It scans text and allows me to easily look up any kanji or word. The quality of the Outlier dictionary remains very high! I also recently purchased the optical reader to help with unfamiliar kanji in manga. Update: I’ve now studied 900 kanji over two years. I just got to 250 kanji and I wish I had used Outlier from the start. Add the Outlier dictionary if you are seriously studying kanji and it’s an indispensable study tool (paired with a good kanji textbook such as “Kanji in Context”). At a minimum this is a great reference tool. Sometimes the original is far removed from the modern, but even then it is helpful to see the components as I often know how to draw those. Outlier will break down the kanji into its radical components and show how they explain the original meaning and on-yomi pronunciation. It is an additional one-time purchase of $30 but I think it is well worth it (about 30 or so entries are available for free, such as 後). The best part by far is the Outlier dictionary which is available for nearly every kanji. It also supplies other guesses if the first guess is not what you wanted. Whenever I draw a kanji it does a decent job of figuring out what I’m trying to draw. Looking up words is super easy using either romanji or hiragana. This is the best Kanji dictionary I have ever used. We are very responsive to your feed-back and suggestions:
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |