomniacgamer. i just started (kanji.koohii.com) its a cool website. The only trouble i’m having is creating the charters on the computer (when using Mnemosyne). I just dled the files from online but i want to learn how to make the computer myself on the pc (typing characters)

  • phauna

    I think it must be said that if Japan were to design a writing method in this day and age and knew of the other world writing methods, then they would discard kanji completely. Yes of course you need kanji to read and write japanese, however, would it really be so difficult to convert to an alphabet? With some simple compromises, of course it could work well.

    Why can’t we put spaces between words? It’s easy, particles would just become conjugations onto the end of words. As to meaning, well maybe the Japanese would not have so many homophones if they didn’t use kanji. They would eventually stop using uncommon homophones, or alter them.

    I think it’s evident that these days, kanji is more difficult to learn for children than an alphabet and spelling. There has been research into this. The Chinese are trying to simplify the mess that they have continued to add to. Adults in Japan are forgetting how to write, through lack of practice. However, I’m pretty sure I could still write something in fifty years if I stopped writing today. If alphabets weren’t superior, there wouldn’t be a million of them separately created in the world. How many character sets are there in the world? Maybe two, chinese and egyptian hieroglyphs.

    Korean has ditched characters, why not other countries?

  • diojenisu

    In reference to how many kanji there are, i know that one of the most elite tests on Japanese, the Kanji Kentei on level 1, tests 6000. So an expert on Japanese would know about that many. A native speaker would know about 2000, but would daily use about 100-200. A fluent speaker (non-native) should know about 3000, i think.

  • gueru

    I think you have to learn to love kanji…. some way they get into your psique and you get the logic of them…
    Something interesting happen to me: sometimes I don’t now how they sound but I can imagine what they mean…. maybe you just see one familiar next to another one familiar an you can imagine what they mean together… make sense??

  • Vier

    Why can’t we put spaces between words? It’s easy, particles would just become conjugations onto the end of words. As to meaning, well maybe the Japanese would not have so many homophones if they didn’t use kanji. They would eventually stop using uncommon homophones, or alter them.

    –There are so many I wouldn’t see how you could create more words without creating more homophones in the process. Maybe if the split up vowels and consonants to not be in pairs, but it doesn’t work like that. Some words like Kakeru have dozens of different meanings, especially taking into consideration verb conjugations. So you’d need a huge and prioritized section of government to regulate this. It would make the French and Spain regulations look like a diner menu compared to an encyclopedia.

    I think it’s evident that these days, kanji is more difficult to learn for children than an alphabet and spelling. There has been research into this. The Chinese are trying to simplify the mess that they have continued to add to. Adults in Japan are forgetting how to write, through lack of practice.

    –You know, even going through this, countries that use chinese characters have some of the highest literacy rates in the world. As for the adults are forgetting to write, it’s not as if they just stare at paper blankly. I think it’s blown out of proportion, they just forget the full strokes of the kanji or miss some strokes. Basically, how people in whatever language don’t spell right. Because of computers and spellcheck, we don’t have to worry about our spelling so much to remember it, just passively have it. Even with Spanish, which is much easier to spell than English by miles, because of computers and it’s uses people spell badly over time. I think it’s something natural, and not exclusive or a bigger priority in Kanji.

    However, I’m pretty sure I could still write something in fifty years if I stopped writing today.

    –And your spelling would probably be terrible *_~

    If alphabets weren’t superior, there wouldn’t be a million of them separately created in the world.

    –This could just be a cause of cultural and present trends towards whichever direction in communication, not necessarily superiority over another. Most languages in the world are actually Tonal. However most western ones are not, and because modern culture and world politics is dominated by it today, it feels “normal” to use a system with simple stress systems while tonal languages are ‘weird’ and ‘hard’.

    How many character sets are there in the world? Maybe two, chinese and egyptian hieroglyphs.
    Korean has ditched characters, why not other countries?

    –Korean has a lot more sounds than japanese. A lot more. Basically using an alphabet in this language is fine because there are so many unique combinations of sounds, that words have their own distinct shapes and sounds, therefore writing it letter per letter doesn’t detract from that.

    –I mean, yes, japanese could stop using characters, but in order to stop doing so they might as well make a different language. We, in the US, don’t even want to switch to using the metric system. I don’t think a country is going to toss their own tongue to the side.

  • http://www.tofugu.com koichi

    vier gets a point for this speech :)
    Another thing to add is that kanji teaches kids all sorts of other things besides just kanji that phonetic alphabets do not. There was a study and comparison done on this, and this is all I remember from the outcome, but positive things do happen. Sorry I don’t remember :(

  • http://www.goddesscarlie.com GoddessCarlie

    eek, my comment got losted, I don’t think I could be bothered typing it up again…

  • http://tofugu.com Tofugu_Erin

    I have a copy of it (the Tofugu staff is notified of all comments via email, including the actual text), if you’d like me to copy-pasta it somewhere. Let me know.

