March 16, 2012

Finished~

For those who care, a complete chart of the JLPT N5 Kanji and their readings (as well as their meanings) can now be found here, although I'm warning you - you'll need to be able to read Hiragana and Katakana to be able to read the On-yomi and Kun-yomi (aka the readings of the Kanji). Don't be scared, though! It helps a lot with your Japanese, as Japanese culture doesn't use romaji very much, if at all, so think of it as being immersed in Japanese for just a short while, even if the word 'immersed' is used in the loosest way possible here.
Have fun~

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