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Sidney wrote: ... I arrived here in Japan about two weeks ago, and now that I'm settled in a bit, I wanted to purchase an e-jisho. The problem is that my Japanese, particularly reading and writing, is pretty bad. Because of this, I can't really search through Amazon.jp or elsewhere and look at the reviews. ...
Sidney wrote:Okay I've narrowed it down to two models:
Casio XD-GF6550/
and
Casio XD-GF9800/
For someone who's native language is English and is going to be studying Japanese for years to come, which one would you recommend?
CrankyBastard wrote:If you're going to be at a desk studying, invest in a good paper dictionary.
If you're on the move and need to look up a word quickly, get a cheap denshijisho.
jmho
omae mona wrote:That's interesting advice, Cranky. Why do you think a paper version is better than the electronic version?
omae mona wrote:That's interesting advice, Cranky. Why do you think a paper version is better than the electronic version?
xaristides@yahoo.com wrote:Paper would be easier to read and "scroll" not to mention 1/10 the price or 1/5 or whatever.
IkemenTommy wrote:If you wanna be hauling around a big heavy ass phone book around at 10 times the weight, then go on ahead.
CrankyBastard wrote:10 times the weight of an e-dictionary!
Even I can handle that.
xaristides@yahoo.com wrote:Paper would be easier to read and "scroll" not to mention 1/10 the price or 1/5 or whatever.
omae mona wrote:That is a really interesting claim! I took a quick look at the price (http://www.amazon.co.jp) for the main dictionaries contained in my ancient Canon Wordtank G50.
Koujien Japanese Dictionary: 7875 yen
Gyakubiki (reverse look-up) Koujien: 3800 yen
Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary: 4390 yen
Reader's English-Japanese Dictionary: 7980 yen
Kenkyusha's New College Japnaese-English Dictionary: 5250 yen
Sanshodo Concise Katakana Dictionary: 3044 yen
Gakken Kanjigen: 3045 yen
Concise Oxford Thesaurus: 3800 yen
TOTAL: 38124 yen
My Wordtank cost quite a bit less than this. I think I got a bargain! I literally use every volume except the thesaurus (mainly because I forgot it was built-in until I typed up this post).
Seems like the electronic dictionaries are a bargain compared to the paper version.
CrankyBastard wrote:My old thirty something year paper dictionary looks pretty beaten up, held together with scotch tape, the back almost worn off, but inside more than half the pages have notes and highlights indicating personal additions that were and still are indispensable when trying to fathom Japanese.
In this way, I was able to add to the dictionary's memory capacity. (can't do that on a denshijisho)
CrankyBastard wrote:A paper dictionary doesn't need batteries, so there's no maintenance cost, well except for a bit of scotch tape!
CrankyBastard wrote:It's robust, drop it from a height, sit on it, spill stuff on it, it's still functional. (can't do that to a denshijisho, either)
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