释义 |
kanji
kan·ji K0010800 (kän′jē)n. pl. kanji or kan·jis 1. A Japanese system of writing based on borrowed or modified Chinese characters.2. A character used in this system of writing. [Japanese : kan, Chinese (from Middle Chinese xan`); see Han1 + ji, character (from Middle Chinese dzı̷h; also the source of Mandarin jì and akin to Mandarin zǐ, child, since certain characters were said to be derived from simpler characters, and ultimately derived from Proto-Sino-Tibetan *tsa, child; akin to Tibetan tsha, grandchild).]kanji (ˈkændʒɪ; ˈkɑːn-) n, pl -ji or -jis1. (Letters of the Alphabet (Foreign)) a Japanese writing system using characters mainly derived from Chinese ideograms2. (Letters of the Alphabet (Foreign)) a character in this system[Japanese, from Chinese han Chinese + zi character]kan•ji (ˈkɑn dʒi) n. a system of Japanese writing using Chinese-derived characters. [1915–20; < Japanese] Translationskanji
Kanji[′kän·jē] (computer science) A set of Chinese characters that are employed by users of the Chinese language to code information in computer programs and on visual displays. kanji (human language, character)/kahn'jee/ (From the Japanese"kan" - the Chinese Han dynasty, and "ji" - glyph or letterof the alphabet. Not capitalised. Plural "kanji") TheJapanese word for a Han character used in Japanese. Kanjiconstitute a part of the writing system used to representthe Japanese language in written, printed and displayed form.The term is also used for the collection of all kanjiletters.
US-ASCII doesn't include kanji characters, but somecharacter encodings, including Unicode, do.
The Japanese writing system also uses hiragana, katakana, andsometimes romaji (Roman alphabet letters). These charactersare distinct from, though commonly used in combination with,kanji. Furigana are also added sometimes. |