Workplace Kanji Trainer
42 kanji that matter on the job.
Kana covers pronunciation. Vocabulary covers words. Kanji is what you will see on signs, schedules, forms, and instructions every day. These 42 workplace kanji are the ones that actually come up — across safety, schedules, locations, work processes, and HR documents.
Kanji is everywhere at work
Japanese workplaces use kanji on safety signs, shift schedules, work area labels, and HR forms. You will not always have a translator nearby. Workers who can read basic workplace kanji follow instructions faster, avoid hazards, and make a better impression from day one.
Different from kana and vocabulary
The Kana Drill covers hiragana and katakana phonetics. The Vocabulary Trainer covers spoken words. This tool covers the written kanji you will encounter on physical signs, printed documents, and digital terminals — recognition under real conditions, not test conditions.
5 categories, 42 kanji
Safety & Warnings, Work Schedule, Workplace Areas, Work Processes, and Documents & HR. Each card shows the kanji, the reading, the meaning, and a note on where you will actually see it. The drill mode focuses on the ones you have not marked as known yet.
Kana Drill
Master hiragana and katakana — the phonetic foundations of Japanese reading
Workplace Signs Reader
30 visual signs used in Japanese factories, food plants, and care facilities
Japanese Reading Practice
Read real workplace notices — shift schedules, safety announcements, forms