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7. The next day, without reference, see if you have remembered readings in gaigana, kana and the kanji’s various English translations as illustrated here for six六. If you missed something, revise the point. Use both kana’s to help you become steadily more fluent with these too. Mark the progress mapper when you are ready.
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六
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six
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六
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mutsu
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六
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むっ
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六
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ROKU
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六
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ロク
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六
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6
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8. Check your answers and write the bushu and other key story components with your kanji. Select those parts which are most useful to you in recalling the shape; you do not need to write down every radical sub-part.
9. Make a flip card with kanji and kana readings on one side with romaji on the other. For each reading, select one of the example words shown on the page or one you remember from elsewhere and put it down in kanji, English and gaigana or kana.
10. Use the ‘kanji by topic’ page to create a simple short phrase of your own mixing in as much kanji as you can confidently write without too much effort.
11. Look at the kanji type, reading ratio, number of homonyms and other relevant information on the bottom of the page. These aspects are covered in more detail in this site and the book.
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