Adopted logographic Chinese characters used in the modern Japanese writing system.
1That's early Settlement Years use, or just hyper-educated, kanji-scribbling, First Families pretension.
2Tsukiyama -cool name -uses the kanji for 'moon' and 'mountain'.
3Each curtain is embroidered with a kanji too ancient to read.
4Its menus, strangely, occasionally appeared in kanji, for no discernible reason.
5Daimon signed me in, and she must have seen the weird kanji for 'Eiji'.
6So her father didn't own a Bible and her mother's was written in kanji.
7But the kanji characters flashed off and on, catching the corner of his eye.
8There were kanji characters shaved into her stubble length hair.
9Bigger than the others, it resembled a kanji character.
10Another example: Japanese use both a phonetic script (kana) and a pictographic script (kanji).
11Plus, many of the kanji are obscure, so I have to keep referring to a dictionary.
12I would like to keep this letter short for the reason that the 'evidence' of the kanji remains inconclusive.
13Should you be another Eiji Miyake with identical kanji, please accept my sincerest apologies for raising your hopes unnecessarily.
14That's the function of many signs of Chinese writing and of the predominant Japanese writing system (termed kanji).
15Each position on this grid is a kanji or a Japanese character, written in worm bodies instead of brush strokes.
16For the most part, today's gamers don't need to crack the books and study kanji characters simply to play the games they want.