11 Comments
Mar 9, 2021Liked by Bunsuke

I first used some internet quiz to learn kanas.

Then I started studying kanjis via the kanji study android app, and at the same time I followed tae kim's grammar guide.

Now I'm using your newsletter as well as the todai easy japanese app, which consists of simplified newspaper articles from NHK.

I'm also using the Jisho online dictionary for all my kanji or grammar reminder needs

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Hi Bunsuke - my personal study mode these days is 60% centered on reading novels - I read as much as I can, look up what I don't know, and do my best to learn what I encounter. I hope you don't mind me giving a quick plug for Kanshudo, which includes a large array of dictionary content integrated into a single look-up system, as well as built-in flashcards and learning games, so Kanshudo is still my main goto dictionary + flashcard system. Another 20% of my study is watching Japanese programs on Netflix - whenever I run into something I don't understand, I love the facility for displaying the subtitles in Japanese. I also use the subtitles as a speed reading challenge - reading as the words are spoken is amazingly useful. Finally, as part of working on the grammar articles for Kanshudo, interacting with native speakers arguing about the finer points of Japanese grammar is an extremely good way to tease out the nuances of the language! I also second the point about a J-J dictionary (something I want to add to Kanshudo) - for me that's the main benefit of reading on the Kindle app as Japanese novels (slowly ...) become available electronically. I use an E-J dictionary as my main dictionary for English Kindle books, so I can test myself on how well I can express a given English concept in Japanese ...

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Mar 7, 2021Liked by Bunsuke

My daily routine is mostly learning vocabulary in Anki (Tango N5, N4, and currently N3 deck) at a rate of 25 new words a day. I began doing Anki in the middle of December 2020 and now my vocabulary is ~1850 words. On average it takes me a little more than one hour to review and learn new words. For grammar, I use free guides by Tae Kim and Michiel "Pomax" Kamermans.

So far, my studies were leaning heavily toward vocabulary, so the next priority is to spend more time on grammar.

As far as reading goes, I recently began reading a book "Japanese short stories for beginners" that has 20 very shorts stories tailored to ~JLPT N4 level. I'm only 5 stories in, but it has been a great experience, each story had less than 5 new words for me, so the readability is high. Bunsuke's short snippets are way harder ;) I really appreciate them though, it's a great way to familiarize yourself with Japanese writers. I was pleasantly surprised to find that the works of some of those writers (like Natsume Sōuseki) were translated into my native Ukrainian language. I gotta try to get them into my personal library ;)

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Mar 5, 2021Liked by Bunsuke

I use the Yomichan extension for google chrome when reading on my laptop, you can install any dictionary you want. Just hold shift over any kanji and it their meanings show automatically in a pop-up. I use it with a J-J dictionary. If you don't understand a word in the pop-up it lets you search that too - hold shift and you can get a pop-up within a pop-up!

Thanks for setting up the newsletter by the way - it's bloody great!

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