I'm currently using Jsho as my go to dictionary as it gives me the option to enter in English, Hiragana, and Rmaji to search for words/definitions. Along with that I use Google Translate and so I'm wondering if there's any better options out there to aid in my learning process, which is going very slowly at the moment. Since I have Google credits to use I'm looking for any free or paid options that you're aware of to help cut down through the copious amounts of apps available on the store.

At the beginning of 2021, I first published DaKanji as an offline stroke order independent Kanji lookup tool for Linux, Mac, and Windows written in Python. Because of the positive Feedback I got here I was motivated to continue working on DaKanji. Fast forward a bit, I rewrote DaKanji in Dart and published it first for Android, slowly extending it to iOS, MacOS, Linux, and Windows.


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After taking a break from DaKanji (and randomly starting to learn Spanish), I decided to apply for a scholarship to study in Japan. For this, I wanted to have something stand out in my application and I decided to add an offline dictionary to DaKanji.

And finally, after a long, long development time, DaKanji 3 is finally out. I am super excited that this new version has finally shipped! DaKanji is a passion project of mine, and I have worked really hard the last year to build the best fully offline, responsive, and cross-platform (Android, iOS, MacOS, Linux, Windows) Japanese English, German, French, Russian, ... dictionary I could. Therefore, I would greatly appreciate you checking it out and letting me know what you think, what to improve, giving a positive review, or maybe even recommending it to your friends

Lastly, I would like to give you a rough idea of in which direction this project is heading, the next 3.x versions will add more features to make DaKanji not only a word lookup dictionary but a tool to understand Japanese texts and effectively learn from them. This includes features such as word lists, Anki integration, grammar lookup, chat GPT integration, a discussion section to ask questions, and likely, yomichan dictionary support.After that, DaKanji will receive support for directly using the dictionary on different sources such as videos, pdfs, ebooks, ...

Hello, I am working on a application that requires some dictionary functions. I have found some APIs for jisho.org but it seems for my application, I would be calling the APIs too frequently and would get blocked. Therefore, I will need to use an offline resource for my needs I think. I just need something that can look up words and will include the details of what JLPT level they are at the least. Does anyone know of any offline dictionaries that would work?

While it started out as an English-Japanese dictionary, you can now access a growing set of translations into other languages, plus monolingual dictionary entries. Each entry has an extensive list of example phrases and kanji breakdowns with stroke order.

Aedict3 is one of the most long-standing Japanese dictionary apps, and it just keeps getting better each year. Aside from having very thorough entries, you can download add-ons for free, such as specialized dictionaries about Japanese science terms, Buddhism and even proper names. The app covers ten languages.

Learning Language Dictionary is actually child-friendly (as in great for beginners). It has a dictionary option for elementary school students specifically and includes kanji exams taken by actual Japanese in schools.

Proper Japanese dictionary for Windows?2012/12/18 00:58 I've been using a couple of Android apps on my phone to help translating english word to kanji/kana/romaji, and to look up kanji. I'm looking for something similar that I can run on Windows (regular computer, no tablet/phone/mobile). I also need it to run entirely offline.


On Android, I've been using these:

* JED: =com.umibouzu.jed

* Obenkyo: =com.Obenkyo

* KanjiRecognizer: =org.nick.kanjirecognizer


The last one is probably going to be a hard call on windows, since it requires drawing kanji, and that's hard to do with a mouse :)


But what I'm really looking for is something like the first mentioned app (JED). This is "just" a dictionary, but one that's loaded with information and has many ways to search.


Now to find something that runs on a computer... 


I've searched google for a while, but all I could find is BS software and a windows8 app (which I cannot run). Lots of stuff that looks like adware and other BS, and maybe one or two that were way too expensive in comparison.


I already do have Human Japanese on my computer, but it doesn't have much of a dictionary.


Any help will be greatly appreciated.by thany

Re: Proper Japanese dictionary for Windows?2012/12/18 18:32 Thanks for the links, I'll check them out.


