Extended shinjitai

Extended shinjitai (拡張新字体, kakuchō shinjitai, lit. "extended new character form") is the extension of the shinjitai (officially simplified kanji). They are the simplified versions of some of the hyōgaiji (表外字, kanji not included in the jōyō kanji list). They are unofficial characters; the official forms of these hyōgaiji are still kyūjitai (traditional characters).

Simplified forms

When the 1,850 character-long tōyō kanji list was produced in 1949, many characters were simplified from their original forms, and the new simpler forms became the standard kanji used in Japanese writing. For instance, the characters , , and became , , and , respectively. The jōyō kanji list, issued in 1981, contained additional simplifications such as , , and becoming , , and . In addition, the character , which had already been included during the formation of the tōyō kanji list, became . A total of 357 characters were reformed from kyūjitai (old character form) to become shinjitai (new character form) when the jōyō kanji list was created (, , and were merged into a single character: , bringing the total number of new shinjitai down to 355).

However, as a result of adopting simplified characters, kanji that shared the same structural elements (radicals or other phono-semantic compounds) were not all simplified in the same way. For instance, , , and , which were included in the list, were simplified as , , and , although the first one is not the same component but simply looks similar. On the other hand, the hyōgaiji , , and – which contain the same element (𧶠) as the latter two of the three previous kanji – were not likewise given simplified counterparts. This problem arose from reforming characters on an individual basis rather than decomposing all characters into radicals and other constructs. This was done systematically for simplified Chinese characters, although many exceptions to the rule exist.

Creation of extended shinjitai

The Asahi Shimbun newspaper developed its own script known as Asahi characters, which applied the rationale of simplification to characters other than jōyō kanji. In this script, the right element of the three previously mentioned unsimplified characters (, , and ) were all simplified as 売. Characters that were simplified in this way are called extended shinjitai, as simplification was extended to characters outside of the jōyō kanji list.

Extended shinjitai was also implemented into JIS kanji. The first version of JIS (JIS C 6226-1978), created in 1978, contained 10 characters that were simplified in this way, such as and .

JIS X 0208, created in 1983, was the first JIS character set to extensively use extended shinjitai, adopting simplifications for a large number of previously unsimplified characters. In total, 299 characters such as (), (), (), , (or 301 characters, when including and ) were simplified from their original forms. Simplified forms had never been used in printing these characters prior to this reform. However, the character set became subject to criticism when it was revealed that the character in the name "森鷗外" (Mori Ōgai, a famous Japanese poet and novelist) could only be represented in word processors in its simplified form ().

Examples of extended shinjitai
FormalExtendedNotes
(uso, bullfinch) and (uguisu, Japanese bush warbler) are different species of birds, but both kanji share the same glyph within the extended shinjitai, namely .[1] In China, the simplified Chinese character of is , whereas is .
Within the Hyōgai Kanji Jitaihyō (表外漢字字体表), the traditional form was recognized as a standard printed font (印刷標準字体), while was classified as a simplified conventional font (簡易慣用字体).
*
*
and are merged to simplified in China.
  • Characters marked * are environment-dependent characters (環境依存文字).

Reduction of extended shinjitai

Established in 1990, the JIS X 0212 set of auxiliary characters supplemented the previous character set by including both the traditional and simplified forms of certain characters. For instance, the traditional , , and characters were included, in addition to the simplified , , and characters. However, usage of these auxiliary characters in the Shift JIS computer encoding was not taken into consideration, and most word processors remained unable to display these traditional characters. The Japanese Language Council meeting of 1992 confirmed the need for a unified character set that could be used in all computers and word processors.

Released in February 2000, the JIS X 0213-2000 character set was presented as a solution to the problems of the previous character set, as the Shift JIS encoding was expanded to re-include traditional characters such as , , and . In December of the same year, the Japanese Language Council compiled a list of 22 widely used extended shinjitai (kan'ikanyōjitai) and approved their use in place of their traditional variants in print.[2]

JIS X 0213-2004 (released in 2004) made minor modifications to the script, changing character shapes and strokes. For characters that are not in the jōyō kanji list, the shinnyō radical () was changed from having a single dot into a double-dot variant. The Windows Vista operating system, released in January 2007, conformed to these modifications, but confusion resulted in cases where the single dot was automatically changed to double dots in, for instance, surnames written using the character .

The Asahi Shimbun newspaper also modified its characters to conform to the new standards, and altered their Asahi characters in January 2007.

In the latest 2010 jōyō reform, taking the aforementioned radical as an example, the previous logic of one-dot corresponding to jōyō and two-dot to non-jōyō was eliminated, as for instance ("riddle") is now a jōyō kanji. This reform also clashes with established JIS X 0208 use, as in some cases less common unsimplified characters have been elevated to jōyō status in favor of variant characters with established use - for instance, as per the official jōyō table, the second character in 装填 ("reload") should be . For the most part unsimplified characters have been added to the jōyō table with this reform, except for three previous kan'ikanyōjitai (, and ), and some extended shinjitai like in favor of .

Nevertheless, the 2010 guidelines by the Japanese government also explicitly allow simplification in handwriting and do not object to use of alternate characters in electronic text, likely in recognition of established technical standards.[3]

gollark: As I said: if someone got the webhook URL *via Discord*, they could do it again.
gollark: Potentially!
gollark: Of course, if they can read the webhook URL they can most likely create new ones.
gollark: The webhook is, yes.
gollark: That was not actually the case.

References

See also

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.