Intermediate Technical Japanese Volume 2 Glossary.pdf

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Also available in the Technical Japanese Series
Reflections on Science by Naka.,va Ukichiro
An Advanced Japanese Reader
Translated and edited by Edward
E.
Daub
and Shiro Asano
((Snow crystals are letters sent from the heavens.
))
-Nakaya Ukichiro
Solid-State Physics and Engineering
Technical Japanese Supplement
Craig T. Van l)egrift
For anyone learning to comprehend scientifIc articles in
Japanese, this reader offers selections from the writings
of well-known Japanese scientist, Nakayo Ukichiro. At
the time of his death in 1962, the
American Meteorological
Society Bulletin
heralded him as " ... the world's outstand-
ing scientific investigator of snow crystals."
Nakaya was a popularizer of science and a brilliant
essayist. Here are included excerpts from his classic book
The Methods ofScience (I(agaku no Hoohoo)
and other
literary essays discussing various cultural and social topics
in relation to science. English translations accompany the
Japanese texts, followed by a glossary.
2003 Paper ISBN 0-299-18104-9
This book is a supplement to the textbook
Basic Technical
Japanese.
It introduces
100
new
kanji
and more than
700
new words and phrases that appear frequently in
documents dealing with solid-state physics. The text
offers ten lessons, each presenting key vocabulary and
ten new
kanji
that reappear in the exercises for that
lesson and in subsequent lessons, reinforcing learning.
The exercises emphasize vocabulary building,
kanji
recognition, definition nlatching, and translation skills.
An
introductory lesson reviews the
katakana
and
hiragana
writing systems.
1995 Paper ISBN 0-299-14734-7
Biotechnology
Technical Japanese Supplement
James L. Davis
Basic Technical Japanese
Edward E. Daub, R. Byron Bird, and Nobuo Inoue
Even with no previous training in Japanese language,
readers of this book can learn to translate technical man-
uals' research publications, and reference works.
Basic
Technical Japanese
provides step-by-step instruction,
from an introduction to the Japanese writing system
through a mastery of grammar and scientific vocabulary
to practice in reading actual texts in Japanese. With
extensive character charts and vocabulary lists, the book
is entirely self-contained; no dictionaries or other refer-
ence works are needed. The authors are scientists and
engineers with extensive experience in translating
Japanese.
1990 Cloth ISBN 0-299-12730-3
This book is a supplement to the textbook
Basic Technical
Japanese.
It introduces
100
new
kanji
and more than
1500
technical terms that appear frequently in documents
dealing with biotechnology, in addition to reviewing
vocabulary containing the 365
kanji
presented in
Basic
Technical Japanese.
1995
Paper ISBN 0-299-14714-2
Polymer Science and Engineering
Technical Japanese Supplement
R. Byron Bird and Sigmund Floyd
This supplement to
Basic Technical Japanese
introduces
an additional
100
kanji to build vocabulary for reading
and translating Japanese literature related to polymer
science and engineering.
1995 Paper ISBN 0-299-14694-4
!(anj'i for C;omprehending Technical Japanese
!(anj'i-Flash/BTJ
Craig T. Van Degrift
This DOS software is an electronic tlashcard companion
to
Basic Technical Japanese.
It follows the text chapter
by chapter, providing exercises to test the pronunciation
and meaning of all
510
kanji
and
4000
compound words
introduced in the textbook. It also allows missed \\'ords
to be saved for retesting. The program requires VCiA or
color EGA graphics.
1992 Software ISBN 0-299-97077-9
Edward E. Daub
Here are presented twenty
kanji,
vocabulary that use
those
kanji,
a
kanji-card
format for study and review, and
technical Japanese essays with English translation. This
volume also introduces significant scientific vocabulary.
1995 Paper ISBN 0-299-14704-5
Intermediate Technical Japanese
Volume 2:
Glossary
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