Shin Kanzen Master N4 Kanji Pdf --exclusive--

Use Adobe Acrobat Pro or a free tool like NAPS2 to run OCR on your scanned PDF. This makes the kanji searchable. Now you can copy-paste unknown kanji into dictionaries like Takoboto or Jisho.org.

| Book | Pros | Cons vs. Shin Kanzen Master | |------|------|-----------------------------| | Sou Matome N4 Kanji | More visual, color-coded, easier pace | Less depth; exercises are shallower | | Kanji Look & Learn | Illustrated mnemonics, English explanations | Too reliant on stories; less JLPT-style drilling | | TRY! N4 Kanji | Integrated with grammar | Fewer kanji (~100) | | Shin Kanzen Master | Best for exam-style reading comp, most rigorous | No English; not for casual learners | shin kanzen master n4 kanji pdf --EXCLUSIVE--

If you want to pass the JLPT, Shin Kanzen Master is superior. If you want to enjoy learning kanji casually, pick another book. Use Adobe Acrobat Pro or a free tool


Here is a workflow that 99% of learners ignore. Once you have your exclusive PDF (legal or scanned), export the "Kanji List" at the front of the book. Here is a workflow that 99% of learners ignore

Overall Rating: ★★★★☆ (4.5/5)
Target Audience: JLPT N4 aspirants, self-learners, classroom students transitioning from N5 to N4.
Best for: Learners who already have a basic grasp of N5 kanji (around 80–100 characters) and want systematic, rigorous practice.


The book covers ~130–150 kanji required for N4 (including compounds and readings). It is divided into 15 lessons, each focusing on a theme (e.g., time, body parts, verbs, adjectives, weather, shopping, family).

At the back of the book (pages 140-145), there is a radical index. In the PDF version, you can bookmark this. Why? Because N4 tests your ability to guess unknown kanji by looking at the radical. For example:

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