掲示板 Forums - IS THAT THE BIGGEST KANJI LETTER?! ##鑈
Top > 日本語を勉強しましょう / Let's study Japanese! > Anything About Japanese Getting the posts
Top > 日本語を勉強しましょう / Let's study Japanese! > Anything About Japanese
What does biggest mean? The most strokes? 𪚥 has 64. 𰻞 has 58. 䨻 has 52. 龘 has 48. 䲜 has 44. 靐 has 39. 䨺 and 齉 have 36. [wiktionary.org]
Out of Jōyō, I think it's this one 鬱 (29)
Outside of Jōyō and Jinmeiyō it's probably these two 驫 鸞 (30)
And as a meme (not used at all) it's this thing 𱁬 (84)
I only see 4 strokes....
I'm sorry I'm sorry I'm just kidding
I can't even see the majority of those kanji properly
If you go on the Wikipedia page for the largest kanji, somewhere there is a UI download thing that makes it so you can see most of them. But for now the rest of them look like this:
If you go on the Wikipedia page for the largest kanji, somewhere there is a UI download thing that makes it so you can see most of them. But for now the rest of them look like this:
I have the same issue that you and Inkheart have, and yet...
wait a minute...I've been bamboozled!
I wonder how that happened... Oddly the first one ポールおじさん said is the only one I can't see (because I downloaded the additional UI), it must be one obscure kanji
I'll just post a screenshot for anyone who can't see it. It's not that interesting though.
I switched to one of my device's browsers. The browser supports the kanjis. Though the ones with the most strokes will basically look like a solid rectangle, it is actually a rendition of the whole kanji, just really tightly spaced. It seems to be specifically a Renshuu app problem. But it not being in the dictionary seems worrisome.
I can see all of them, including that one. On PC with Japanese installed (Microsoft Japanese IME).
The one you can't see is this one https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki...
None of the characters I mentioned are in renshuu’s dictionary. They aren’t really used in Japanese, after all.
I switched to one of my device's browsers. The browser supports the kanjis. Though the ones with the most strokes will basically look like a solid rectangle, it is actually a rendition of the whole kanji, just really tightly spaced. It seems to be specifically a Renshuu app problem. But it not being in the dictionary seems worrisome.
I don't think it's a Renshuu issue, I couldn't see them a long time ago (on mobile) until I was binging Wikipedia and had to download the extra symbols.
Can you see all of these? 𪚥 𪛕 𪜀 𫝀 𫠝 𬺰 龘 靐 䨻 齉
The first 6 require font support for CJK Extensions B and higher, maybe you don't have those?
Can you see all of these? 𪚥 𪛕 𪜀 𫝀 𫠝 𬺰 龘 靐 䨻 齉
No I must be missing another pack
I switched to one of my device's browsers. The browser supports the kanjis. Though the ones with the most strokes will basically look like a solid rectangle, it is actually a rendition of the whole kanji, just really tightly spaced. It seems to be specifically a Renshuu app problem. But it not being in the dictionary seems worrisome.
I don't think it's a Renshuu issue, I couldn't see them a long time ago (on mobile) until I was binging Wikipedia and had to download the extra symbols.
There are differences.
Renshuu app:
vs browser:
Both on the same device.
Got it. If you can't see any of them you don't have support for CJK fonts at all. If you can only see the last 4, you have CJK fonts up to Extension A (if you can see this one 䨻)
Anyway, it's not that important.
As for the difference between the browser and app, the browser probably has better font support.
Eh, I had actually updated mine a short time ago for a similar issue, but I forget the specifics to resolve it.
Basically, I came across a discussion about 骨 written in some picture and interestingly someone noted that they saw differences in the writing and what is typed. This led to a rabbit hole discovery that it turns out that despite some folks adding the Japanese language to their devices, they were susceptible to getting the Chinese version of some characters.
A lot of Unicode blocks include characters used by Japanese, Chinese, and sometimes Korean (hanja). Which version of a character you see depends on your device’s language settings and font support.
The CJK Unified Ideographs block is exactly that. CJK stands for Chinese, Japanese and Korean.
骨 is in the main set (CJK Unified Ideographs, U+4E00 - U+9FFF). Looks to be one code point (U+9AA8), so any difference are due to glyph variants (based on language). I think you can explicitly tag the language in HTML.
Anyway, I'll stop nerding out now
Edit: Ok, just one more time