Postby NickT » January 27th, 2007 3:18 pm
In order to illustrate the above point: A Kanji I recently learnt was "ha", leaf. Now, in my opinion the five most useful words that use this kanji are as follows:
葉書
はがき
葉
は
落ち葉
おちば
言葉
ことば
千葉県
ちばけん
Now, if you only learnt the kanji itself, and the readings, would you really be able to read these words? OK, "ochiba" and "ha" are pretty straightforward, but would you be able to guess that leaf + write = postcard? That say + leaf = word? Would you be able to recognise the kanji of chiba prefecture? I guarantee though, that if you practice writing these words a few times each, you will recognise them when you seem them no problem, even if you can't remember how to write them a few months from now. Also notice that none of these words use the onyomi, "you".
Three of these five words were not included in the vocab of my kanji textbook, which did include such gems as 針葉樹, a conifer tree - A word which uses a JLPT 1 kanji, a JLPT 2 kanji, and that according my vocab lists, is not even on the vocab list for JLPT level 1. For reference, I took JLPT 3 last month, and this book as aimed at students of about that level.