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Japanese from scratch TAC 2015 東亜

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kraemder
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1497 posts - 1648 votes 
Speaks: English*
Studies: German, Spanish, Japanese

 
 Message 25 of 1702
02 June 2011 at 4:15am | IP Logged 
An Amazon purchase just arrived in the mail today. Elementary Japanese Volume One by Yoko Hasegawa. I saw this in Borders. Borders has free wifi so I deftly checked amazon.com on my ipod touch and unfortunately it was way cheaper so I have been waiting for some time for it to come. I've more or less been just winging it regarding learning. I've been memorizing vocabulary lists and listening to Pimsleur and some other podcasts. I do have the Living Language coursebook but I quickly discovered my initial intention of using romaji exclusively until I reached an intermediate level wasn't going to work for me and haven't respected it since because it has no japanese characters except for a kana chart at the beginning for unknown reference reasons.

I've been really intimidated by Kanji. I noticed right away that this book has plenty of Japanese letters which was why I wanted it. I am hoping that a nice structured approach to the kanji (and everything else) is going to make this more appealing to me than giving me a list of 2000 kanji and saying STUDY!

Every other language I've studied my first steps were always in the classroom. After the beginner courses I pretty much set out on my own as my attention wanders and sticking to someone else's plan for what to study just didn't happen. However, I am having a pretty good respect for the difficulty of Japanese and especially its alphabet so I am going to embrace this textbook's structure with open arms. I really want to learn this thing. I might even look for courses near where I live too.

Not sure if I mentioned that I have the level 1 Rosetta Stone course. While I'm looking forward to their tutors I know from experience what to expect and it would in no way prepare me to deal with learning Japanese. I need grammar and alphabet training - learning through osmosis like I did English as a kid is NOT going to cut it. It's a nice supplement though.
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kraemder
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1497 posts - 1648 votes 
Speaks: English*
Studies: German, Spanish, Japanese

 
 Message 26 of 1702
02 June 2011 at 11:19pm | IP Logged 
Ok. I like the new text book so far. Its much more challenging than any other text book I've looked at yet.
They don't mess around - it's kana from page 1 albeit with Romaji under it until like page 4 where they give
a chart of the kana. Then no more romaji. I find this motivating but hard . I have sound out the kana and
it's slow where the romaji has no conversion process and is super fast to read for me. Whoever says that
using romaji ruins your accent but using kana gives you native pronunciation is wrong. But I will never read
Japanese text effectively until I master kana so may as well get it over with. I get frustrated whenever I see
text I can't even pronounce so kana I will study. I'm thinking of tring the Asimmil program too as I'm seeing
some good stuff about it in other logs ( although for other languages) but it has good reviews on amazon for
the japanese version too. I'm a little modded that there isn't an mp3 version. I really hate CDs. Well back
to work...
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Lasciel
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Studies: Spanish, Japanese

 
 Message 27 of 1702
03 June 2011 at 12:30am | IP Logged 
While I agree that there will be very few occasions when you need to write Japanese (unless you get a penpal or live in Japan) learning the correct way to write the symbols is very helpful when you have a couple hundred kanji under your belt and you begin encountering a lot of kanji that differ in very small ways. Knowing how to write them really seems to help with being able to pick out those differences when reading.

Plus writing things down tends to aid in memorizing them :P
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kraemder
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 Message 28 of 1702
03 June 2011 at 4:16am | IP Logged 
Lasciel wrote:
While I agree that there will be very few occasions when you need to write Japanese (unless you get a penpal or live in Japan) learning the correct way to write the symbols is very helpful when you have a couple hundred kanji under your belt and you begin encountering a lot of kanji that differ in very small ways. Knowing how to write them really seems to help with being able to pick out those differences when reading.

