稔
Tags
- Jinmeiyō kanji
- Kanji for use in personal names #jinmeiyou
- 9th grade kanji
- Kanji learned in ninth grade (junior high school) #grade-9
- 13 strokes
- Kanji with 13 strokes #strokes-13
- JLPT N1 kanji
- JLPT N1 kanji: Advanced Level #jlpt1k
Reading
- On'yomi
- ネンジンニン
- Kun'yomi
- みの.るみのり
- Nanori
- としなるなりみのるねみ
- Chinese (pinyin)
- ren3
- Korean (hangul)
- 임염
- Korean (romanized)
- imyeom
- Vietnamese
- NhẫmNẫm
Meaning
- harvest, ripen
- cosechar, madurar, año
Stroke order
Components in kanji 稔
Extended information
Frequency 1775
KANJIDIC Project
2645 "Modern Reader's Japanese-English Character Dictionary", by Andrew Nelson (now published as the "Classic" Nelson)
3288 "The New Nelson Japanese-English Character Dictionary", by John Haig
4149 "New Japanese-English Character Dictionary", by Jack Halpern
1207 "Kanji Learners Dictionary" (Kodansha) by Jack Halpern
815 "Remembering The Kanji" by James Heisig
2607 "Japanese Names", by P.G. O'Neill
1916 "Essential Kanji" by .GP. O'Neill
1979 "Daikanwajiten" by Morohashi
25107:8:592 "Kanji and Kana" by Spahn and Hadamitzky
2183 "Japanese For Busy People" vols I-III, published by the AJLT. The codes are the
volume.chapter
0 "Remembering The Kanji, 6th Ed." by James Heisig
2653 "Kodansha Kanji Dictionary", (2nd Ed. of the NJECD) by Jack Halpern
1544 "Kanji Learners Dictionary" (Kodansha), 2nd edition (2013) by Jack Halpern
1115
Halpern's SKIP (System of Kanji Indexing by Patterns) code
1-5-8 The descriptor codes for The Kanji Dictionary (Tuttle1996) by Spahn and Hadamitzky
5d8.5 The "Four Corner" code for the kanji. This is a code invented by Wang Chen in 1928
2893.2
JIS X 0208-1997 - kuten coding
nn-nn
1-44-13 Decimal representation of the UTF16 character
31252