There are more then 35,000 Kanji characters in the Japanese language. A lot of them are obscure and not commonly used. I doubt there is a website that has all of them.
You can look at the JLPT project site and there will be a lot of Kanji, all useful.
I can't seem to find any with the English translation, but I've added a website with the written Japanese and also romanised Japanese to the related links below.
Hiragana is the basic, so that is most used in sense. When writing in Japanese you need a mixture of Hiragana Kanji and sometimes Katakana.
i never done it before but i think you type in like say you want this saying -------> can i get some soup , you would type in -------> how do you say can i get some soup in Japanese .... ( i think )
123Japanese is a very good website for vocabulary because it is organised, and has the largest vocabulary list both in romaji and kana.About.com's Japanese section is fantastic for all parts of Japanese, especially kanji. One of the downsides is that it's quite difficult to find information, though.JapanesePod101 - This is a good website if you want to listen to lessons rather than read and they have free mp3 lessons daily.I've added some resources for you to have a look at in the related links section below.
I can only find that as a name in Japanese, and written with only one spelling: 神前. First kanji means 'God' (kami) and second means 'in front of, before'.
There is not a very good website to get Japanese erasers but there is a store called spanx and they sell them
"Veronica" does not have any meaning in Japanese. Though it is possible to find Kanji characters that phonetically match the syllables, often times it will result in nothing meaningful or coherent. However, "Veronica" can be written in Japanese as: ベロニカ
/www.csse.monash.edu. is Jim Breen's website. You can go to the multi-radical part and check the ones that apply to find almost any Kanji, it's various readings, and its meaning. Studying Japanese requires an understanding that any symbol can be read in multiple ways, especially when combined with other ones. Mountain is yama, or san. So if you say Mount fuji you say 'fuji-san'. But that mountain is 'ano yama'. To identify a complicated kanji, break it into parts and search a dictionary for words belonging to that part.
Kanji is pretty complicated, they are the words in japan shortened down into one symbol. although, if you don't know hiragana, which is the Japanese alphabet and the expansion of those words, you should probably learn those first. for example. the word 'school', in hiragana, is: がっこう, which is gakkou. but to shorten down the writing you can write it in kanji which is: 学校 but it still stays as gakkou. Hiragana are much easier to learn and you don't need kanji to convey a message by writing hiragana. kanji are just complicated ways of making things shorter. to learn hiragana and kanji, I suggest going onto quizlet and searching "year 7 japanese' to find some tests that Japanese teachers make for their students that anyone can use. you can also try various websites with Japanese memory tests for year 7 English students. starting there would be best. there should be some text books you can find on it too. I would recommend the "hai" course and workbooks, you should be able to find them online. :)
五 is the Kanji character for it. ご is the Hiragana, though you will rarely find this It is pronounced "go".
There are many different websites that are dedicated to learning Japanese. One can find a guide on how to learn Japanese on the Guide to Japanese site as well as the Guide to Learn Japanese website.
If you are looking for Japanese recipes there are many place to check. You can look at allrecipes website or foodnetwork website. They both offer great japanese recipes and how to's.