Eijirō

Eijirō (英辞郎) is a very large database of English–Japanese translations. Developed by the editors of the Electronic Dictionary Project and aimed at translators, Eijirō is currently one of the most popular dictionaries on the Internet. Although the contents are technically the same, EDP refers to the accompanying Japanese–English database as Waeijirō (和英辞郎).

Eijirō
Original author(s)Electronic Dictionary Project
Initial releasebefore April 1998
Stable release
Ver. 159 / January 15, 2020 (2020-01-15)
Written inPlain text (Shift JIS) / PDIC
TypeReference software
LicenseProprietary commercial software
Websitewww.eijiro.jp

History

The Eijirō project was started by an anonymous Japanese translator. Noting the favorable reception it received when he shared it with his friends, he started the Electronic Dictionary Project, a wiki-like structure that allowed for and even encouraged contributions to the dictionary. This resulted in a comprehensive database that grew to include over 1.66 million entries in the fourth edition.[1]

Characteristics

Although commonly termed a dictionary, Eijirō differs from other Japanese dictionaries such as the Kōjien by not distinguishing examples from definitions.

Access

Eijirō can be purchased online as either a CD-R or downloadable dictionary file for a comparatively low price. Eijirō was also released from SpaceALC in 2002,[2] and the SpaceALC version has since gone through eight revisions as of 2016.

In addition, an online version of Eijirō is provided free of charge through the SpaceALC Japanese portal.

Notes

gollark: Yes. However, having a language which actually ALLOWS YOU TO WRITE THAT as a generalized thing would be better without compromising elegance with weird special cases like Go also does.
gollark: Parallel iterators would make that code clearer, actually simpler (not Go-"simpler") and less error-prone.
gollark: I don't think the way Go encourages you to write code is very good.
gollark: I had a bug because I didn't put in the `src := source` line and something something closure. I probably could have accidentally messed up the waitgroup.
gollark: Or, well, is moderately complex but can be abstracted.
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