Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Jinmeiyō_kanji> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 77 of
77
with 100 triples per page.
- Jinmeiyō_kanji abstract "The jinmeiyō kanji (人名用漢字, lit. Chinese characters for use in personal names) are a set of 861 Chinese characters known as the "name kanji" in English. They are a supplementary set of characters that can be legally used in registered personal names in Japan, despite not being in that country's set of "commonly used characters" (jōyō kanji). As a rule, registered personal names may contain only jōyō kanji, jinmeiyō kanji, katakana and hiragana. Jinmeiyō Kanji is sometimes used to mean only the 861 characters, or to mean the 2997 characters in both the Jinmeiyō and Jōyō sets. All characters outside the Jinmeiyō list in the large sense (2997 characters) are known as Hyōgaiji.A ministerial decree of 1946 limited the number of officially sanctioned kanji for public use to the 1850 tōyō kanji. Only kanji on this list were acceptable as registered names, despite the fact that the list excluded many kanji frequently used in names up to that point. However, on May 25, 1951, the cabinet extended the set of characters usable in names by specifying the first 90 jinmeiyō kanji.Over the years, the Minister of Justice has increased the number of name kanji, and has a plan for further addition in response to requests from parents. As of April 30, 2009, there were 985 jinmeiyō kanji, but this number was reduced to 861 in late 2010 when 129 jinmeiyō characters were transferred to the jōyō kanji list, and 5 characters were transferred from the jōyō kanji list to jinmeiyō characters.In Japan, name kanji are taught at the junior-high level, and mastery of the name kanji is required to achieve Level 2 of the Kanji kentei, a Chinese-character proficiency test.Before September 27, 2004, there were 2232 government-designated jinmeiyō kanji used in personal and geographical names, with plans to increase this list by 578 kanji, the largest increase since World War II. The plan was not without controversy, however. For example, the characters for "cancer", "hemorrhoids", "corpse" and "excrement", as well as parts of compound words (words created from two or more Chinese characters) meaning "curse", "prostitute", and "rape", were among the proposed additions to the list. This was because no measures were taken to determine the appropriateness of the kanji proposed, with the committee deciding that parents could make such decisions themselves. However, the council dropped these proposed inclusions after public protest. Some of these kanji have led to speculation that the "odd" kanji being added to the names list are being done so in an attempt to make a de facto expansion of the Jōyō Kanji List, rather than with the serious idea that anyone will use them in names. The idea of reducing the number of kanji in use has been a politically contentious issue, with many believing that kanji are culturally Japanese and that people should use them frequently.".
- Jinmeiyō_kanji wikiPageExternalLink jouyoukanjihyou_h22.pdf.
- Jinmeiyō_kanji wikiPageExternalLink 000058122.pdf.
- Jinmeiyō_kanji wikiPageID "1281494".
- Jinmeiyō_kanji wikiPageLength "13166".
- Jinmeiyō_kanji wikiPageOutDegree "47".
- Jinmeiyō_kanji wikiPageRevisionID "662718586".
- Jinmeiyō_kanji wikiPageWikiLink Category:Japanese_writing_system.
- Jinmeiyō_kanji wikiPageWikiLink Category:Kanji.
- Jinmeiyō_kanji wikiPageWikiLink Category:Names_by_language.
- Jinmeiyō_kanji wikiPageWikiLink Character_(computing).
- Jinmeiyō_kanji wikiPageWikiLink Chinese_character.
- Jinmeiyō_kanji wikiPageWikiLink Chinese_characters.
- Jinmeiyō_kanji wikiPageWikiLink Ehime_Prefecture.
- Jinmeiyō_kanji wikiPageWikiLink English_Language.
- Jinmeiyō_kanji wikiPageWikiLink English_language.
- Jinmeiyō_kanji wikiPageWikiLink Gifu_Prefecture.
- Jinmeiyō_kanji wikiPageWikiLink Hiragana.
- Jinmeiyō_kanji wikiPageWikiLink Hyōgaiji.
- Jinmeiyō_kanji wikiPageWikiLink Ibaraki_Prefecture.
- Jinmeiyō_kanji wikiPageWikiLink Inmyongyong_chuga_hanjapyo.
- Jinmeiyō_kanji wikiPageWikiLink Japan.
- Jinmeiyō_kanji wikiPageWikiLink Jōyō_kanji.
- Jinmeiyō_kanji wikiPageWikiLink Kanji.
