Why does the Japanese language use kanji?

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So anyone learning Japanese or Chinese knows the dreads of kanji lessons. Even natives of the language have to go through classes throughout their childhood to keep learning more and more difficult kanji.

Living in Japan for a while, books and newspapers had to deal with the more undereducated population by writing in brackets the hiragana next to the kanji, where half of the article would end up just being in brackets anyway.

Seeing as they have a fully functioning (two even) phonetic alphabet, why go through the difficulty of keeping kanji? Is it just intrinsically cultural, or is there a linguistic aspect or something else?

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Anonymous 0 Comments

Japanese could get away with moving away from kanji if they really wanted to. Korean has a lot of similarities and they do just fine with hangul. I think fundamentally the Japanese just like kanji. Using kanji connects the language to the past.

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