| ▲ | mbrubeck 3 hours ago | |
Can you clarify which characters you're talking about? I don't see any examples of Japanese-specific kanji in the simplified Chinese examples. For example, the first image uses 沟 and 时 forms that are found only in simplified Chinese. In both Japanese and traditional Chinese, these are written 溝 and 時. The images also correctly use the Chinese forms of 統/统. The Japanese form [0] differs from both and does not appear in these images. 请 as shown in the image is similarly used only in simplified Chinese, not Japanese. In Japanese, the traditional Chinese form is normally used in handwriting, and an alternate form of the 訁 radical (different from either of the Chinese forms) is often used in printed text. | ||