I'm intrested in learning Japanese and need your help.
So, I'm reading the Japanese introduction on Wikibooks and it says for me to first master Kana (hiragana, katakana) and kanji. Is there an order on how I should learn each one or learn them all together? Say should I study hiragana for 3 hours then study katakana for 3 hours or learn them both as I go along? I ask this because I feel afriad I might get confused and stressed out. I want this to be fun and not feel like work.
Right now I'm using Wikibooks to study kana and kanji so If you have any books or websites you can recommend for studing kana and kanji let me know, thanks.
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Ein2006-10-26 19:19
i know little japanese...
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Anonymous2006-10-26 20:04
Learn all of the Hiragana first, then all of the Katakana, and then start picking up a Kanji per day or something. Probably the best start. Mixing them up might cause you to get confused sometimes, because some hiragana/katakana look alike.
Get a teacher. You can only learn so far from books. I'm doing Japanese at uni, and i'm in japan now as part of my course. If you're honestly interested and not one of those part time "kawaii desu ne" people who seem to be plaguing the internet at the moment!
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Anonymous2006-10-27 7:05
>>7
si tambien habia uno que sale el hombre araña y dice "como tiro yo la telaraña?" y esta la foto de el pero con sombrero de mariachi, lo recomiendo
Yeah, I kinda hesitated posting this here because some of you might have not taken me seriously due to a lot of people wanting to learn Japaneses, mainly the younger crowd who give up after a while.
el japonese es muy malo debes aprender los 3 idiomas y el primero te lleva muchisimo porque son muchisimos kanjiis que NUNCA vas a leer porque nadie habla japonese a menos que seas un otaku emperdernido, y despues siguen el japonse con letras comunes y dsp otro mas lleva años aprender bien japonese pero teoricamente en 6 meses sin practica ya te olvidas de la mitad de los kanjiis
no aprendan este idioma no sean imbeciles por favor.
Source to end sources. It has interactive flash resources with recordings of native speakers, pdf files on verbs and adjectives and how to conjugate them, plus a bunch of other things like sample dialogs and overall grammar. This learning material is from a school in Tokyo for English speakers learning Japanese, alot if the material is based around preparing you for the annual Japanese Language Proficiency Test, which is a good thing.
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Anonymous2006-10-31 22:09
oye y si quiero ir pa japon y conseguir trabajo ahi y conocer gente? yo digo que mientras mas idiomas puedas aprender mejor, asi expandes tu conocimientos de idiomas y puedes visitar otros paises y disfrutar mas de la vida, coño!
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Anonymous2006-11-01 8:23
disfrutar tu madre aprender japonese no se disfruta es una tortura yo se lo que digo si quieres ir a japone pues que hablen ingles los japoneses y a la mierda tu eres gay disfruta de mi pene
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mexi.carlos2006-11-01 8:28
y aparte ese pais apesta esta lleno de japoneses salen hasta de los inodoros mas superpoblado imposible y las japonesas son todas iguales
si quiero disfrutar del mundo prefiero ir a africa y ver correr desnutridos por la jungla es mas divertido
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Anonymous2006-11-01 15:06
>>4
So, did you learn kana yet? It's been several days, and it took me an hour or two to learn both sets.
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Anonymous2006-11-02 13:28
>>23
Thanks for asking, yes I have but I haven't memorized all of the kana which is what I'm currently doing. I also found Japaneses teacher in my area, I'm looking forward to that a lot.
>>19
Thanks for the link, I'll bookmark it and look into.