  • http://tofugu.com Tofugu_Erin

    If kids hundreds of years ago could learn kanji, kids today shouldn’t be any different. I seriously dislike the idea of changing a written language just to make it easier to learn.

  • Chimiko

    As a someone who’s known Mandarin Chinese well at one time in my life, I really like learning Kanji because I know how to write and read half of the kanji I’m seeing. That said, I agree with most of these reasons, including the “it’s pretty” one. I’ve practiced Mandarin the calligraphic way, and when done well it really is an art. So yes, Kanji is pretty.

    That said, I don’t think Mandarin Chinese is any more difficult to learn than Japanese. In general, languages just takes interest and determination.

    I think the best way to learn kanji is to not be afraid of it, and surround yourself with Japanese stuff (dramas, magazines, music, lyrics, anime, etc.) to absorb it over time. It’s more natural that way, and it also stays with you longer… I think…

  • http://www.rockinginhakata.com Deas

    Alex at Victory Manual and I recently posted about this too. Kanji makes some things much more simple. The things it obfuscates seem few by comparison. But that’s probably only after a breakthrough.

  • Mark

    Nice article. I also have a love-hate relationship with kanji, but I think the *best* thing about learning kanji is when you come across a Japanese person who cannot remember how to write a kanji you (as a foreigner) *can* remember how to write.

    I had this just the other day when my father-in-law admitted he couldn’t remember how to write the kanji for “arm” (腕) and I could do so. We all laughed about that over dinner when I replied to him “それは問題だね”. Hahaha!

    With the high use of mobile phones and computers which aid Japanese people to write kanji without having to do much work, I think kanji comprehension is becoming a bit of a problem that is only going to get worse as time goes on unless something is done.

    I predict that kanji knowledge and usage will have dropped considerably given another 50 years. Already now there are so many foreign words brought into Japanese all of the time using katakana (which is a pet hate of mine I have to admit) and quite a few frequently-used words are now mostly written in hiragana instead of kanji – only today my girlfriend questioned the fact I’d written “とうとう” in kanji (到頭) instead of hiragana. This is a shame I think.

  • Digger

    I read somewhere (the Yookoso textbook, I think) that by high school graduation, a Japanese person must know at least (almost 2,000 kanji). But it also said that an educated Japanese person (although it didn’t define educated) knows about 5,000. Still, the book also said that after the first 500 (~_~), memorizing them gets easier. I hope so….

    Koichi! Get ready ‘cuz I’ve got some questions for you….

  • Maggie

    arghh.
    i hate kanji. although..it does have some good points. haha
    im taiwanese so ive been learning mandarin chinese for god knows how long and it hurts my head too memorize so much! haha.

  • http://www.michaelburnner.com oo0speed0oo

    i agree, people are just getting lazier.

  • kevinnwhat

    kanji is 10x more easier to readdd

  • Qwertatious

    I’m learning mandarin, people learning japanese have it way better.

  • taroroot

    When I first started learning Japanese I thought that Kanji was an absolute waste of time, however the more I learned the more I realized that it was quite necessary. But still I find that there are waaay to many Kanji…

  • Travesty

    I live in Japan and study Japanese, without Kanji Japanese would very difficult to read (as pointed out by many people). I going to skip taking level 3 of the JLPT and go straight to level 2 (although, I am clearly not ready) this year and when I go back and do some practice tests for level 3 which are mostly written in hiragana sometimes I have trouble actually understanding the sentence.

    Once you get to a certain level (around 3 or so) Kanji ceases to be a problem and just a part of Japanese.

  • gary

    LOL! I use the same trick! XD

  • Kitam

    this will make things kinda complicated.. but in the long run i suppose its cool

  • tomususan

    1000-2000 thousand, not THAT bad . On one website on guy is telling that 800 is engugh to be FLUENT READER in japanese… Ehhhh

  • http://www.youtube.com/user/starsandsea Jeannette

    My roommate often has a problem with #5 when writing papers for her Japanese language class. She has to write more in order to reach the page limit.

  • Xhilononi234

    かんじはたのしいです。かじで読むのとかなで読むのとでは、かなで読むよりかんじで読む方がやさしいです。でも、もしかんじは分からないのなら、このかんじはつかいません。

    Also, according to the Wakan program (electronic dictionary/learning tool for Chinese and Japanese), There have been 6,355 kanji found and 18,522 traditional Chinese characters found. You don’t need to know them all (thank God). In Japanese, you only need to know about 2,000 or so. I don’t know how many you need to know for Chinese. So, Japanese really isn’t too bad.