How am I supposed to understand compound kanji when there's two, three, or even four of 'em, and they ain't in the dictionary? Like that, 港村 the first one means port, the second's a lil' village, so together it's a seaside village. Now, does that second kanji always describe the first one or what? I ain't too sure. And what about a four-kanji word like 歌舞伎町? If the first kanji gets described by the second in them two-kanji combos, idk that does hold true or not. What’s the deal with them four-kanji ones?
by SASA_78m