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Viewing 15 posts - 16 through 30 (of 164 total)
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  • Justin
    Member

    Only thing I have to add is for readings/etc also check out http://kanji.koohii.com – it’s free and is based on RTK. But it’s got readings (or at the VERY least the most common ones) and a whole community behind it. You’ll have to sign up but, again, it’s free.

    I haz a blog http://maninjapanchannel.wordpress.com/ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qLQzB-1u-dg
    in reply to: Hello from Brussels and now Japan #47590

    Justin
    Member

    It’s important to remember that being surrounded by the language is a massive leg-up on learning, but it does not mean it isn’t going to be a lot of work. Just make sure to keep studying, and when you’re out and about (which you should try to do as often as you can) use everything that you can. Talk to people, even if it’s just simple things. Practice makes perfect and all that, and having the exposure you’ve now got is going to give you a lot of opportunity to practice.

    I’d also recommend finding a language exchange partner; I couldn’t tell you WHERE to find them, but there are plenty of people who will sit down with you and spend half the time talking only in Japanese, and half the time only in whichever other language (Brussels; French or Dutch? I can’t remember). The benefit being you have that regular person to speak to, instead of relying on brief conversations with total strangers.

    This, of course, is coming from someone who DOES NOT live there and IS NOT fluent, so take everything I’ve said with an entire salt mine’s worth of scrutiny lol. But this is mostly based on what I know about languages in general – some of this stuff is very universal.

    Best of luck to you and I hope you have a great time. Do you have a blog/vlog or anything for us to follow?

    I haz a blog http://maninjapanchannel.wordpress.com/ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qLQzB-1u-dg
    in reply to: Kanji Woes #47589

    Justin
    Member

    Hey! That’s awesome! :) Progress feels great.

    Keep on chippin’

    I haz a blog http://maninjapanchannel.wordpress.com/ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qLQzB-1u-dg
    in reply to: Kanji Woes #47567

    Justin
    Member

    Yeah it can be brutal…

    It may be worth spending a few days just doing an ass-kicking review. Although I wouldn’t know exactly how to go about that in the most effective manner. I’ve been meaning to do a massive review myself, so if I get to that soonish I’ll let you know how it goes lol. No promises though. I might not do it.

    I used to do a review-at-the-beginning-of-the-day thing and it worked pretty well for me. Except doing reviews at 4am just isn’t sustainable, so it didn’t last. Apparently I’m expected to actually GO to work. Psh.

    Anyway, best of luck. Don’t let it get the best of you, and just plug away at reviews if you’re getting stuck on new material. You’ll get there.

    I haz a blog http://maninjapanchannel.wordpress.com/ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qLQzB-1u-dg
    in reply to: Kanji Woes #47564

    Justin
    Member

    How many are you learning per day?

    Some people can do like 40 or 50 per day and they’re what scientists call “tanks”. I’m not one of those people. 15 to 20 is about my comfort range.

    Also, do you write anything down or do you just read and review? I found writing stuff down helped it stick, but that is pretty dependant on how you learn.

    Last thing, when you use Anki, how much time do you give yourself to guess the answer before clicking the red button? I try to limit it to about 5 or 6 seconds. If I don’t get it, red button that bitch because obviously I haven’t learned it. It makes the reviews pretty long, I’ll admit. But you’re also packing 2200 new things into your mindbrain so it’s gonna take some time. Stock up on patience because learning a language will absolutely pillage it.

    The most important thing is not to get discouraged. If you’re getting overwhelmed, take a day off from learning new ones and just use the time for review. It’ll let you catch up, but it’s important to keep on the review so you don’t go forgetting stuff. But also! Don’t just give up! My god I can’t stress how important that is. I had stopped for a couple months and the 500+ kanji I knew are almost totally forgotten. It burns.

    Best of luck. I hope you get it sorted soon!

    (shameless plug my yt channel has a video on kanji studyage that shows you how I do it)

    I haz a blog http://maninjapanchannel.wordpress.com/ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qLQzB-1u-dg
    in reply to: Sentences with the particle を #47556

    Justin
    Member

    I wish I could cite some specific audio examples. I should try putting something like that together, because I see questions like this come up a lot. Not that I’m an expert in the language, but my musical background helps distinguishing the sounds lol.

    I had one Japanese lady once explain it basically as this; in regular conversation you just make the “o” sound. But if she were saying the sentence slowly, for instructional purposes for example, she would sound out “wo”. One of those fun weird things. I’ve not had any 4 beat o-sounds yet but I got to do a 3 beat one with my tutor last week. It snuck up on me and I felt ridiculous.

