
An extra dimension that you can play with

ようこそJapaneseLanguageへ! 日本語に興味を持てば、どうぞ登録して勉強しましょう!日本語に関係するどのテーマ、質問でも大歓迎します。 This is a community dedicated to the Japanese language. Feel free to come in and ask questions or post your thoughts and opinions about this beautiful language.
Feel free to check out the web archive of r/LearnJapanese's resources if you're looking for more learning material or tools to aid you in your Japanese language journey!
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Remember that you can add furigana to your posts by writing {KANJI|FURIGANA} like:
{漢字|かんじ} which comes out as:
{漢字|かんじ}
Short Tom Cardy song about the most important Japanese word to learn
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An extra dimension that you can play with
This article was making the rounds last year, but I don't think I've seen it posted here - and it seems like a good fit.
It talks about how disconnected the Japanese writing and speaking systems can be, and how that can create some affordances. I found it interesting, at least.
Anyone that learnt Japanese after Chinese?
I've been learning Chinese for quite some time now, and will probably keep at it these coming years as it'll be a necessity in my life, but I'd lie if I'm not constantly attracted by Japanese. I'm just afraid of picking up another life-long project, and having to balance learning Japanese with keeping up my Chinese. Has anyone learnt Japanese after Chinese? What has been your experience? Did knowing hanzi help with learning kanji?
コーヒー支配
I figured a meme for folks learning Japanese could be fun :)
Here's a fun song that teaches some Japanese tongue twisters
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MONO NO AWARE - Kamukamo-Shikamo-Nidomokamo!!
MONO NO AWARE - かむかもしかもにどもかも!
Struggling to find enjoyable reading and listening material
Hi. I'm a big YouTube guy. I spend a ton of time watching YouTube videos. But for the life of me, I can't seem to enjoy Japanese YouTube. I do enjoy watching SOME vtubers occasionally when they play fun games. Other than that I don't really read much unless it's on reddit/lemmy or github. Someone pointed me to a Japanese mastodon instance but it has a pretty intense VPN block.
What do you guys watch/read in Japanese?
What podcasts are you guys listening to?
Looking for some suggestions :)
kanji app that isn't just flashcards
i finally went over and gave up the romanji completely, it really does make my lessons so much easier that i have to kick myself for not just sitting there and putting more time into learning the characters sooner, but now i find myself really thirsting for the kanji study that i was always putting off
i remember being recommended a website, i don't think that they had an app at the time, but it actually went through and pointed out connections in the pictogram aspect of the kanji to build off of which made things a lot more interactive and memorable for me than some of the apps that i've been trying out recently that all seem pretty "memorize these flashcards" and i sit there feeling like dennis on that family feud ep of always sunny and it's like, they're stealing my thirst and i just want to feel good learning kanji again like i did that time, does anyone know what site i'm talking about? or any apps that actually try and teach you before just endlessly quizzing you?
ty in advance
Does anyone know of any good reads? Blogs/websites etc (Around N2-N1 Level)
Can't for the life of me find anything fun to read other than NHK News :c
Listening struggle
I stopped learning Japanese in a classroom about three years ago, with passing N4 being my biggest achievement. Since then, I've been occasionally doing my Anki reviews and trying to read and listen from time to time.
As a molecular biologist, I was thrilled to find a couple of great thematic podcasts: Researchat.fm and 研エンの仲. A game-changer for me, though, was Nihongo Con Teppei, which I could actually understand.
The problem with the first two podcasts, which are not designed for Japanese learners in any way, is that while I’ve started to pick up some nouns and phrases over time, I can almost never, for the life of me, grasp the meaning of entire sentences. I can tell they’re discussing a specific topic, but the overall gist almost always eludes me.
Does anyone have advice on how to improve comprehension? I feel like verbs are the trickiest part to understand...
jisho.org have account on mastodon where they post japanese puzzles and kanji of the day
884 Posts, 34 Following, 834 Followers · ★ This is the official account of http://jisho.org ★ Jisho.org is a Japanese-English dictionary with word, kanji, sentence and text search. Yoroshiku!
A revolutionary input method
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Last year: https://bookwormstory.social/post/279316
is this how you directly address the person in Japanese?
maybe it's another Duolingo bullshit they push upon us or maybe a typical thing in Japanese? namely in phrases like
けんさんは二年生ですか it could mean both "Is Ken a second year student?" and (according to duolingo) "are you a second year studentsophomore, Ken?" how do i know if it's directly addressing the person? which is which?
I don't think flashcards are working for me.
So for 2-3 years I have been using flash cards to get to 1000 kanji and then switch for full immersion and extrapolate meaning with some dictionary. I only know around 150 kanji.
This method already worked for english and russian but without flash cards part. I learned first 1000 words + grammar in school by osmosis thorough textbooks.
My routine is 30 min a day for two weeks and then 2 week break due to boredom or some other factor. It makes my backlog huge and discouraging and my retention seems terrible (60-70%)
For the past 6 month I didn't make any new flashcards to remember. only reviews of old ones.
Do y'all have some better method to get to 1000 kanji inefficiently? Because it seems efficient method doesn't work for me.
Would native speakers still understand words that are basically the same in Japanese as English?
Like "radio" or "fantasy" or "game..." They're basically the same in Japanese (radjio, fantaji, gaamu) so if I just said them in English pronunciation, would someone with no experience in English still be able to tell what I'm saying?
How to use Free Software to learn Japanese, and more.
Japanese pop-up dictionary with pitch accent?
Hi, I use Rikaichan/Rikaikun at the moment but I'm not sure how to turn on pitch accent if it has it. Does anyone use a pop-up dictionary that has pitch accent, by any chance?