- Jinmeiyō_kanji wikiPageWikiLink Kanji_kentei.
- Jinmeiyō_kanji wikiPageWikiLink Katakana.
- Jinmeiyō_kanji wikiPageWikiLink Korean_name.
- Jinmeiyō_kanji wikiPageWikiLink Kumamoto_Prefecture.
- Jinmeiyō_kanji wikiPageWikiLink Kyūjitai.
- Jinmeiyō_kanji wikiPageWikiLink Ministerial_decree.
- Jinmeiyō_kanji wikiPageWikiLink Nara_Prefecture.
- Jinmeiyō_kanji wikiPageWikiLink Osaka.
- Jinmeiyō_kanji wikiPageWikiLink Pig_iron.
- Jinmeiyō_kanji wikiPageWikiLink Saitama_Prefecture.
- Jinmeiyō_kanji wikiPageWikiLink Shinjitai.
- Jinmeiyō_kanji wikiPageWikiLink Shizuoka_Prefecture.
- Jinmeiyō_kanji wikiPageWikiLink South_Korea.
- Jinmeiyō_kanji wikiPageWikiLink Tochigi_Prefecture.
- Jinmeiyō_kanji wikiPageWikiLink Tōyō_kanji.
- Jinmeiyō_kanji wikiPageWikiLink World_War_II.
- Jinmeiyō_kanji wikiPageWikiLink Yamanashi_Prefecture.
- Jinmeiyō_kanji wikiPageWikiLinkText "Jinmeiyō Kanji".
- Jinmeiyō_kanji wikiPageWikiLinkText "Jinmeiyō kanji".
- Jinmeiyō_kanji wikiPageWikiLinkText "Jinmeiyō".
- Jinmeiyō_kanji wikiPageWikiLinkText "jinmeiyō kanji".
- Jinmeiyō_kanji wikiPageWikiLinkText "kanji which no longer exist in modern Japanese".
- Jinmeiyō_kanji wikiPageWikiLinkText "personal name characters".
- Jinmeiyō_kanji category "Kanji used for names".
- Jinmeiyō_kanji hasPhotoCollection Jinmeiyō_kanji.
- Jinmeiyō_kanji type "Jinmeiyō kanji".
- Jinmeiyō_kanji wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Authority_control.
- Jinmeiyō_kanji wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Citation_needed.
- Jinmeiyō_kanji wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Japanese_writing.
- Jinmeiyō_kanji wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Nihongo.
- Jinmeiyō_kanji wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Jinmeiyō_kanji wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Wiktionarycat.
- Jinmeiyō_kanji subject Category:Japanese_writing_system.
- Jinmeiyō_kanji subject Category:Kanji.
- Jinmeiyō_kanji subject Category:Names_by_language.
- Jinmeiyō_kanji type Thing.
- Jinmeiyō_kanji comment "The jinmeiyō kanji (人名用漢字, lit. Chinese characters for use in personal names) are a set of 861 Chinese characters known as the "name kanji" in English. They are a supplementary set of characters that can be legally used in registered personal names in Japan, despite not being in that country's set of "commonly used characters" (jōyō kanji). As a rule, registered personal names may contain only jōyō kanji, jinmeiyō kanji, katakana and hiragana.".
- Jinmeiyō_kanji label "Jinmeiyō kanji".
- Jinmeiyō_kanji sameAs Jinmeiyō_kanji.
- Jinmeiyō_kanji sameAs Jinmeiyō-Kanji.
- Jinmeiyō_kanji sameAs Jinmeiyō_kanji.
- Jinmeiyō_kanji sameAs Jinmeiyō_kanji.
- Jinmeiyō_kanji sameAs Jinmeiyō_kanji.
- Jinmeiyō_kanji sameAs 人名用漢字.
- Jinmeiyō_kanji sameAs Jinmeiyō_kanji.
- Jinmeiyō_kanji sameAs Jinmei.
- Jinmeiyō_kanji sameAs m.04ptbn.
- Jinmeiyō_kanji sameAs Дзиммэйё_кандзи.
- Jinmeiyō_kanji sameAs Q1439720.
- Jinmeiyō_kanji sameAs Q1439720.
- Jinmeiyō_kanji sameAs 人名用漢字.
- Jinmeiyō_kanji wasDerivedFrom Jinmeiyō_kanji?oldid=662718586.
- Jinmeiyō_kanji isPrimaryTopicOf Jinmeiyō_kanji.