Kanji

The term in Japanese literally means "Han characters". Japanese kanji and Chinese () share a common foundation. The significant use of Chinese characters in Japan first began to take hold around the 5th century AD and has since had a profound influence in shaping Japanese culture, language, literature, history, and records. Inkstone artifacts at archaeological sites dating back to the earlier Yayoi period were also found to contain Chinese characters.
Although some characters, as used in Japanese and Chinese, have similar meanings and pronunciations, others have meanings or pronunciations that are unique to one language or the other. For example, means 'honest' in both languages but is pronounced or in Japanese, and in Standard Mandarin Chinese. Individual kanji characters and multi-kanji words invented in Japan from Chinese morphemes have been borrowed into Chinese, Korean, and Vietnamese in recent times. These are known as Wasei-kango, or Japanese-made Chinese words. For example, the word for telephone, in Japanese, was derived from the Chinese words for "electric" and "conversation." It was then calqued as in Mandarin Chinese, in Vietnamese and in Korean.
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3by Ho, Cassandra Su Lyn, Horiuchi, Toshikatsu, Taniguchi, Hiroak, Umetsu, Araya, Hagisawa, Kohsuke, Iwaya, Keiichi, Nakai, Kanji, Azmi, Amalina, Zulaziz, Natasha, Azhim, Azran, Shinomiya, Nariyoshi, Morimoto, YujiGet full text
Published 2016
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