Postby Jason » March 4th, 2007 10:46 am
Well, the problem with that is kanji are very context sensitive. Most of them have many possible readings, and which one is used changes depending on things like whether they appear alone or in a compound. They even sometimes change when they're alone depending on the word. Like 行く (to go) and 行う (to do/perform/carry out). In the first word the 行 is read い(く) but in the 2nd it's read おこな(う). They don't really have a "most basic form" by themselves. So it's my and many other people's opinion here that trying to learn all of an individual kanji's readings isn't very productive or effective. It's much better to get a feel for what the general meaning of a character is and learn their readings in the context of words and compounds. So I would strongly recommend you study their readings on a word-by-word basis, as they already are on the kanji closeups, and not worry about trying to memorize a list of ON and KUN-yomi.
Any print kanji dictionary or computer Japanese dictionary will give you all the possible readings if you still want to see them. The kanji dictionary in the Learning Center does, as well. Rikaichan will show you individual kanji details if you hover over the character and press the Shift key.
Jason
Manager of Mobile & Mac Applications