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'' in the search string. For example, the word
{{inline/S=18:日本}} (``Japan'') is made up of the two characters whose JIS
codes are 467c
and 4b5c
. You could search for all entries
that contained ``{{inline/S=18:日本}}'' by searching for
``!467c!4b5c
'' (without the quotes, of course). If you use the
default ``word starting with pattern'', you'll find words beginning with
{{inline/S=18:日本}}. Follow this link
to see the main dictionary server with this example set up.
Note that when you insert Japanese text in this way, the ``Japanese Search'' and ``English Search'' selection doesn't matter, as that only governs if the letters you type should be taken as romaji or English. However, if you use ``combo searches'', it does still matter for the non-raw parts.
For example, searching for ``!467c!4b5c
AND NOT ENGLISH japan''
would find entries that began with {{inline/S=18:日本}}, but didn't have
the English ``japan'' anywhere in them. If the ``Japanese/English''
selector were on ``English'', then you could omit the ``ENGLISH
'' if
you wanted.
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