i dunno any vocab but im gonna get some literature and just pound through it with a dictionary until i know japanese, anyone have any recs?
That sounds like misery. It's a hassle for me to look up the occasional word in a book I don't already know, having to do it for every word while looking at a conjugation table does not sound fun at all and a good way to exhaust your enthusiasm.
But best of luck, are you interested in classical literature or modern light reading? For the prior I recommend botchan, and latter hataraku maou sama.
I've been busting through tae kim and practicing conjugation with the extremely simple verbs given. Classical literature might be too antiquated so I'm looking for something more modern. For the record, I have done this before, and it was miserable. Learned spanish from a (modernized) version of Don Quixote.
going to rec 紫色のクアリア (book ver.) again.i dunno any vocab but im gonna get some literature and just pound through it with a dictionary until i know japanese, anyone have any recs?
Oh nice. Wanna PM me the site?There's a site out there that has a large amount of novels availible in html format, letting you use rikaisama on them.
the book you're starting now is also on it
There's a site out there that has a large amount of novels availible in html format, letting you use rikaisama on them.
the book you're starting now is also on it
Ok I got it.
Wish me luck
Try searching one of your email accounts for your registration confirmation, etc.?
Calling them would probably be the quickest route. Did you forget all of your Japanese since then? They may even speak English just fine...
Unfortunately before 2012 all the JLPT stuff(registration, results, etc) was conducted via regular mail so I don't have anything digital.
And yes I forgot almost anything I've learned.
I guess I'll try contacting some old buddies in Japan to help me out.
Is it normal to struggle with Japanese grammar? I never hear how hard it is... I'm having a tough time wrapping my head about relative clauses. I've been reading practice ones online and just can't wrap my head around what is going on in the sentence.
I have the dictionary of basic japanese grammar and have been going through the grammar terms at the beginning of the book. Hopefully that'll clear up some of my confusion? Like one part talks about auxiliary adjectives and now I know what those are... lol
Is it normal to struggle with Japanese grammar? I never hear how hard it is... I'm having a tough time wrapping my head about relative clauses. I've been reading practice ones online and just can't wrap my head around what is going on in the sentence.
I have the dictionary of basic japanese grammar and have been going through the grammar terms at the beginning of the book. Hopefully that'll clear up some of my confusion? Like one part talks about auxiliary adjectives and now I know what those are... lol
I would like to get some manga in Japanese. I live in the US. What are my options? Do I have to import?
I would like to get some manga in Japanese. I live in the US. What are my options? Do I have to import?
Is it normal to struggle with Japanese grammar? I never hear how hard it is... I'm having a tough time wrapping my head about relative clauses. I've been reading practice ones online and just can't wrap my head around what is going on in the sentence.
I have the dictionary of basic japanese grammar and have been going through the grammar terms at the beginning of the book. Hopefully that'll clear up some of my confusion? Like one part talks about auxiliary adjectives and now I know what those are... lol
Perhaps it would be better to change your approach. It sounds like you're just going one by one through a grammar book and approaching the language as if you were learning math or something.
To tell you the truth, I do not know what relative clauses or auxiliary adjectives are, but that's never stopped me from learning, speaking, reading, and writing Japanese. I'm sure if I read up on those concepts now, I would be able to recognize them, but I'm really not sure how valuable knowing them is, especially if you're just learning the language for the first time. Native speakers really don't think in those terms.
For beating level 2. On 4 now. They sent stickers.I subbed right after that so it worked, although I would have done that anywayHaha, did you get that for finishing wanikani?
I'm pretty sure the coupon doesn't apply to the lifetime sub.Id buy lifetime sub if someone slipped me a 50% coupon from Textfugu
If it's your first time studying Japanese, I'd imagine it will take a while to get used to how it "works" even at a simple level.Is it normal to already struggle by level 2 of Wanikani? I thought I was doing well but as soon as it introduced things such as 下がる, 下さい, 上げる, and 上る I basically hit a brick wall.
Ok I got it.
Wish me luck
If it's your first time studying Japanese, I'd imagine it will take a while to get used to how it "works" even at a simple level.
You'll remember it eventually. The whole design of the system is if you suck at words they'll give it to you until you get it.I started just under a month ago by learning Hiragana and then Katakana. Once I was confident I had those down everything suggested diving into Kanji next. First level was a breeze but once WaniKani start introducing 'below' and 'above' words it's like they completely abandoned having helpful mnemonics.
Well, with such a simple kanji and a couple of hiragana there's not much one can do as far as mnemonics go. You see up/above, the hiragana remind you of a verb (not now probably, but in a bit it will be pretty obvious), and so you think of "raise" or something similar.I started just under a month ago by learning Hiragana and then Katakana. Once I was confident I had those down everything suggested diving into Kanji next. First level was a breeze but once WaniKani start introducing 'below' and 'above' words it's like they completely abandoned having helpful mnemonics.
Well, with such a simple kanji and a couple of hiragana there's not much one can do as far as mnemonics go. You see up/above, the hiragana remind you of a verb (not now probably, but in a bit it will be pretty obvious), and so you think of "raise" or something similar.
Mnemonics will be really useful for complex kanji and words you'll see later down the line.
Is it normal to already struggle by level 2 of Wanikani? I thought I was doing well but as soon as it introduced things such as 下がる, 下さい, 上げる, and 上る I basically hit a brick wall.
For those two for example you can try to remember that with the あ-sound it's more of a passive meaning (not literally passive, mind you), so you have "to get lower" and "to rise" (where you are not applying the action to something beside yourself). With the え-sound it's instead more active; "you raise" or "you lower" something.I know each of them individually but the problem is mostly when recalling the difference between 上げる and 上がる for example. I know that it's verb involving 'raising/rising' just never sure which.
I know each of them individually but the problem is mostly when recalling the difference between 上げる and 上がる for example. I know that it's verb involving 'raising/rising' just never sure which.
For those two for example you can try to remember that with the あ-sound it's more of a passive meaning (not literally passive, mind you), so you have "to get lower" and "to rise" (where you are not applying the action to something beside yourself). With the え-sound it's instead more active; "you raise" or "you lower" something.
By the way, you shouldn't worry too much; you'll start seeing them more often (on WK and in other places later) and you'll get used to it. As you have realised though, knowing the kanji which appear in a word is generally not enough to know the exact meaning (but usually you can at least make a guess); there are cases where the same two kanji together mean one thing or another based on their order (this link has some examples)
If your main interest is kanji and vocab I'd say it could be worth it, if you like the way the site works.Hey guys, so I'm currently on Lesson 16 at Genki 2 (but my classes are at 13), and I was wondering: would it be worth doing WaniKani?
I would definitely like to get into reading more, and I feel like my lack of kanji (and vocab) are the biggest issues right now.