みなさん、こんにちは、
I know radicals are an important way of learning kanji. For instance, I remember how to write 語 (language) because it's the radical 言 (speech) plus the radicals 五 + 口 (five + mouth), indicating that the kanji is (usually) pronounced 'go', just like the Japanese for 'five'. (Let's not complicate this by noting that the kanji originated in China, where 語 and 五 are pronounced differently )
I was looking up や on beta.jisho.org to try to answer izzyさん's question (though unfortunately I couldn't find anything useful) and I happened to notice in the sidebar that 八 is described as "eight, eight radical (no. 12)".
What does this "no. 12" mean? Is there a standard ordering for radicals? And what benefit does this ordering have - is it anything I could use to help with learning?
よろしくおねがいします、
小狼