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This list represents the texts that I use when I translate Japanese to English (and visa versa). I've inlcuded comments on all the texts along with the ISBNs so interested parties may seek out their own copies of the books.If you have any suggestions for good dictionaries, please let me know.
The Granddaddy of them all. Get this and you really don't need anything else for your kanji translations. (Add Kanji & and Kana and you really *don't* need anything else). This is the one that the professionals use and I understand why. It is arranged by radicals (which if you don't know, you are in trouble) The kanji are arranged so that you look up the first kanji in a word, then you find the following kanji in that word under the section of the first character. A very effective system. My problem is usually looking up the first character, which is where Kanji & and Kana comes in. If I can't find it in Nelson's, I dig through the stroke numbers or reading (if I know it) index and see if in there. I've gotten to a point where I can find pretty much everything.
I spent a few years looking for this one. Although it does everything in romaji, which I dislike, it is none the less a very powerful dictionary and covers a lot.
This was one of the first books I picked up for Kanji and I have never regretted it. This volume is a cornerstone to the translations I do. It has has three indexes for the book listing Kanji by reading, radicals, and number of strokes. Also contains good information about how to correctly determine radicals and stroke order.
I like this because it's entirely in kana. I hate reading romaji for two reasons, 1) it slows me down, and 2) not everybody writes the same romaji. This is the actual kana, so it's hard to not look up a word. I do recommed this book only after you have at least a good idea what you are doing with the kanas.
My first dictionary. This is my only J-E/E-J dictionary right now, and it's not the best in the world. This is ok for a beginner but not for the more advanced student. I don't recommend it if you want to get serious. For the hell of it, here's a few tidbits of wisdom I've learned along the way:
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