    I haz a blog http://maninjapanchannel.wordpress.com/ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qLQzB-1u-dg
    in reply to: Tips for learning the verb/adjectives (な/い) lists? #47538

    Justin
    Member

    Well Joel beat me to it. My old place was plastered in post-its, like that scene from the Simpsons at the Flanders’ cottage.

    Otherwise, yeah there’s a definite learning curve when starting to pick up the words. Maybe try this at the beginning of the day, and Anki may fall a bit short for you here but load up your list, and go through the words but keep clicking the… red button? I’m sorry I haven’t Anki’d in a while, but you want the button that makes it come up again soon. Do it for all of them like 3 or 4 times until you get it almost right away.

    Then cry for 45 minutes. (optional)

    Then some time at the end of the day, do it again (you may have to change settings for it to let you). SRS does work to an extent but I found trying to pound that many words into my head, it did tend to not make a difference for me even though I was doing it at the same time everyday. You will get there – you learned one language, you can learn another. Building vocab is a particularly fun hurdle to get over but with some practise and figuring out what works for you, you’ll get there. The important thing is to try not to get discouraged, as trout mentioned.

    Best of luck!!

    I haz a blog http://maninjapanchannel.wordpress.com/ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qLQzB-1u-dg
    in reply to: Big issue with anki decks. #47533

    Justin
    Member

    I haven’t used anki in a while but I’m pretty sure you download the decks as zips and then you have to extract them to a folder. Did you do that?

    I haz a blog http://maninjapanchannel.wordpress.com/ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qLQzB-1u-dg
    in reply to: Learning Japanese from Chinese #47484

    Justin
    Member

    Since you’re fairly comfortable with kanji, I’d say get to work on the kana (I don’t know how to pluralise that… kana? Kanas? Kani?) and once you’ve got that down (literally should take no more than a week) start working figuring out different kanji pronunciations/readings. You’ll probably want to try out WaniKani since it will walk you through the readings, and just beat vocabulary into your head. You’ll pick up a lot of the readings from vocab, and since you’re fairly comfortable with kanji-type characters you’ve got a serious leg-up on the whole thing.

    Honestly, vocab is probably your biggest hurdle, with grammar very close behind. I don’t know much about standard Chinese grammar but I’ve been led to believe it’s (comparatively) very simple. Japanese grammar requires study but I’d say you can pick up a great deal of it through experience.

    However, I speak English and understand some French – i.e. I don’t know that I’m even close to correct. But I would hit up vocab and basic grammar ASAP and you’ll be able to start jamming through stuff *really* quickly with regular use. You may also wish to email Koichi directly about this, he might have some insight. He’s usually pretty good about answering emails.

    Best of luck! Maybe also share your conclusions when you get going?

    I haz a blog http://maninjapanchannel.wordpress.com/ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qLQzB-1u-dg
    in reply to: こんにちは from Utah! #47483

    Justin
    Member

    I enjoy that “こんいちは” rhymes with Utah.

    Welcome to the party!

    I haz a blog http://maninjapanchannel.wordpress.com/ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qLQzB-1u-dg
    in reply to: Anki2 Combining Decks #47482

    Justin
    Member

    P.S. Don’t worry, as great as Anki is, they really didn’t put a ton of time into the interface. It isn’t the most intuitive thing ever lol.

    I haz a blog http://maninjapanchannel.wordpress.com/ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qLQzB-1u-dg
    in reply to: Anki2 Combining Decks #47481

    Justin
    Member

    Ahh I’ve actually answered this question but it was a long time ago…

    From the main screen, click “Browse” and then on the left select the deck you want to take cards from. Select the cards you want to move (or click on one and then ctrl + A to select all of them), then click “Change Deck” and select the destination deck, then click “Move Cards”. You can delete the deck after, since it will be empty now. All of your study data moves with the cards too, fyi.

    Good luck!

    I haz a blog http://maninjapanchannel.wordpress.com/ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qLQzB-1u-dg
    in reply to: damn ive reached that damn dip #47427

    Justin
    Member

    Damn, Cimmik, I would have posted that!!! That one really makes the rounds.

    Not really much else I can say that nobody else has said. Try to avoid comparing your progress to others, avoid complete stoppage… etc.

    If you have an Android phone you can download an app called Kanji Senpai. It’s actually kinda fun and much better than doing nothing.

    Stereopony makes hella terrific music that I strongly encourage you to enjoy for some Japanese tunes.

    Good luck, and as our fisherman friend (not to be confused with Fisherman’s Friends lol) would say, NEVER GIVE UP!

