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Jim Breen's Japanese Page
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INTRODUCTIONAs many readers of this page will know, I have an on-going interest in Japan, its people and language. This has led to a number of activities bringing together Japanese and my professional activities in computing and telecommunications. I have assembled this set of pages: (a) to provide information about a number of my projects in the area of Japanese computing and dictionaries, (b) to provide links to some of the resources available on the WWW on Japanese matters. These pages were mentioned in an article in the Asahi Evening News, by Andrew Horvat, whose pages have a link below. William Gordon has written an extended essay on these pages and the WWWJDIC dictionary server. In 2001 David Jolly mentioned WWWJDIC in an article in the International Herald Tribune (backup copy as the original has expired). More recently Alexander Jacoby mentioned WWWJDIC in an article in the Japan Times. Please feel free to email me at: jwb@csse.monash.edu.au about the various Japanese projects described on this page. I will try very hard to reply quickly, but I get a lot of mail, and long letters may take a while. If you are thinking of emailing me about other things, especially to ask me questions not related to my projects, please read this page first, as it may save us both some time. If you want to link from this page, please use this page, which has both advice and a submission form. Submissions are added automatically to this page (they may be edited later.) LINKS TO INTERESTING SITESMost of this page is made up of links to some interesting Web sites relating to Japan and Japanese information. They are broadly broken down by category (see the menu list to the left). The |
The Tejina package provided a
very impressive kanji dictionary and learning tool.
Andrew Innes has written Jverb
a learning tool for Japanese verbs. It's for Linux.
lrnkana.pl is a
kterm-dependent Perl-based kana drill program.
An interesting resource page on the Kokinshuu. (Sadly
it's in need of some repair.)
An amazing set of links to files of Japanese literature can be
found at Fukui University's Nihon-Bungaku
page. (Japanese only.)
Akira
Kitauchi's collection of Japanese Literature, which is good for
people who want to read Japanese texts.Information about on-line WWW-server-based dictionaries is progressively being added to my Online Japanese Dictionaries page. Please refer there for server information.
For people struggling to remember katakana, there is the Learn Katakana site. More than
you ever wanted to know about katakana.
Barry Waid's Gengogaku
page has useful systems for inflecting verbs and adjectives and generating
counters.
The Infortech company in Japan
has some interesting educational software, including Kurobi, which is a
Japanese instructional program, and Power Nazoler, which is a
writing instruction program aimed at kids in Japanese primary
(elementary) schools.
The
CONJUGATE (CONsortium for Japanese Language Materials Using
GlobAl TEchnologies) project, hosted at the University of Tsukuba
International Student Center, is a starting point to a mass of
useful material.
Gerald Laabs' How to
Japanese (sic) site, based on his CD-ROM of the same name.
Complementing Tom's page is John De Hoog's short Job of a Professional
Translator article.