A repository for JD4GD. Free Japanese dictionaries for your GoldenDict!
Bushu
A dictionary of radicals. It contains all the radicals and all their possible variants, along with all their possible readings (including their KANGXI counterparts and Simplified Chinese forms). Can be searched by radicals or any of their variants.
Enamdictplus
My take on the famous Enamdict. All entries are colored, and a description is given for each name (male name, female name, family name, place name, etc). Can be searched either by name or by kanji.
This pack includes an additional dictionary: Enamdict Furigana. It complements Enamdict+, helping the student to visualize the readings of kanji inside the words and names, and how they change their readings according to their combinations with okurigana or other kanji.
Essential Synonyms
A simple dictionary of Japanese synonyms which can be searched either in Japanese or any of its definitions.
Frequency
A compilation of the most commonly-used pronounciations and readings of Japanese words according to the frequency they appear in a variety of media (newspapers, books, light novels, etc). It's very useful to determine how likely a given pronounciation or reading can be applied to a word or kanji.
Gloss Homonyms
A dictionary of Japanese homonyms - words that sound similar while having different meanings. In the case of Japanese, there are also single entities that can be written in multiple ways while sounding all the same. Searchable by kanji or by readings.
JMDictplus
My take on the ubiquitous JMDict, but with every kanji colored according to the "Horizon". Katakana and hiragana are also colored for easy reading. All hiragana readings are also romanized to help students in beginner levels. The most frequent entries are marked with a red star.
This pack includes an additional dictionary: JMDict Furigana. It complements JMDict+, helping the student to visualize the readings of kanji inside the words and names, and how they change their readings according to their combinations with okurigana or other kanji.
Jouyou Multiple
A correlational Japanese dictionary of synonyms, but it's based on a different dictionary and contains all the 2136 kanji from jōyō, with a lot more definitions. You can lookup up entries using either kanji, or any of their definitions in English.
Kanji Classification
A "database" of kanji. Learn when they're taught in Japanese schools (in case of jōyō), its alternative codepoints inside the Unicode matrix, its equivalents in older forms, etc.
Kanji Multiple
A correlational dictionary of synonyms. It'll give you all the synonyms of a given kanji, while also displaying all the related kanji for those synonyms. You can lookup up entries using either kanji, or any of their definitions in English.
Kanji Parts
A kanji decomposition dictionary that will break up all parts which make up that kanji (components and radicals), while displaying their meanings. This is a nice introduction to radicals for students at the beginner level. This dictionary contains all the relevant phonetics for each kanji.
Kanji Radicals
Breaks up any kanji into its main radicals while displaying their names, so you can lookup other kanji using that radical (or its name). Several elements are clickable to lookup for more details about them.
Kanjidicplus
My version of the famous Kanjidic. It's one of the few dictionaries in this collection to have almost 13 thousand kanji (all the kanji from the "Horizon" plus 5,801 kanji from the JIS X 0212 standard) plus another thirty important kanji missing in the original Kanjidic I added myself for good measure.
Onyomi Frequency
A compilation of the most commonly-used kun'yomi readings for each kanji according to the frequency they appear in JMDict. It's very useful to determine how likely a given reading can be applied to kanji, specially if they're phonetic.
Sudachi Synonyms
A dictionary of synonyms based on the famous Sudachi tokenizer. When synonyms are part of the same genre they'll be grouped by topics (in gray). You can lookup up words using either kanji, or any of their definitions in English. Kanji are colored.
All dictionaries were converted from publicly available sources, free for personal and commercial use - most of them derive from the excellent works of James Breen and the Electronic Dictionary Research and Development Group. A license file is included with every dictionary.