This thread is for the discussion of the language, culture, travel, daily life, etc. of Japan. Let's tark at randam in Japanese and English. Take it easy!
>次スレを立てる前に必ずスレ立て宣言をして下さい。次スレリンクも忘れずに。 >Please declare when making a new thread and post its link. at least remove this if you're not gonna follow it yourself you ape
why you so salty? i just called you a ape because you were being an ape. created a new thread because you couldn't fucking read that the ru comrade was already going to do it and even argued over it.
Learning rules like that is for beginners only. When you're more advanced, you will have an instinctive feel for things, and won't need a flowchart guide. When you're a beginner, you will just be confused or distracted by something so thorough. It's a bad chart with no valid use.
葉っぱ、それは、危ない! 前々スレの続きだけど The place that 佳奈美 was born is Japan The place that 佳奈美 was born is in Japan 自然なのは、前者だが、後者は成立する。 では、 The place that 佳奈美 was born in is Japan は、何故、おかしいのだろうか。 What about that sentence? 君の見解は?
How did you guys deal with Kanji? It's the one thing that stopped me from learning Japanese
Ryan Perry
イギリスなんて日本じゃ嫌われまくってるのに皮肉だね
Julian White
初耳
Grayson Adams
i became a weeb that really wanted to play my japanese video games on release
Jaxon James
元々旅行先では不人気だったけど最近反日国だとばれた BBCなんかの報道が伝わって
Brody Myers
How long did it take you?
Adrian Morgan
I learned Kanji through exposure to them. I read my Japanese books and went over online resources and just looked at the Kanji over and over. You learn by starting small. Learn a few kanji at a time and then see what common words they appear in. Best done with kanji that are words in themselves (ex. 日=day, 本=book, 何=what) After you get some kanji, learn how they go together to form more complex words (ex. 日本=root of the sun/Japan, 昨日=previous day/yesterday) Look up some words in Japanese and see how they're rendered in Kanji. You can learn the readings of Kanji by the words they appear in. Learn the readings for individual Kanji later after you get a solid foundation of how words are read. You don't need to learn how to write the Kanji (debated, but in this digital era, writing Kanji is less important than reading them) so you can focus your time on learning how Kanji are read and put together into words.
Levi Gomez
a really long time. 4 years i think
Logan Parker
一部のネット民はイギリス嫌いなのかもしれないけど、ほとんどの日本人は嫌いじゃない
Samuel Mitchell
Addendum: It took me a couple years to learn enough Kanji to be functional in reading Japanese, and I haven't stopped learning Kanji. Learning a new language is a huge commitment that can possibly take a lifetime. You must never give up in your pursuit of learning if you want to git gud. >How do you eat a whale? One bite at a time.
Henry Sullivan
Letters are too small to read. But it definitely shows Japanese verbs conjugate way more orderly than I thought.
If you dont have the balls you can always go and learn hangul or whatever it is called you pussy leaf They left out all kanji off their alphabet specially for weak minded individuals like you
Nathaniel Howard
I'm a native speaker. I don't remember the last time I learnt a new kanji character.
Does one really need to understand that much Kanji just for basic stuff like manga though? I'm not looking to get balls deep into Japanese, just enough to understand the language so i'm not completely clueless.
Depends on the manga you want to read. A lot of shonen is made for young boys (surprise!) so the higher level Kanji will have furigana to indicate readings. So in order to read manga, you need at least a small amount of Kanji in order to read basic words. You can always look up words you don't know as you go, and learn from that. There are definitely a number of people who learned Japanese through anime and manga, so it's not impossible.