Jōyō Kanji
In the 2,136 , there are 364 pairs of simplified and traditional characters (for example, is the simplified form of ). Note that the kanji is used to simplify three different traditional kanji (, , and ).Traditional characters that may cause problems displaying
Note that within the jōyō kanji there are 62 characters the old forms of which may cause problems displaying: Kyōiku kanji (26): * Grade 2 (2 kanji): * Grade 3 (8 kanji): * Grade 4 (6 kanji): * Grade 5 (1 kanji): * Grade 6 (9 kanji): Secondary-school kanji (36): * Secondary school (36 kanji): These characters are Unicode CJK Unified Ideographs for which the old form (kyūjitai) and the new form (shinjitai) have been unified under the Unicode standard. Although the old and new forms are distinguished under the JIS X 0213 standard, the old forms map to Unicode CJK Compatibility Ideographs which are considered by Unicode to be canonically equivalent to the new forms and may not be distinguished by user agents. Therefore, depending on the user environment, it may not be possible to see the distinction between old and new forms of the characters. In particular, all Unicode normalization methods merge the old characters with the new ones.List of the simplified jōyō kanji and their traditional forms
In the revised version of Jōyō Kanji, 5 kanji were removed (but preserved as Jinmeiyō Kanji), and 196 more kanji were added into ''Jōyō Kanjihyō'' of originally 1945 kanji; 6 of these new kanji have a traditional and a simplified form. They are underlined in the following list. :Jinmeiyō Kanji
Kyūjitai vs. Shinjitai
The Jinmeiyō Kanji List contains 212 traditional characters still used in names. The modern form ('' shinjitai''), which appears in the Jōyō Kanji List, is given in parentheses. :Variants
The Jinmeiyō Kanji List also contains 631 additional kanji that are not elements of the Jōyō Kanji List; 18 of them have a variant: :Former Jōyō Kanji still used as Jinmeiyō Kanji
The following 5 kanji were removed from the Jōyō Kanji List in 2010, but were preserved as Jinmeiyō Kanji. They have no simplified form. :勺 銑 脹 錘 匁 Note that and areJinmeiyō Kanji used as Jōyō Kanji since 2010
Of the 196 new Jōyō Kanji, 129 were already on the Jinmeiyō Kanji List; 10 of them are used in names of Japanese prefectures, and the kanji appears in the name of South Korea ( ''Kankoku''). Four of these kanji have both a simplified and a traditional form: :艶(豔) 曽(曾) 痩(瘦) 弥(彌)Hyōgai Kanji
Hyōgai Kanji are kanji that are elements of neither the Jōyō Kanji List nor the Jinmeiyō Kanji List. In , traditional characters are recognized as printed standard style () while the simplified characters are recognized as simple conventional style (). Here are some examples of Hyōgai Kanji that have a simplified and a traditional form: :Former Hyōgai Kanji used as Jōyō Kanji since 2010
In 2010, 67 Hyōgai Kanji were added to the Jōyō Kanji List; 2 of them have a traditional and a simplified form: :餅(餠) 麺(麵)Kokuji
Kokuji are characters that were created in Japan and were not taken over from China. Some of them, e.g. , are now also used in Chinese, but most of them are not. Currently, there are no kokuji that have been simplified after their introduction.Kokuji used as Jōyō Kanji or Jinmeiyō Kanji (as of 2010)
The Jōyō Kanji List currently contains 9 kokuji ( and are Kyōiku Kanji): :働 匂 塀 峠 腺 枠 栃 畑 込 was removed from the Jōyō Kanji List in 2010, but is still used as Jinmeiyō Kanji. The Jinmeiyō Kanji List currently contains 16 kokuji: :匁 俣 凧 凪 喰 柾 椛 榊 樫 畠 笹 籾 辻 雫 鰯 麿See also
* Traditional Chinese charactersExternal links