Postby videovillain » June 28th, 2013 3:28 am
The best thing I've found is to learn kanji in compounds. That means together with other kanji that form a word. Not only will you end up learning a few different readings (the most commonly used ones at that), but it is much more useful when it comes to reading, retaining vocabulary, as well as remembering meanings. You'll see kanji in compounds more often than you'll see kanji alone.
事 [ジ、ごと] - Matter, thing, fact, business, reason
That alone is pretty useless knowledge...
However:
用事 [ようじ] - Task, things to do, errand
Is commonly used in daily Japanese, like:
ヒマがありますか。いいえ、用事があります。(Are you free? No, I have things to do.)
用事があるので、先(さき)に帰(かえ)ってもいいですか。(Since I have an errand to run, is it okay if I leave early?)
事故 [じこ] - Accident, incident, trouble
Is also commonly used:
あそこ、事故を見(み)ました。(I saw and accident over there.)
先週(せんしゅう)、ここで大(おお)きな事故がありました。(Last week, there was a big accident here.)
仕事 [しごと] - Work, job, business, occupation, employment
Is definitely used daily in Japanese:
仕事は何(なん)ですか。(What do you do for work?)
今(いま)の仕事はたいへんなので、やめようと思(おも)う。(As my current job is troublesome, I think I'll quit.)
Now you've got a better understanding of the meaning of the kanji 事 because you've seen it used in context. This leaves you with a higher likelihood to retain that understanding, as well as the three vocabulary words used in the context, and don't forget the two main readings you learned in the process (ジ、ごと). Lastly, this way of learning will give you incite into the possible meanings and usages of the other kanji that you weren't even trying to learn!
In my experience, trying to learn the meaning/readings of individual kanji and then using that knowledge to understand compounds when i'm reading is too difficult. It seems backwards, but learning the compounds and using that knowledge to breakdown the meaning and reading of each individual kanji works much better!
Hope that helps!