Plus writing things down tends to aid in memorizing them :P


I might cave and do this at some point. But not yet. When I get serious about reading kanji texts if I'm really struggling I may resort this.
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kraemder
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Speaks: English*
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 Message 29 of 1702
06 June 2011 at 1:58am | IP Logged 
It's been a little over a month since I started this log. In terms of progress I've gotten mostly comfortable with the Hiragana alhabet, and have gotten through more than half of the katakana alphabet. I've read this is possible in just a couple days and I don't disbelieve it. So my progress isn't stellar by any means. I'm not doing an intensive study however but a part time one and I'm just happy I'm still keeping at it.

My study routine is pretty much flash card based. I've got flashcard sets for hiragana, katakana, a lot of vocab lists I've gotten from quizlet.com and I made some sets to go with Pimsleur and chapters 1/2 of the textbook I just started. I am using Flashcard Deluxe on my ipod for the flashcards along with TextAloudmp3 and the kyoko japanese voice from Scansoft to make audio for the flashcards.

In the past I never really made headway with a language until I started reading fiction books in the target language. With a good pop up dictionary I can pretty much do this with any European language without much study at all but I've found that is definitely not the case with Japanese. The written language is simply too different from English.

I did find a neat webpage that I'll be using I'm sure when I want to make another stab at reading.

http://nihongo.j-talk.com/kanji/

It basically can convert regular text with kanji to hiragana or romaji or translate it to English. It can convert it to a translate html text with mouseover translations like a pop dictionary (but the translations are better than any pop up dictionary I've found yet). It can make a list of all the vocabulary with translations and pronunciations for you.

This website is freaking awesome. I wonder if there's similar sites for Spanish/French/German... I would love the feature to make vocabulary lists for me that I can past into a spreadsheet without any effort.. man.

Actually pulling it up to write about it I think I'm going to go ahead and make another flashcard set with that last feature and maybe start reading sooner. Well maybe not just yet. Looks nice though.

I did find a great free app on ipod to listen to Japanese radio. So I've got some ambient Japanese talk radio. Can't follow any of it yet.

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kraemder
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Speaks: English*
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 Message 30 of 1702
11 June 2011 at 12:58pm | IP Logged 
Ok.. I got assimil and my ipad2 in the mail today. I am checking out the app store for cool apps related to
Japanese learning. A few look interesting but nothing is tempting enough for me to buy. Ive already got
several on my iPod and they're interesting but nothing really compares to my old flashcards deluxe program
I got for the iPod way back when. And the author just added a new beta feature for TTS. I forget the
languages but it includes Japanese. They're the neospeech voices if you're familiar and sound great and
are really easy to setup. Nothing makes flashcards more fun than adding voice IMHO and I already loved
the interface.

I'm a bit tired now but I'm thinking there's other posts on he for tips on getting h the most out of an iPad. I
love this thing!
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The Real CZ
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 Message 31 of 1702
11 June 2011 at 1:35pm | IP Logged 
kraemder wrote:
The Real CZ wrote:
It's cultural. It's like an American nodding their head while someone is talking to them. It's basically to let the other person know that you're still listening.


How come they don't do it in the cartoons I watch - is it used more in specific situations like on the radio?


You surely don't expect anime to be accurate in depicting real Japanese life. Go watch some Japanese dramas and you'll see.
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kraemder
Senior Member
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1497 posts - 1648 votes 
Speaks: English*
Studies: German, Spanish, Japanese

 
 Message 32 of 1702
11 June 2011 at 11:12pm | IP Logged 
Quote:


You surely don't expect anime to be accurate in depicting real Japanese life. Go watch some Japanese
dramas and you'll see.

Yeah I'm a little naive I guess. I figured it was actually more or less the way they talk since the characters
were Japanese and written by Japanese. I guess cartoons are different. Where can I view Japanese
dramas via the internet? And when you say dramas are they basically soap operas or would you say they
have more substance? One turn off for me with Spanish was their fascination with soap operas and e lack
of other entertainment (aside from soccer which is cool but not the best for language studying).


Edited by kraemder on 12 June 2011 at 1:59am



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