    I haz a blog http://maninjapanchannel.wordpress.com/ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qLQzB-1u-dg
    in reply to: Season 2 Numbers anki deck is missing numbers #47403

    Justin
    Member

    I haven’t looked but I would think the Anki shared decks would have something, no? There’s a pretty robust selection of things there.

    I haz a blog http://maninjapanchannel.wordpress.com/ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qLQzB-1u-dg
    in reply to: Could I get advice for my study schedule? Long post sorry :( #47401

    Justin
    Member

    Don’t worry about longish posts – I think I get some kind of internet prize for doing the same thing, as you’re about to discover lol.

    “In regards to actually conversing with a native, when would you recommend doing this?”
    For me, I went on Kijiji (which I think is specific to Canada, so if you’re Stateside you’ll have craigslist I guess) and found a Japanese tutor. I pay $20 per session but she’s quite fluent in English so if she says something I don’t understand she is able to explain it. This of course is pretty dependent on where you live – I’m in the country’s capital so there’s a lot of diversity here, which makes it relatively easy to find a native speaker. Otherwise, check out japan-guide.com; you will have to weed through some folks but if you pop an ad up in the classifieds (it’s all free) that you’re looking for a speaking partner, you will find someone. You can start out written at first. Think about what you want to say, and fill in the blanks as you go. Get a lot of it wrong and then you will be corrected. That was my experience with it, anyway. From there you’ll also be able to find people who are willing to go on skype or google hangouts, and you just use what you know. You’re going to encounter things that you don’t know how to say, and you’ll have to learn how to say it. As to when you actually do this, it can be at any time in your language learning journey. It’s going to be uncomfortable as hell but when you start to do it more, your confidence will build and you’ll be more open to making mistakes and not knowing how to say stuff. Necessity is the mother of invention as they say, and in this case swap invention for language learning.

    You can also try, and this is scary but worth the risk, chatroulette or one of those other webcam things. The trick is to put that “Japanese” is one of your interests. It eliminates most of the penises you have to see and you’ll get thrown at people who are willing to chat. I’ve made a few friends doing that. There’s also mylanguageexchange.com and italki.com which both have some decent potential. You’re going to get a lot of people that are, as you have experienced, “more interested in flirting than learning” but if you keep at it you WILL get people that don’t suck.

    “And one other thing :P, I typically consider myself a pretty sociable guy, but at the idea of trying to converse with a someone in a different language makes me kind of nervous. Any tips on this?”
    I have a fairly mild social anxiety, so I can completely understand your apprehension here. I get nervous striking up ENGLISH conversations with strangers lol, let alone Japanese. As far as tips, this is a bit tricky. I try to live by this question: “will I regret this later?” – and I’ve never thought “yes” after talking to someone. (It’s also useful for weight loss! “Will I regret not eating this chocolate later?” NOPE. Just putting it out there haha). Sure you’ll feel like an idiot but afterward you feel good because you made yourself do something. It’s productive and it feels good emotionally to overcome the fear. So, you just kind of do it. Be aware that you might not feel good about it the first few times. You’ll feel like you just made a fool of yourself, and if you’re like me you think they’re judging you. But remember, most people will be happy that you’re making an effort to learn THEIR language. (Imagine it like someone is new to English and they come to you and, in broken English, ask for something; do you think “wow this guy’s an idiot for trying to speak a language he didn’t grow up with”? No, you do your best to understand and appreciate that they made the effort). If you’re more comfortable to start out just writing to someone, do that first. As I said before, I didn’t start using my knowledge until very recently and because of that I have zero confidence in it. Your being nervous comes from having no confidence in your language skills, so you need to build that confidence, which you will do by being uncomfortable a lot of the time at first. It’s actually good to have someone whose English is stronger than your Japanese, because like with my tutor, things can be explained to you. For some inspiration, check out the YouTube channel “Other Ways of Life” and look at his “Rejection Therapy” videos.

    Now – all of this said – you still want to learn vocabulary. Grammar is important too, for sure, but there’s more vocabulary than there is grammar. So, as Strangeluv said, grab that 6k deck. You still want to spend a bit of time on grammar, but you will pick up a lot of it over time through regular or semi-regular usage. You should also check out the Tofugu 500 sentences pack if you haven’t. There’s some pretty advanced/weird stuff in there but going through each of the sentences you pick up a lot. I’m cutting myself off now because I could actually write all day about this.

    How’s that for a lengthy reply? ;)

    And thanks for checking out my channel!!

    I haz a blog http://maninjapanchannel.wordpress.com/ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qLQzB-1u-dg
Viewing 15 posts - 16 through 30 (of 164 total)