Danny_V MiyagiPA wrote:I recently bought a Canon Wordtank V330 and I think it's great. It's aimed at high school/university students studying English, so it has a lot of study options (some of which can be reversed to study Japanese), as well the the ability to write kanji, see how they are written (stroke order) and look up how to read them as well. The menu can be switched to English, you can ask someone at the store to do it.
I don't know if you have a store near you where you can try before you buy, but there's a Yodobashi Camera near the hotel in Shinjuku where you can try different models and decide (and even get started on getting points for free merchandise!).
It costs about 30,000 yen, and I certainly don't regret getting it. My previous dictionary (a lower model Canon) was good for three years, but was starting to pack it in.
Info link:
http://smartimports.net/product.php?productid=16364
Hope this helps!
chelocean wrote:Thanks for the rec!! I actually found it on Amazon Japan for a good price, so I was thinking about buying it there and shipping it to my new address over in Shikoku. Do you know if to buy on Amazon Japan, I should wait till I have a Japanese bank account and pay from there? Or can I just pay with my American credit card...would it charge me more for some kind of exchange rate fee?
neocarbunkle wrote:Proper denshi jishos are for people who are upper advanced or native Japanese people
ness wrote:Also consider that most phones here have at least a basic dictionary and if you get an iphone you can downloaded some great free ones (eg Kotoba). I haven't used my electronic dictionary since I got my iphone. I just taught myself the skip method so I can look up any kanji (with a relative degree of success) it often shows stroke order and other useful examples. And it is much easier than lugging a phone and a dictionary around especially when you are out and about at night talking to some ojisan at a bar.
If I am at my desk at school or at home with my laptop I just have "jim breen's" open and use that.
I wouldn't waste the money on an electronic dictionary now.
chelocean wrote:ness wrote:If I am at my desk at school or at home with my laptop I just have "jim breen's" open and use that.
I wouldn't waste the money on an electronic dictionary now.
I have an iPod touch, which I think can get all the apps an iPhone can get...would I be able to easily learn the look-up process, having no knowledge at all of kanji at this point?
Also, what's Jim Breens?
chelocean wrote:Also, what's Jim Breens?
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