I have great passion for Japan and Japanese language, and now I have a collection of N4, N3 and N2 Japanese Language Proficiency Test Diplomas. Join me as I explore the beauty of Japanese language, share my tips for language learning and glance into Japanese culture!
I'm originally from Ukraine, live in the US , I can speak Russian, Ukrainian, English and of course Japanese!
Thank you for taking a step to explaining harder topics in Japanese! I feel like a lot of Japanese channels tread the same ground by teaching the same beginner lessons. So really, thank you for the time to make this!
you have to explain the sentence word by word or write the translation of the long sentences below. Otherwise, it'd be complicated to undertsand what you are explaining (unless this video is for advanced students)
1:40 Same! My native language is brazilian portuguese, which pronunciation is way similar to japanese. I have no hard time on pronunciating the words/phrases, it's pretty handy.
In short, find the は go to to the end and look for the ''verb'' then see what other additional information in the middle is made available I have to have super powers and super memory to memorize all the guys sentence cache the part he marks with は wait for him to finish his sentence to look at the final verb and figure out what else he said in the middle as additional info www Just kidding, Learning japanese is really challanging but hopefully we'll get there some day
thank you it was very helpful. In a strange way japanese reminds me kinda of latin as both have the verb at the end. Even though latin had the messiest sentences ive ever seen cause there are no strict rules when it comes to word order and even adjectives dont have to stand next to the word theyre describing and can even be seperated from it by multiple subclauses in the worst case. ❤
There is N1. And then there is Kitano Takeshi san in the 1980s. And then there are the dialects. I get completely thrown off once the intonation changes.
i love how it's a 50-50 tossup on youtube, whether you'll get a japanese japanese teacher or a white japanese teacher. a testament to the popularity of japanese abroad. sugoi da ne, sempaii
For me, I hear all the words, but sentences don't make sense. So in the JLPT N5 listening questions, I hear the words to all the answers, and I'm like "Which one is it?"
My mind has just been blown by the similarity between the words "futoi" and "fat". :) And yet I have been searching for ages for the answer to a question about the first kanji here, and that is: what is the difference between the kanji 夕 and katakana タ? I mean a difference in the way that you would write them by hand. Is there a difference? Or do you just write them in the exact same way? I can't find an answer anywhere!