日本語を読めますか?
Untitled
No sorry I've been slacking
I can read most manga with a dictionary.
anyone who browses Zig Forums regularly should know katakana and hiragana to find sauce easier.
ま、なんとなくね.
嫁の為にもっと日本語勉強にするです
実、その全部読めません
>の為に
Nice machine translator
Unfortunately, it was not.
And a ching chong nip nong to you, young Sir.
No, really, stop this, you are allowing /jp/ in.
I can read it if it's really easy
Can I understand what I read? No, not really.
How was mine?
This is good.
Why would you assume that he knows better just because he criticized someone else?
Because I believe
Please be careful, user. There are lots of crazy people out there.
お嫁さん誰?
この子俺の嫁
I started putting real effort into it recently, with Anki and everything. I actually find memorizing kanji easier if I group together all of the ones that have a radical in common. I have a side-notebook where I write a group of similar looking kanji for each page.
I could read this one and got several stuff from this . I even know that 為 is "tame", I stumbled upon it by accident and for a while I also thought it could be used to mean "sake/for", now I mostly remember it because if you put イ before it it becomes 偽 "nise", as in "nisemono" (fake).
It's a really slow and straining ordeal, but I'm making real progress and it makes me really giddy when I see a sentence I can understand. However, I made the possibly weird decision of putting most of my effort into learning only the meaning of kanji and not how they're read.
Honestly I think the absurd amount of homophony to be the biggest roadblock in learning Japanese. Now that I kind of gave up on trying at all costs to learn the reading of each kanji right away I made much smoother and substantial progress. Once I have a foot firmly planted in the door of being able to read well enough I'll go back and start studying how they're read of course.
その事は言うないです. 俺の日本言葉まだ悪いですからね~
>I started putting real effort into it recently, with Anki and everything. I actually find memorizing kanji easier if I group together all of the ones that have a radical in common. I have a side-notebook where I write a group of similar looking kanji for each page.
Heh, I do the exact same thing.
私はゲイ
based
Isn't it much better? If I try to just go for the ones I may need I keep mixing together all of the radicals.
This way instead I have an anchor, and then I have to only remember the rest. Like for example:
支 is support
枝 tree + support = branch
皮 = leather. It doesn't have a clear metaphor behind it, but you can think of skin/leather as support for something
波 The three dots before are often used for watery things + skin = wave
疲 The 广 with the two dots at the side mean "sickness, disease" + skin = exhaustion
Studying the radicals themselves can be really useful. Obviously not everything can be made sense of, but making up dumb metaphors or sort-of-mnemonics can really help.
I started studying again
This time I just didnt bother with trying to grind 20 words a day since it would probably lead to diasater again, last time I got like 200 words before I got burned out, this time im just going though the grammar guide, but weeew I finally made it though the basic grammar section, and theres still miltiple sections to go PLUS /djt/ claim that all of tae kim is basic and there's more?
At least with Kanji you don't have to think much about it, just memorize. I cant imagine how I could ever construct sentences with all these crazy rules. And you have to relearn eveything for 丁寧語.
You are supposed to do both, grammar and anki grinding.
可能性は自動詞なんじゃない?
「日本語が読めますか」にすべきだと思う
Well if you try to read something without knowing grammar you basically can't read it, but if you try to read without knowing kanji all you need is a dictionary.
まぁ、ちょっとだけだなファッキュー。
読めるぞ、メガネくん
>日本語 読んですか」op さべったの。
>その 日本語だから。漢字わすれな!本当に!
>「あのさ、漢字わかってか?」
どうぞ
baka yarou!
>KOITSU GAA!