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Spaces? Yes/No/Other

Name: Anonymous 2007-12-13 2:46

I'm planning on learning Japanese. One of the main things that's been confusing me so far is the apparent lack of spaces between written words in Japanese (or most Asian language) sentences. How do they tell when one word ends and the next one begins? Or am I just missing something? AsfarasIcantelltheirsentencesalllooklikethis. Isthathowtheyactuallyare?

Name: ASK HERE 2007-12-13 3:40

Japanese - Ask questions thread
http://dis.4chan.org/read/lang/1174719097

Name: Anonymous 2007-12-13 12:37

>>1
How do you tell the difference when you're talking?

Name: Anonymous 2007-12-13 16:38

Jesus you're a moron.

Name: Anonymous 2007-12-17 5:28

>>1
thats the reason for kanji
seems retarded at first but, strangely it make things quicker to read

Name: Anonymous 2007-12-17 15:20

>>3
Talking and reading are two different things.

Name: Anonymous 2007-12-17 15:30

In english, spaces are important otherwise they can combine with other words and make weird new sounds, not to mention, you don't know  where one syllable ends

In Japanese, you always know when the syllable ends, even with hiragana, so reading really isn't a problem.

Name: Anonymous 2007-12-20 14:26

That's why 1) kanji are useful, and 2) a good knowledge of grammar is important. Knowing most of the particles and grammatical constructions will allow you to figure out word boundaries in more confusing texts. Kanji are also very useful in demarcating words since words, if they contain any kanji, almost always start with it. Of course, there will probably be some longer set expressions written in hiragana that will confuse the heck out of you, but you can't do much about that except ask for help on those, or do Google searches for the intermediate segments.

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