Jim Breen's page looks daunting O.o


As for ZKanji, how stupid of me that I didn't think of looking at SF.net, there's always some interesting/promising project going on. Thanks for finding that for me ;)by thanyrate this post as useful

Re: Proper Japanese dictionary for Windows?2012/12/19 00:12 Apologies if it's a repeat from some link on Jim Breen's page, but I have this page bookmarked for good reason:


 


It's even more fun with a touchpad!by Pirilamporate this post as useful

Re: Proper Japanese dictionary for Windows?2012/12/19 03:04 builds on the Edict files as kept by Jim Breen but as you asked for an offline dictionary, this might be of interest although I hven't used it myself: 

If you use Firefox, Rikachan ( ) will be worth looking intoby Hoshisatorate this post as useful

Re: Proper Japanese dictionary for Windows?2012/12/19 20:22 Again, thanks :) I already found Tagaini in the mean time. It was on a blog posting somewhere with a whole bunch of windows software like this (nog Breen's page, tho). I forgot where I found it :/


The firefox and Chrome plugins might be helpful at some point, but not for now. I was actually looking for a dictionary where I can type in kanji/yomi/romaji/english and find their meaning or translation. That's a slightly different use case.


I think Tagaini pretty much covers my use case. Its interface is a little too bloated (not in a bad way tho) for my purposes, but it will do perfectly fine nonetheless. I just hope that whatever dictionary it is built on top of, is a good one :)by thanyrate this post as useful

Speaking of another dictionary, the English-Japanese in the Dictionary App of OS X is also a good compromise if you are not ready for immersion since it has lots context sentences in Japanese and lot of explanation terms in Japanese besides the English explanation.

A picture is worth a thousand words, as the saying goes, so I've gone ahead and taken screenshots of a few words from each dictionary so you can compare. Excuse the shoddy editing to put them side by side, this is what I can do with ten minutes and Windows Paint. Please don't sue me Japan, k thx.

If you're not masochistic enough to go J-J yet, or just a beginner, I'll shout out Akebi (link to store) as my J-E dictionary of choice. It has offline usage, example sentences for most words, and kanji search, and is overall an awesome app that I used daily before I decided I was sick of reading without getting a headache and switched to monolingual dictionaries.

This page pointed me to Tagaina Jisho, which is in the AUR. I can confirm that it comes with its own dictionary file, which looks like a giant 52 MB XML file. I think it has a Qt GUI, so it doesn't exactly match what you're looking for.

I am not sure if it will satisfy you, but Icecat (firefox, Icewasel) has add-on called rikaichan. It has its own dicitionary that you can download and it can work offline. It has lookupbar that helps me quite a lot. Type a word and it will translate it and give you many additional info (strokes, etc)

It has often been said that dictionary publishing in Japan is active and prosperous, that Japanese people are well provided for with reference tools, and that lexicography here, in practice as well as in research, has produced a number of valuable reference books together with voluminous academic studies. (1998:35)

The Wiktionary uses the English word dictionary to define a few synonyms including lexicon, wordbook, vocabulary, thesaurus, and translating dictionary. It also uses dictionary to translate six Japanese words.

The first three homophonous jiten compounds of ten ( "reference work; dictionary; classic; canon; model") are Chinese loanwords. However, Chinese distinguishes their pronunciations, avoiding the potential ambiguities of Sino-Japanese jiten: cdin  "word dictionary", zdin  "character dictionary", or  "encyclopedia". The usual Japanese word for "encyclopedia" is hyakka jiten ( "100/many subject dictionary", see Japanese encyclopedias). The jiten, jisho, and jibiki terms for dictionaries of kanji "Chinese characters" share the element ji ( "character; graph; letter; script; writing").

Lexicographical collation is straightforward for romanized languages, and most dictionaries enter words in alphabetical order. In contrast, the Japanese writing system, with kanji, hiragana, and katakana, creates complications for dictionary ordering. University of Arizona professor Don C. Bailey (1960:4) discusses how Japanese lexicography differentiates semantic, graphic, and phonetic collation methods, namely:

The second system of dictionary collation by radicals (Chinese bushou, Japanese bushu,  "section headers") originated with the 121 CE Shuowen Jiezi () . Japanese dictionaries followed the Chinese example of reducing the number of radicals: original 540 (Shuowen Jiezi), adjusted 542 (Yupian ()), condensed 214 (Zihui (), Kangxi Dictionary ()), and abridged 189 (Xinhua Zidian ()). Japanese jikeibiki collation by radical and stroke ordering is standard for character dictionaries, and does not require a user to know the meaning or pronunciation beforehand. ff782bc1db

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