DJT is the best Japanese language learning vtuber shitposting thread on Zig Forums for むっつりスケベ共 that are interested in everything Japanese Japanese speakers learning English are also welcome
How to learn 日本語: 1.無理があんのよ 2.Don't waste time/money on ゴミ like: -All textbooks like Genki, RTK etc. -All mnemonics like KLCC, Kanji Damage etc. -All online courses like Wanikani, Duolingo etc. -All language schools, classrooms etc. -Shitty english youtube channels, you're here to learn Japanese (日本語の森 is good) -Awful anki decks(only 2k/6k from the OP and a simple yomichan mining deck are good) -Spending 20 hours on Anki daily (you shouldn't spend more than 1-2 hours as a beginner and 30 minutes max after a few months, spamming easy is fine) -JLPT, Kanji Kentei tests etc. -Pitch accent(doesn't actually exist, you can say words however the fuck you want) -Learning how to write on paper (if you really want to waste time on this do it later once you know the basics) Avoiding these beginner traps will cut down your learning time considerably to less than 5 years if you learn every day and never give up 3.youtube.com/watch?v=iGTJkFpiqy8 4.Spend a few days getting familiar with hiragana and katakana 5.A few months of Anki 6k vocabulary and your favorite grammar guide while reading something easy on the side 6.A few years of reading, listening, watching cyberthots, shitposting in /djt/ and having your posts corrected by jap flags, googling stuff you don't know and you're done! 7.Move out to Japan (optional) 8.Realize there's always more to learn and the ride never ends 絶対英語を学べる方法: 一つ 楽勝だから方法なんていらないだろう
(a bit more detailed) >あ、綺麗に洗えてるよ? Here the subject and the objective are omitted. >(お兄ちゃんは) (洗濯物を) 綺麗に洗えてる If you get >お兄ちゃんは 洗濯物を 綺麗に 洗える then you should also get its ている-form with あ、and よ.
when i'm studying individual kanji on anki, i'm suppose to press good when i get the meaning and the readings or only the meaning?
Kayden Green
INDIVIDUAL KANJI?
Isaac Walker
Don't study individual kanji dipshit
Camden Bailey
why not?
Gavin Lewis
That's chinese
Joshua Stewart
I think learning individual kanji is not necessarily wrong, at least it is definitely way more beneficial than trying to memorize all radicals of it. The problem is that it'd be much too laborious memorizing all PRONUNCIATIONS of each kanji without any knowledge of compound words. I don't want you memorize all pronunciations of 生 before actually starting reading something. The number of common kanjis are about 2k, and it's not that big number when learning a foreign language I think. And I read an article that contend the benefit of knowing meaning of kanjis when reading Japanese, even though you don't know the pronunciations at all. britvsjapan.com/learn-kanji-fast-ultimate-guide-to-remembering-the-kanji/ So what I'd like to tell you is that you're better off focusing on their meanings than pronunciations, but you may take a way you prefer, as the number is not that big as I think. Thank you for learning our language.
kanji are not words. they're logograms, rarely single ones are words compounds are words. you learn words pronounce(reading) and meaning, then grammar. now you can read
>自*分の意見 This is way more natural. >罐詰めにされた/罐詰めにされた these are natural ones. I think I haven't seen the phrase "缶詰まれた" until today. >抛っておく 放ってく is way more common, you may have already known it though. And >あいつら*が If it's は it might sound like it's "them" who leave that(people or things, something mentioned outside of the text) untouched, for me.
Luis Torres
>>罐詰めにされた/*罐に詰められた sorry
Wyatt Smith
>放って*おく is way more common, terribly sorry
Isaac Barnes
Scuze you
Jack Phillips
Thanks I read 罐詰 in a story by 筒井康隆 but I guess I mixed it up.
Levi Price
Also that kanji 抛る was used in the same story
Nathan Howard
スキューズ? なかなか素晴らしい本の趣味をお持ちで。 いや本当に。 >that's his style, bit old-fashioned, which we enjoy.