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Words near each other
・ Tōwa, Fukushima
・ Tōwa, Iwate
・ Tōwa, Yamaguchi
・ Tōya Maru
・ Tōya Station
・ Tōya Station (Kushiro)
・ Tōya Station (Tōyako)
・ Tōya, Hokkaido
・ Tōyako
・ Tōyako, Hokkaido
・ Tōyama Kagemoto
・ Tōyama Mitsuru
・ Tōyama no Kin-san
・ Tōyo, Ehime
・ Tōyō Bunko
Tōyō kanji
・ Tōyō Miyatake
・ Tōyō Rapid 1000 series
・ Tōyō Rapid 2000 series
・ Tōyō Rapid Railway Line
・ Tōyō, Kumamoto
・ Tōyō, Kōchi
・ Tōyō-Katsutadai Station
・ Tōyōchō Station
・ Tōzai Line (Kobe)
・ Tōzai Line (Kyoto)
・ Tōzai Line (Sapporo)
・ Tōzan Shrine
・ Tōzen-ji
・ Tŏkhyŏn Line


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Tōyō kanji : ウィキペディア英語版
Tōyō kanji

The ''tōyō kanji'', also known as the ''Tōyō kanjihyō'' (当用漢字表, "list of kanji for general use") are the result of a reform of the ''Kanji'' characters of Chinese origin in the Japanese written language. They were the kanji declared "official" by the Japanese on November 16, 1946. They were replaced in 1981 by the Jōyō kanji.
==History==

Thousands of kanji characters were in use in various writing systems, leading to great difficulties for those learning written Japanese. Additionally, several characters had identical meanings but were written differently from each other, further increasing complexity.
Prior to World War II, language scholars were concerned with these problems in learning fluent Japanese. One of their more radical proposals was to abolish the Chinese kanji characters entirely and make use of an entirely phonetic system. When the Ministry of Education tried to implement this reform, however, it encountered strong opposition from scientists, writers and the general public, and the idea was finally dropped.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Tōyō kanji」の詳細全文を読む



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