Kanji Worksheets

I’ve put together a couple of kanji worksheets for anyone wanting to help themselves learn kanji.

The first sheet has all of the Grade 1 kanji and the 2nd has the first half of the Grade 2 kanji.

The idea is you trace over the grey character in the 2nd and 3rd columns then try it yourself without any assistance in the blank columns.

Kanji Worksheet 1,Kanji Worksheet 2

I’ve also made a list of all the level 1 kanji. Maybe print it out and put it up some place you’ll see it often and you will absorb it via osmosis, or you could use it as a quick reference.

Level 1 Kanji List

I’ll work on putting together some more (At least the rest of Grade 2) as soon as I can, I’ll take into account any comments anyone puts forward, but for the time being enjoy.

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12 Comments.

  1. The link for “Kanji Worksheet 1″ brings up Kanji Workshet 2.

  2. Sorry about that I’ve Fixed it now.

  3. Wow! That was fast :)

    I think these worksheet will really help me in my Japanese studies. I’m glad you took the time out to create them. Once I finish Grade 1, I’ll come back and bother you some more, so you will finish Grade 2 ;)

    Doumo arigatou gozaimasu.

  4. Hey, Thanks!
    That was super helpful in my studies

  5. Glad you found them useful.

  6. Thanks. They are very useful. Is it possible to add stroke sequences, similar to the Chinese character worksheets from http://www.archchinese.com?

  7. I’m not sure I can, sorry. I just typed out the kanji and thier meanings. There are quite a few places you can get the stroke order from.

    There are certain rules you can follow when you are writing kanji, have a look at this:

    http://thejapanesepage.com/kanji/stroke_order

  8. I see only one problem with your worksheets. You did not include stroke order. It doesn’t make much of a difference in the look of the character, but one’s handwriting and balance will be much better and the characters will feel more natural once they’re learned if you learn them with the proper stroke order.

  9. @Myuu-tan
    and now I see that you have already been notified of this ^^;; gomen ne.

  10. I’m a firm believer that you should learn the stroke order rules. And not memorise the actual stroke order.

    It’s like learning grammar and vocab rather than just memorising stock phrases.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stroke_order#General_guidelines

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Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported
This work by Omar Kooheji is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported.