1
26
submitted 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago) by x4740N@lemm.ee to c/learnjapanese@lemmy.ml

I'm wondering where this extra stroke came from in the kanji for cicada that I have highlighted and would like an explanation since it doesn't match up with the kanji radicals on kanshudo

https://www.kanshudo.com/word/%E8%9D%89/1387080?oq=%E8%9D%89

2
14
submitted 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago) by glorious_puffy@lemmy.world to c/learnjapanese@lemmy.ml

わなし にほんじんです Here は is read as wa instead of its usual ha Can somebody explain this?

3
6

I want to say "If it was 〇〇, then... ", is "〇〇だったば、..." the right clause?

4
14
submitted 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago) by PlexSheep@feddit.de to c/learnjapanese@lemmy.ml

At break with coworkers today, I mentioned learning Japanese since a bit over a year now. I was then asked to say something in Japanese, but I couldn't really think of anything good.

On my way home, I formulated a little something that I could say the next time I get asked:

「今月に桜が綺麗です。」

Do any of you have such default sentences, and if so, what are they?

Edit: Wikipedia has the following as an example:

「太陽が東の空に昇る。」

5
15
6
16
submitted 8 months ago by x4740N@lemmy.world to c/learnjapanese@lemmy.ml

I'm wondering if これとこれ would work to say "this and this" in Japanese

7
4

I’m looking for anything out there that could help me navigate grocery stores in Japan? Maybe an Anki deck for food labels with proper kanji? I’ll be there for a period of time later this year and while my conversational skills are okay, I don’t know that I could grocery shop! I’ve got Genki 1 and 2 and some vocab cards for various ingredients, but they’re mostly hiragana or basic kanji like 肉 or 魚 or ご飯. Is there anything else I could get? Books, YouTube channels, anything that would help prepare me to buy ingredients would be appreciated!

8
13
submitted 9 months ago by x4740N@lemmy.world to c/learnjapanese@lemmy.ml

For additional context it is from the anime 「のんのんびより」

Screenshot_20240211-112443

9
10
submitted 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago) by x4740N@lemmy.world to c/learnjapanese@lemmy.ml

I remember kanji by first tracing them a certain amount of times with my finger usually around 5 times

Then I'll remember it by remembering a visualisation of drawing of drawing the kanji step by step instead of trying to visualise or think of the whole kanji at once

Mentally it feels like I use less mental bandwidth remembering kanji this way so my mind doesn't get stuck

This might not work for everyone but I'm sharing it in hopes it will help some people

10
0
submitted 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago) by x4740N@lemmy.world to c/learnjapanese@lemmy.ml

I'm not sure of the grammatical order in this scentence

I have learned about" Sentence topic, Time, Location, Subject, Indirect object, Direct object, Verb"

"学校から私に家へ手紙を送った"

Is "家へ手紙を" describing a direct object or is it something else ?"

I haven't learned all the kanji yet in the scentence and only know some of them

This scentence is from the sakubi grammer guide: https://sakubi.neocities.org/#moving

11
2
submitted 10 months ago by x4740N@lemmy.world to c/learnjapanese@lemmy.ml

I can read and make scentences in japanese provided I know the words and particle usage but it gets complicated for me once more than one subject or object or verb is used in a scentence

I'd also like to know how to order indirect objects in scentences

I have tried looking online but haven't found any useful google results on this so far

12
2
Marugoto (marugotoweb.jp)
submitted 11 months ago by moreeni@lemm.ee to c/learnjapanese@lemmy.ml

Website with free resources for studying Japanese. It only has content for A1-A2 levels but is still quite good.

13
4
14
5

What is the difference between

「」

and

『』

i.e. single-line and double-line quote marks?

15
3

Hi,

I'm currently learning and memorising hiragana at a pace that is comfortable for me after recently starting to learn japense but I'd like to know of a good online resources to learn about Japanese vocabulary in the future once I'm at that stage in learning Japanese

I'd prefer that online resource to be free

16
1

Im not familiar with what best way works with me so i figured i try the trial run.

The lessons consisted of communicating with someone from Japan on a one lesson a week for 4 weeks. Sessons was about 30 min.

-Lessons were mostly meet and greet -Learning how to say various forms of nouns in a formal manner.

  • using follow up questions as in which item -Counting and using different single digit numbers to form large numbers.

Its definitley some great feedback to learn as you go with responses from the teacher one in one over a zoom call.

  • after the trial i was offered to continue through a plan but i stopped as I honestly couldnt afford another expense. If i do continue it id like to see how far self taught goes and maybe learning through a group class of some sort.

Mind you after classes i would go over the lessons on my own for about half hour a day. Consistency is pretty much the nature of the beast. I limited to 30 min because if i get to bored im not learning nothing.

Do i recommend 1v1 via online tutor, yes(if its in your budget) though find out if they will be giving you work material and the slides or a reference of what was learned in class. Im sure i wasnt given anything since it was a trial. I was typing it as the lesson was going on. Its real good for beginners and good to use to brush up since you are talking to someone who lives the language in that country.

17
2
submitted 1 year ago by Pseudo@lemmy.ml to c/learnjapanese@lemmy.ml

Did all of the /r/learnjapanese users just migrate to Discord and call it a day?

18
1
submitted 1 year ago by renlok@lemmy.ml to c/learnjapanese@lemmy.ml

I've been learning Japanese for a few years now, my reading is pretty good but my listening is terrible. I've been actively trying to watch more Japanese content but I'm not a huge fan of anime. So I've been getting into Japanese dramas. I've found some good ones from just randomly browsing Japanese netflix but I've found it hard to find recommendations. Anyone have any suggestions of something I need to watch?

19
2
submitted 1 year ago by ferm@beehaw.org to c/learnjapanese@lemmy.ml

Hey all, my goal is to be at an ability level where I would be comfortable living in Tokyo while working at a company that speaks English in the office.

To that end, I've been working through Genki and its workbook. I've noticed that the slowest part for me is the workbook exercises, because of all of the writing I'm doing. Additionally, while I'm learning kanji (through WaniKani) I'm not trying to learn how to write it. So I'm doing all of these exercises by writing down kana. This is starting to seem a little ridiculous because trying to read my kana-only answers is challenging (the kanji apparently helps me read).

Do I keep going like through all of Genki and even through Quartet? Or should I call it quits and start typing my answers?

20
2
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by red_fish_tub@beehaw.org to c/learnjapanese@lemmy.ml

Physical Media

Textbooks

TL;DR: We recommend Genki

GENKI

The most commonly recommended textbook series in /r/LearnJapanese, published by Japan Times. Genki is a comprehensive textbook series designed for beginners; no previous knowledge is required to use Genki (although it won't hurt). Genki is also known for being very affordable compared to other textbooks. The companion workbook is recommended but not required.

Description from Amazon: Second edition of the most highly regarded teaching text book on the Japanese language, covering speaking, listening, reading, and writing to cultivate overall language ability. Each lesson in the revised edition features a new section dubbed Culture Notes," and now includes the audio CD companion which is in mp3 format ready to install on any music player. In Japanese/English. Distributed by Tsai Fong Books, Inc.

Genki-Online | Amazon.com Purchase Link

Nakama

Description from Amazon: NAKAMA 1 is a complete, flexible introductory program designed to present the fundamentals of the Japanese language to college students. Presented in two parts, NAKAMA 1A and NAKAMA 1B, the program focuses on proficiency-based language learning, emphasizes practical communication and student interaction, and fosters the development of all four language skills and cultural awareness. Thematically organized chapters focus on high-frequency communicative situations and introduce users to the Japanese language and its three writing systems: hiragana, katakana, and kanji. Maintaining the program's balanced approach, the new edition features updated technology resources, new authentic art, and practical, contemporary vocabulary to enhance learning.

Tobira

Description adapted from White Rabbit Japan: The "Tobira" textbook combines the practice of all four language skills (reading, listening, writing, speaking) and is designed for use by students who have completed a beginning Japanese textbook or, in terms of classroom time, somewhere from 250 to 300 hours of Japanese study.

The primary goals with this textbook are to solidify the grammar, vocabulary and kanji foundation studied during the beginner level and to develop all 4 language skills. Included is a link with which you gain access to the multimedia kit on Tobira’s official website. The menu holds various materials for audio learning, video learning, Kanji, grammar and writing practice. With this Language Partner Online, you can follow scenarios of everyday conversations, repeat single section or completely take over one part and interact with the other person.

The book holds 15 chapters, covering up everything from reading, vocabulary list, dialogues, conversation practice, grammar notes, kanji list to culture notes. The book is popular and has been used by many university courses worldwide.

Amazon.com

Kanji Learning

Remembering the Kanji

One method of learning kanji pioneered by James Heisig in Remembering the Kanji, is to use keywords that are made up of smaller components(radicals) called "primitives". To remember the meaning of a kanji, a mnemonic story is then constructed based on the primitives. As the learner becomes more familiar with kanji, the goal is ultimately to be able to recognize the meaning of a kanji while also being able to write it, eventually losing the need of the mnemonic.

The Kodansha Kanji Learner's Course

This book provides a system for remembering kanji meanings and understanding how these meanings are used in generating actual words. Kanji are introduced in building-block fashion, and sample compounds contain only previously learned kanji. All 2300 kanji are annotated with mnemonics and often other tips such as how to remember readings and/or how to distinguish between similar kanji. Can be reviewed with Memrise.

Dictionaries

Japanese-English

Kodansha’s Furigana Japanese Dictionary

Kodansha’s Furigana Japanese Dictionary includes both Kodansha’s Furigana Japanese-English Dictionary and Kodansha’s Furigana English-Japanese Dictionary and is designed specially for non-native learners. Words are sorted by reading, and are first given using hiragana and katakana before appropriate kanji (e.g. くる 来る {Irreg.}). Includes labels for speech level (e.g. colloquial, formal, humble, etc.) and example sentences.

Amazon.com

Japanese-Japanese

Sanseido Kanji Dictionary offers large-print Kanji dictionaries originally intended for children, but generally helpful to anyone wanting to see clearly defined Kanji, their common compounds, and Japanese readings. No English translations are given because it is meant to be used by Japanese children in a Japanese classroom, the same way Merriam-Webster is used in American, so a good Japanese-English dictionary is also suggested. Sanseido Kanji Dictionaries can be found in some US bookstores, or at Mitsuwa locations Link throughout America.

Grammar

Dictionary of {Basic/Intermediate/Advanced} Grammar

Please use this space to describe the Grammar Dictionary Series.

Basic Amazon.com Purchase Link | Intermediate Amazon.com Purchase Link | Advanced Amazon.com Purchase Link

21
3

Before the subreddit went private I was able to make a backup of the wiki. As far as I'm aware Lemmy does not currently have a community wiki functionality, so I will be posting the pages from the old wiki here as individual posts.

This might not be the ideal way to do this, but I like that people will be able to comment on resource pages directly. People could ask questions or make suggestions without having to make individual posts.

22
1
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by kentaromiura@feddit.it to c/learnjapanese@lemmy.ml

Cure dolly materials are good but some people has issues with the pitched up voice, so I found a way to pitch it down using a combination of virtual audio and a daw; any will work but for this guide I'll explain it using reaper and blackhole on osx, as easily available for anyone and they exist on other os as well and setup is similar for them.

Disclaimer: Reaper is not free but has a 60 day trial and you can buy it later if you desire, it will show nag screen to remind you (or use another daw, if you do I assume you know how to route audio and pitch down audio in your daw); black hole has a donation box on their site.

Requirements: 0) homebrew: follow the "install homebrew" command you find at brew.sh

  1. install blackhole driver Open a terminal and type each line followed by return:

brew install blackhole-2ch

sudo launchctl kickstart -kp system/com.apple.audio.coreaudiod

  1. Install reaper daw from reaper.fm/download.php

Now you're ready:

  • Press cmd+space and type system settings, press enter
  • select "Sound" on the left menu
  • Under output & input select blackhole 2ch (all your system audio is redirect to blackhole this way, so you should hear silence now until next steps)
  • open reaper (either via cmd+space or click on launchpad/reaper)

It will ask to configure your audio:

  • Click on "Allow use of different input and output device" -at the top you' ve input device, from the dropdown option select "blackhole 2c" -On output select "macbook pro speaker" or your usual device on your mac -press ok.

Now you're seeing a very empty reaper, right click on the left side area below the icons and insert new track.

Click on the red circle, this allow now to hear sounds again.

Click on the fx button, search for "pitch", from the fx listed select "VST: ReaPitch" with a double click, now here the first horizontal slider say shift(full range) just click on the right side of the slider in the textbox that has "semitones" next to it and write -6

Now if you start a cure dolly video, it will be pitched down, and it should solve the issue some people have with it.

You can add some more filters to make it better, or use a different value for pitchx but I think this is already enough for most people.

When you finish just remember to go to system settings/sound and restore your output to your speaker (of course if you're using headphones select headphones)

That's it, I hope the people that couldn't follow now can with this trick.

Happy learning!

Learn Japanese

520 readers
1 users here now

A hub for learners of the Japanese Language.

founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS