Тёмный

How Japanese People Learn Japanese // KANJI Edition! 

KemushiChan
Подписаться 187 тыс.
Просмотров 405 тыс.
50% 1

A chat with my friend Akkie about Japanese! Hoping he has the special antidote to make kanji-learning easier!
- - - - - - - - S I M I L A R V I D E O S - - - - - - - -
"How I Moved to Japan " tinyurl.com/yb8yylch
"28 Facts About Me in Japan": tinyurl.com/y7xqqse2
- - - - - - - - D I S C O U N T S !!! - - - - - - - -
tinyurl.com/p8pxl87 ← Japanese Learning on iTalki!
Click this for a Buy 1 Get 1 Free Language lesson with the teacher of your choice. (You get a discount, and I get a commission!)
NINJA WIFI provider:
tinyurl.com/j9tc2fh
Cheap Pocket WiFi for your next trip in Japan. Link above gives you a discount at checkout!
JAPANESE STATIONERY
Discount code: KEMUSHI10 for 10% off your first stationery box with My Bungu Box
www.mybungubox.com/
- - - - - - - - S U B S C R I B E - - - - - - - -
Boomer: ru-vid.com/show-UCAZ3...
Me: / kemushichan
- - - - - - - - H O W T O R E A C H M E - - - - - - - -
/ kemushijp
/ kemushichan
/ kemushijp
SnapChat @KemushiJP
- - - - - - - - M Y M A I L B O X - - - - - - - -
Send me messages or whatever you want via the address below!:
Yummy Japan - KemushiChan
〒150-0022 東京都渋谷区恵比寿南2-1-2 R・K・F恵比寿ビル5F
Yummy Japan - KemushiChan
5F, RKF-EBISU, 2-1-2, Ebisuminami, Shibuya-ku,
Tokyo, 150-0022, Japan
Business Inquiries:
Hello@KemushiChan.com
 
- - - - - - - - F A Q - - - - - - - -
Hi! My name is Loretta, a girl from the U.S. who moved to Japan! I'm here on the MEXT scholarship program as a graduate student, studying to get a Masters in Business Administration. Here are some answers to common questions:
1. Do I Speak Japanese? Yep! I was taught formally in High School and have been speaking now for over 15 years.
2. What are you studying? I'm a student in a Japanese "Masters of Business Administration Program"
3. How old are you?: tinyurl.com/y7xqqse2
4. How did you get into Japanese school?: tinyurl.com/yb8yylch
5. What camera equipment do you use?: I film my videos with a Canon 60D using a 30mm Sigma Art Lens and I edit with Sony Vegas Pro 10 (with some help from photoshop).
- - - - - - - - ♬M U S I C I N T H I S V I D E O♬ - - - - - - - -
♪ "Hep Cats"
by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (creativecommons.org/licenses/...)
Source: incompetech.com/music/royalty-...
Artist: incompetech.com/
♪ "Do Do Do" - RU-vid Audio Library
Topics in this video: 外国人 日本 独学 英会話 語学 海外の反応 Foreigners in Japan Culture Shock Life in Japan Speaking Japanese The JLPT Self Study Teach Yourself Japanese Pimsleur Japanese from Zero

Развлечения

Опубликовано:

 

22 май 2018

Поделиться:

Ссылка:

Скачать:

Готовим ссылку...

Добавить в:

Мой плейлист
Посмотреть позже
Комментарии : 618   
@sambonjuku
@sambonjuku 6 лет назад
ロレッタさん今回は本当にありがとうございました!The content, the editing and your personality, everything is amazing! I'm so impressed and really appreciate it. I'm currently working on the collaboration video for my channel! 楽しみにしててねー Sambon Juku Akkie/三本塾 あっきー
@OrionOokami
@OrionOokami 6 лет назад
三本塾Sambon Juku I was just looking for your channel till I saw this. Your eyes are really beautiful sorry off topic. Thank you for your channel.
@network9990
@network9990 6 лет назад
Oh that's what happened! I was looking for the video, I'll wait for you to post. Thank you guys for posting such informative videos on RU-vid. I just subscribed to Sambun jukuさん and I'm looking forward to more videos from you both.
@skipinkoreaable
@skipinkoreaable 4 года назад
Thank you. Your channel is fantastic too. 三本塾も Kemushiちゃんも偉いです.
@yutassmilehealsme6572
@yutassmilehealsme6572 5 лет назад
"if a textbook has furigana that's all the students read and skip over the kanji" Y-YOU CAUGHT ME
@BubJeans
@BubJeans 4 года назад
yuta's smile heals me Learn your radicals you lazy
@lillianbaptiste4839
@lillianbaptiste4839 3 года назад
Me.
@sijimaye5258
@sijimaye5258 3 года назад
@@BubJeans why i'm the one who got the damage of this 😭
@tanguysanchez9687
@tanguysanchez9687 3 года назад
Man I did this untill I became fluent and now I have all the kanji to learn TT I feel so stupid omg..
@user-ov4wr5yu4r
@user-ov4wr5yu4r 10 месяцев назад
Old students for the win! I can't see that tiny sht anyway.
@lynguini
@lynguini 6 лет назад
dude you know youre FLUENT AF in a language when you can make puns in it.
@deegiiamarsanaa
@deegiiamarsanaa 5 лет назад
lynda y KANJI desune
@Dracopol
@Dracopol 5 лет назад
I ended up dreaming in Esperanto. It's a bitter dream that enough people will speak in it anyway.
@samaohya1838
@samaohya1838 4 года назад
i can make some puns in japanese but like, I suck at it;-;
@anderskock3848
@anderskock3848 4 года назад
I wish I could make puns in japanese but I'm not Nippun.
@tFighterPilot
@tFighterPilot 4 года назад
And when you pronounce Hamburger with Japanese phonology
@user-ki5lj1dh5z
@user-ki5lj1dh5z 5 лет назад
As a Japanese, I don't know(or have forgotten) why I can read and write kanji Exactly, when I was kid, I wrote kanji again and again as homework of elementary school, but I had knew some kanji before I was taught at school Of course I was surrounded only Japanese so I guess I memorized naturally, but it feels a little strange lol
@k_wang64
@k_wang64 4 года назад
中山健太郎 I’m Chinese. Writing kanji is more of an intuition for me. When I’m planning to write something down, I feel like the corresponding kanji just pops up in my head, along with the procedure of writing them (like the strikes). When I started learning Japanese, I found it super easy to memorize kanji, since I’ve seen nearly all of them before somewhere, so I just need to memorize their pronunciation. However, being good at kanji can sometimes be a drawback actually. When I want to type something in Japanese, I usually think of the kanji first, and it goes before the actual pronunciation of the words. Also, I tended to use kanji that are not quite commonly used by you guys, like 沢山, but it’s not a problem now lol. I’d say kanji is hard, but is also a good invention haha.
@000LONER
@000LONER 4 года назад
@@k_wang64 Semantic memory, on the other hand, is a more structured record of facts, meanings, concepts and knowledge about the external world that we have acquired. It refers to general factual knowledge, shared with others and independent of personal experience and of the spatial/temporal context in which it was acquired. Semantic memories may once have had a personal context, but now stand alone as simple knowledge. It therefore includes such things as types of food, capital cities, social customs, functions of objects, vocabulary, understanding of mathematics, etc. Much of semantic memory is abstract and relational and is associated with the meaning of verbal symbols.
@k_wang64
@k_wang64 4 года назад
T0M thanks bro!
@cccant6635
@cccant6635 3 года назад
in american school we did a lot of kanji idk why
@vie2334
@vie2334 2 года назад
nakayama
@xXHatsuneMikuFanXx
@xXHatsuneMikuFanXx 6 лет назад
"you're just reading the furigana on top" I STOPPED DOING THAT I PROMISE
@user-to8cj1rd5z
@user-to8cj1rd5z 3 года назад
do you speak japanese now
@mitchellmcclinton7154
@mitchellmcclinton7154 3 года назад
@@user-to8cj1rd5z probably. i just finished memorizing hiragana. wish me luck lol.
@virave
@virave 3 года назад
@@mitchellmcclinton7154 wow. Best of luck buddy. I just learned the a, i, u, e, o that's it. Wish me best of luck too.
@ItzMeKarizma
@ItzMeKarizma 3 года назад
@@mitchellmcclinton7154 It's been 1 month, how did it go? Did you get better at it? Just curious.. hehe. By the way, I finished learning Hiragana, Idk why but it just feels like I've accomplished something amazing lol.
@mitchellmcclinton7154
@mitchellmcclinton7154 3 года назад
@@ItzMeKarizma oh yea, i mastered hiragana and katakana, i know about 10 kanji and around 40 words. i havent really been practicing and havent wrote in japanese since that original comment i made (a month ago), which shows that you can probably master 150 (in kana, kanji comes later) in a month at the very least with practice.
@whisperofspring
@whisperofspring 6 лет назад
I'm so guilty of the furigana thing 😂 I wish I wasn't, but all the texts in the textbook we use at uni are so full of furigana, it's so hard to avoid. I think I'm going to start covering the furigana with a sheet of paper to stop myself from cheating haha 😂
@skinny0408
@skinny0408 6 лет назад
Yes, probably use a sheet of paper to cover them. I had the same problem while reading children books in japanese. Slowed down my reading speed but learned lots of kanji and didn’t even forget them! Kanji challenge: Carry a notebook and write every new kanji for 1 week every day on 1 page. Second week every second day and 3rd week every third day. You won’t need to look them up at any time. 頑張ってください!
@playinghuman
@playinghuman 6 лет назад
It's so much easier to avoid looking at furigana if you don't need to when they add it BELOW the word. My brain naturally wants to start reading from the top, so it doesn't matter how well I know a word if furigana has been placed above it...
@bl0gwar
@bl0gwar 6 лет назад
ravenclvw I know there are books (or you could even do this yourself) where the furigana is written in red writing, and the book comes with a sheet of clear red plastic. So when you cover the page you're studying with the redplastic, you can't see the red furigana writing :) but you can remove the sheet to check you were right
@jhnl2362
@jhnl2362 3 года назад
@@skinny0408 tsutekudasai!
@EmilyEckard
@EmilyEckard 6 лет назад
1:42 pretty impressed you managed to get that pun to work in English too... nice
@kemushichan
@kemushichan 6 лет назад
Emily Eckard Haha, you caught that! I was so unabashedly proud of myself when I translated that😅👼.
@ninjabieber7695
@ninjabieber7695 4 года назад
? It was Japanese
@kevinscales
@kevinscales 4 года назад
@@ninjabieber7695 subtitles
@ninjabieber7695
@ninjabieber7695 4 года назад
Kevin Scales ohhhh
@adley6374
@adley6374 4 года назад
What is a pun?
@maitaniyama
@maitaniyama 5 лет назад
When I was taught Japanese in college we went the classic Japanese method of “just write it until you memorize it.” Stories to memorize it? Nope. Them trying to teach you radicals? Nope. Just hand cramps from those Genki workbooks
@droplet4792
@droplet4792 3 года назад
Oh please, don't remind me of those workbooks
@arpitsrivstva
@arpitsrivstva 3 года назад
I ve downloaded worbooks - Minna no nihongo. Lets see what happens. I learn kanji by the same method, write write write. But they are so many, either i forget after some while or i mix them up.
@PrimiusLovin
@PrimiusLovin 4 года назад
How do Japanese people learn Japanese? That's a simple answer: they dedicate at least 9 years of their lives learning it.
@kokuou
@kokuou 3 года назад
From a linguistics perspective, there's actually no real dedication. In linguistics, we call "learning" one's native language acquisition as there's no real "effort" put forth by the speaker to actively learn their language. Learning kanji might border more on active learning for even native Japanese speakers, but even then there's an element of acquisition because they are surrounded by it all their lives that it's just easier for a native speaker to "acquire" kanji than any non-native speaker.
@tartaglia1959
@tartaglia1959 3 года назад
Nicholas Jaikaran acually, if you never learned english its way easier too learn japanese, because learning english makes u per ounce some letters differently and that can be a problem if your learning japanese, example: english ppl think its hard saying the japanese letters like “Ra” or “Ru” because they per ounce it diffrently. So yeah its easier too learn japanese if its not your native language
@yuurai
@yuurai 3 года назад
@@NikoDraws but if you know atleast like 2 more languages, it's definitely easier to learn japanese too. Especially if one of those languages is similar to japanese pronunciation, like ka ki ku ke ko. In my country it's ka ke ki ko ku, but it's definitely not that hard to adapt. The only thing that's abit uncomfortable at first is the difference of いい(ii) and ええ(ee), because when you know english it kinda messes up your pronunciation if you're not comfortable enough. Knowing english as far as I'm concerned definitely makes it harder for you to know japanese, especially if it's your native language.
@jayg.1734
@jayg.1734 3 года назад
HoneyBee シ this not the case for everybody js
@DoodleBob1997
@DoodleBob1997 3 года назад
@@NikoDraws SoME PeOpLE cAn BarEly sPeaK EnGlisH shut up nerd
@vesterpop
@vesterpop 6 лет назад
I can read Japanese relatively well after three years and it's all because of wanikani. Sure, you don't learn how to write the kanji, but wanikani organizes the order in which you learn the 2000 kanji Japanese high schoolers need really efficiently, gives you lots of quizzes, and you can learn writing on your own much more easily.
@HaohmaruHL
@HaohmaruHL 6 лет назад
vesterpop wanikani is awesome and you don't really need to write kanji nowadays, except cases you do paperwork in like banks or something.
@silentmat2029
@silentmat2029 5 лет назад
@@HaohmaruHL Is it free? Or is it subscription based?
@BoltRM
@BoltRM 4 года назад
@@silentmat2029 I Googled & see it is free until level 4👍 knowledge.wanikani.com/getting-started/payment-and-billing/wanikani/wanikani-free/
@silentmat2029
@silentmat2029 4 года назад
@@BoltRM Alright, thank you!
@MrAcer4
@MrAcer4 5 лет назад
She speaks really well!! Its a motivation to me for just starting and can only carry very light phrases. One day I'll be speaking as you. Thankyou!
@ElizabethSd
@ElizabethSd 3 года назад
How that going for u its been a year
@asher2710
@asher2710 3 года назад
I just wanted to learn how to read kanji because I cannot read them in mangas of my favorite Artists lmao. Glad I found this useful channel recommendation
@toshi7786
@toshi7786 3 года назад
Same
@alansu65ahus
@alansu65ahus 6 лет назад
日本人でさえ漢字覚えるの大変なんだから、外国人が覚えるのが大変なのはあたりまえだろうな。
@CakePopClara
@CakePopClara 6 лет назад
I felt so happy I understood two full sentences at the beginning.. It's an amazing feeling!
@Giiamonios
@Giiamonios 6 лет назад
Oh jeez! I love akki. Found his chanel a while back and it's just one of my absolute favourite japanese language RU-vid chanels! Much love to you both! ^^
@freyajingu
@freyajingu 6 лет назад
My japanese husband and i are watching your videos. He said that you are good in speaking in japanese. Loving your videos!!!
@TranscendingNobody
@TranscendingNobody 6 лет назад
ok first off hes SUPER HOT! and secondly this was very invaluable and I loved it!!!! very interesting!!!
@Anonymous_Jo
@Anonymous_Jo 6 лет назад
Kel Preston oh my god, right!?!? 😅😅
@yk5044
@yk5044 6 лет назад
He's so attractive 😍 his voice tho
@kemushichan
@kemushichan 6 лет назад
Haha, he's great teacher too😃💪!!!
@ErikaBardere
@ErikaBardere 6 лет назад
riiight
@nkechi4635
@nkechi4635 6 лет назад
loool I saw this comment coming
@juliat.4946
@juliat.4946 6 лет назад
Wooow I was surprised to see Akki in this video!!! Great video❤
@esetbulguch703
@esetbulguch703 3 года назад
What a lovely conversation! Such a pleasure to watch you two 😊
@sambeawesome
@sambeawesome 6 лет назад
My favorite resource for kanji learning by FAR is WaniKani. Though it's not free, I still feel entirely worth the price. It teaches as you described, with stories and mnemonics, for both the meaning and reading. I've learned more through them than anywhere else. It's unfortunate that this method isn't more used. In college, we did it as Akkie described, just writing it over and over, which didn't lead to anything for me and left me frustrated. Great video though! I laughed really hard at the furigana part, where's the lie? XD
@danlynch7329
@danlynch7329 6 лет назад
Agreed Wanikani is very helpful by not only the stories and such but also the spaced repetition software incorporated into it. However, for no cost at all you can find free PDF's of "Remembering the Kanji" online which is similar, but of course lacks spaced repetition, so if you don't have proper diligence then it won't be nearly as useful. Also, I have a major complaint about wanikani, it will not teach you all in JLPT order, but it will throw in kanji that you may not see in forever before learn the more common ones (ya know cuz everyone wants to learn words like 農民 (lvl 10) before learning 机 (lvl 32)).
@sambeawesome
@sambeawesome 6 лет назад
WK was my first experience with SRS, and I love it! :D You could always put information into programs like Anki, which have their own built in SRS system, and it's free. I'm actually okay with it not teaching in JLPT order, but I can understand that being frustrating.
@piperaislinn2511
@piperaislinn2511 6 лет назад
Littlest Lynch my problem with RTK is that you don't learn any readings or vocabulary to contextualize the kanji. What's the use of recognizing them if you can't read or understand them?
@nf7694
@nf7694 6 лет назад
Piper Aislinn i use wanikani. they do have example sentences though... not that i actually look at those lol. i just kinda use it to recognize kanji. context and readings can come from reading actual japanese material. i can't say wanikani's the best since i've only tried anki and wanikani but not anything else. i think anki's great but i don't feel that engaged using it. my only issue with wanikani is how you can't make it go faster. on anki, i can do more than the daily amount if i feel like it. sometimes i open anki just to do a few more reps after anki to scratch the itch. but now i'm just sticking on the wanikani schedule and using the rest of my free time to learn grammar and read native material (manga+light novels). i realized that focusing too much on memorizing kanji wasn't the way to go, i guess. i just started learning a few months ago, so i'm still trying to organize my study plan but i think i'm making okay progress. slow and steady :D
@freesoftwareextremist8119
@freesoftwareextremist8119 6 лет назад
RTK isn't meant to be used alone, you should study vocabulary too. RTK is meant to teach you how to write and gives you the ability to recognize kanji which is really helpful when studying vocabulary.
@PitohuiLife
@PitohuiLife 3 года назад
hey cool i actually understood the whole thing without subtitles, guess i didn't waste 6 years learning japanese for nothing haha when he brought up the furigana i felt that. I relied on that too much and still do cuz for the life of me kanji is a pain
@iscreamcandy1161
@iscreamcandy1161 6 лет назад
Wow that was a really great video! For some reason it was really peaceful while being informative. I also enjoyed your editing, I've never seen that before.
@iFireender
@iFireender 3 года назад
Having tried both the "story remembering method" and the "look at kanji and remember it" method, I have to say - maybe, when starting out, the 'story' thing works out, at least for remembering the radicals, but as soon as you have the radicals down, just.. looking at the kanji and remembering the vocabulary that goes along with it is more than good enough. You need to train your pattern recognition to recognize the radicals as logical elements, and then remembering them from just seeing it isn't too hard. Compare to English. If you don't really know latin script, remembering "birthday" is super hard, but if you can easily read it, it isn't hard to remember that sequence of characters, because the information has been broken down into logical components rather than visual information.
@marine6271
@marine6271 5 лет назад
I've watched and understood all the video with only the Japanese subtitles this is my personal victory of the day ha ha
@Mari-cn5yz
@Mari-cn5yz 6 лет назад
oh my! I always wondered about that!! thank you for the video!
@ZeroWasteAtlanta
@ZeroWasteAtlanta 2 года назад
Thank you so much for this video! I have literally spent the last 2 hours trying to find the very simple answer to this question. You guys hit the nail on the head in 8 mins. Thank youuuu!!!
@kemushichan
@kemushichan 2 года назад
Best of luck to you! Here comes the hard part...
@ChubbyMaGirl
@ChubbyMaGirl 5 лет назад
I never thought about learning Kanji in just the context it was in! That was life changing! Thanks!
@NightpireVideos
@NightpireVideos 6 лет назад
These are a great listening comprehensions. Hope to see more of these!
@marilynthompson4513
@marilynthompson4513 3 года назад
That was really good to watch. Beginner self-learner here.
@maerimilkeu3962
@maerimilkeu3962 3 года назад
I always think of this! Thanks for the video
@eingryffindor5997
@eingryffindor5997 4 года назад
Your japanese is so impressive. I'm learning japanese but I started with the hiragana and katakana. I thought this would be the way which makes tge most sense. Hope I was right . Nice video btw
@Sahara333
@Sahara333 6 лет назад
Aw thank you for this video. Akkie sensei is so cute!! I’m definitely going to check out his channel and figure out a way to go back to japan and STAY. I loved it there and didn’t wanna return to my home country.
@suckkmycandles
@suckkmycandles 6 лет назад
whats your home country?
@leileivanderheyden3353
@leileivanderheyden3353 6 лет назад
I just turned on the NHK world channel on tv and saw you. I was excited to see one of my favorite Japan youtubers this time. I wish my Japanese was as good as yours
@davidprado8732
@davidprado8732 6 лет назад
I literally found your channel today and I cannot stop watching your content. It’s so good, where have you been?!
@bikkikumarsha
@bikkikumarsha 6 лет назад
you guys are changing lives
@VictoriaKleinCo
@VictoriaKleinCo 6 лет назад
ありがとうございます!This is such a wonderful video - thank you both for taking the time to make it. I'm in university in the United States to get a Bachelor degree in Japanese language and culture, with the goal of being a translator. Since I've had barely any exposure to Japanese before a year ago (other than random anime ... etc.), I've got a big mountain to climb, but this video was incredibly helpful. Also, I'm working with a tutor on italki during my breaks from school to help prepare for the JLPT :)
@BigPapaPeaches
@BigPapaPeaches 6 лет назад
Such a great video! I'll definitely be checking out Akkie's channel! :)
@NeelLLumi-AnCatDubh
@NeelLLumi-AnCatDubh 6 лет назад
This is pretty interesting! I’ll definitely look into those apps. Honestly, this kinda reminds me how I first started learning Japanese with Yu-Gi-Oh cards in Japanese, haha. Unrelated: you look like a cuter Uzo Aduba :O
@jem8483
@jem8483 6 лет назад
Wowww i love this vid this helped a lot! Thanks!!
@xcowboy10kx
@xcowboy10kx 6 лет назад
When I was in Japan, I found weblio to be super great. When you look up words, you can find example sentences that the word is used in, so you can kind of check to make sure the context is right. I don't remember how much of the site is in English though...
@ando1135
@ando1135 5 лет назад
as a non-native, learning japanese is like learning 2 languages at the same time....japanese and chinese lol.
@Coconutcrinklefries
@Coconutcrinklefries 2 года назад
Yayyy! Glad to see the way I’m already going about it is probably going to be the easiest way. I’m learning kanji bit by bit but I’m also learning by just memorizing as I come across them
@Thalespoliglota
@Thalespoliglota 4 года назад
This video is awesome! Thank you guys for your tips!!!!
@CesarDainezi
@CesarDainezi 4 года назад
O Poliglota Brasileiro oskapsodkapsokdaposk
@denisew7027
@denisew7027 4 года назад
You two are lovely people. Will definitely subscribe. I‘m just trying to learn japanese and i also think that learning kanji by reading texts and memorizing just those that you find in the text helps a lot :)
@kawaiikowai08
@kawaiikowai08 6 лет назад
Love this video!
@maidenthe80sla
@maidenthe80sla 6 лет назад
Loretta, Thank you for another great video and this one was perfect for me. I have now subscribed to 三本塾 Sambon Juku as another source to advance my learning of the Japanese language. I heeded his advice by about learning Kanji. Learn the character(s) meaning within the structure of the sentence. I am still building my foundation of the language but that one bit of information will solidfy that part for me from here on out.
@chelly92
@chelly92 6 лет назад
This is so cool! When I first came to this channel I spoke no Japanese and now after like 3 years I can follow what's being said! There's a few vocab gaps but I can understand. Omg this is so cool!
@EvelynQKelly
@EvelynQKelly 3 года назад
I'm so happy I found this channel. I'm trying to acquire Kansai-ben accent when I speak Japanese to fit in where I am . These videos are helpful! Thank you :) More specifically about this video, I use furigana waaaay too often. I need to practice my radicals more often 😅
@VitaTuggummin
@VitaTuggummin 4 года назад
Once I started studying Japanese with kanji only and no furigana I started learning lots of kanji super fast! I always make sure to learn vocab with its kanji and man you pick up so much. It adds context too, and I recognize it in other places and can guess its meaning. Kanji is so fun. Thanks for the video and the recs!
@blueberryice7290
@blueberryice7290 4 года назад
Tialiq may i know do you mean you studied the kanji through novel ? I am starting to dive in kanji but really don’t know where to start 😅
@VitaTuggummin
@VitaTuggummin 4 года назад
@@blueberryice7290 hey! No I mean I studied sources with only kanji. Like, when I used lingodeer I set it to only show kanji and no furigana. I followed Tae Kim's guide which only uses kanji. I only used anki decks with kanji. If you wanna learn kanji it's definitely the way to go! It takes longer but you're learning more things so that's okay. Good luck!
@DannyMexen9
@DannyMexen9 6 лет назад
I found this video helpful, thank you. It was nice to get some affirmation that kanji should be memorized in context. Easier to remember that way.
@janpanesestories7815
@janpanesestories7815 6 лет назад
Hi, my friend. My channel has many Japanese learning videos through Japanese fairytales with Japanese subtitles. It will help you increase your listening, speaking and vocabulary skills, would be great if you go to my channel. I am very grateful to you if you take time to watch my channel and contribute ideas for my channel to grow better. thanks
@theressomuchtowaitforseein3465
5:48 that exactly what I needed to know about Japanese kids. Thanks. I'll try to use that way of learning. Thanks.
@ananicolevigueras2262
@ananicolevigueras2262 4 года назад
Omg yes Loretta! This was such good listening practice!!! More vids like.thiiiiis
@MetBitTV
@MetBitTV 4 года назад
あっきーさんの日本語はすごく分かりやすですね!
@ifiaintreadin
@ifiaintreadin 5 лет назад
Great collaboration!
@lymorada2643
@lymorada2643 5 лет назад
Your channel is extremely fun to watch! Totemo omoshiroi yooo! 😍😍😍😍😍
@kemushichan
@kemushichan 6 лет назад
Everyone give a warm welcome to Akkie !!! :) ( His channel: ru-vid.com/show-UC0ujXryUUwILURRKt9Eh7Nw ) We filmed THREE videos this day, but in usual me-fashion I'm posting them out of order as the more intensive ones are taking a while to edit. In the meantime, here's a casual chat about Kanji and all the struggles that come with them, both from a native and non-native perspective. I hope you like it!
@morbidcandii
@morbidcandii 4 года назад
He’s so cuuuuuute!!!
@suckkmycandles
@suckkmycandles 6 лет назад
4:44 ~ WOOOO this is exactly how i've been going about learning kanji and vocabulary in japanese, no wonder i've been progressing so fast! its so much more fun to learn in context (i use raw manga and anime, as well as japanese twitter and online articles~) thanks for the awesome video! and like everyone else said hes a freakin hottie. how do you find all these hot guys sheesh kemushi
@melratanapintha9290
@melratanapintha9290 5 лет назад
Thank you so much for this video! I actually find that even though its incredibly frustrating & slow paced to read large slabs of text when you don't know the kanji - when I do know the kanji or at least have some understanding of it, I begin to understand the context faster than if I were to try to sound out a word with furigana. I still rely on furigana way too much sometimes but this is just something interesting I've realised about how I absorb Japanese vocab ^^
@liz9330
@liz9330 6 лет назад
😱 I love your Japanese accent. It's beautiful I wish I could speak like you. Good video 😊
@ahnseongwoo
@ahnseongwoo 6 лет назад
Hello Loretta! How are you doing? I wanted to let you know that I absolutely adore your channel and that in October I'm going to uni to study Japanese and I'm so excited and I can't wait!! Love from Italy x :)
@mikikazukimaus
@mikikazukimaus 3 года назад
After a year and a half studying I gave it a full on try without English subtitles, but with Japanese ones (gotta do that since I'm partially deaf, plus it's also a reading exercise too) and I understood about 90% of the video. I feel accomplished now and I can go to sleep blissfully happy :')
@kemushichan
@kemushichan 3 года назад
Sweetest of dreams!!!
@bluefemale32
@bluefemale32 6 лет назад
I enjoyed watching 💜You're amazing thank you for this vid 😍🌼💜
@MsIdontcare18
@MsIdontcare18 6 лет назад
Wow your pronunciation is very good! I'm so jealous 😍
@d34ddud3
@d34ddud3 3 года назад
I can definitely agree with what they're saying. What I'm doing right now is I picked up a manga and I'm trying to translate it sentence by sentence. It does have furigana, but it's just a matter of self control that the first time you read the sentence you ignore it. The second time you read with furigana. And then write the sentence (see if you can guess the stroke order). Then look up the words and kanji used (make sure to look up the proper stroke order and use it) and now that you can write them individually on the side. If there might be any particles you don't know or are unsure of (or maybe it's using a meaning you don't recall. Like perhaps /ka/ which is used as both a question marker and as a way to say "this or that") make sure to get those too. Then try to translate the sentence in sections (I recommend generally breaking it up by going until the next particle). Now Google translate isn't perfect, but it can let you know if you're on the right track most of the time. So just write it into the translator and see if what you got was similar to what Google said. If it's similar, you're definitely doing well! If not... Well try to delete different parts of the sentence to see what your mistake was. If it was in the use of a particular word then that word may have a connotation to it that isn't expressed by a simple definition and requires a bit more explanation. A good example I learned recently was the difference between /daisuke/ and /aishiteru/. (Basically /aishiteru/ is MUCH more intense and should only be used for something like a proposal. When in doubt, /daisuke/.
@sev_tex
@sev_tex 3 года назад
I feel like they would give really warm hugs
@slixnoir
@slixnoir 3 года назад
Me after a month of learning basic Japanese and Japanese etiquette: IS THAT KEIGO I HEAR? MASU-KA? MASU-KA????
@user-ly8yk3ic8v
@user-ly8yk3ic8v 4 года назад
私は今アメリカに留学している日本人の大学三年生です。英語を学ぶのも苦戦するけど、日本語覚える方が絶対難しいなって思います。 この動画をみて、小学生の頃はたくさん漢字ノートの宿題や漢字ドリルをやっていたことを思い出しました。。本当にめんどくさかったけど、あれが大事だったんだなぁって思いました。
@Kotoniidesu
@Kotoniidesu 6 лет назад
Akkie is adorable 😍
@katecosettevocals
@katecosettevocals 4 года назад
This was so interesting thank you!! I’m just starting to learn so it’s good to know not to rely on furigana... that had been my plan.... haha!😅😂
@bjbhvhkvhi
@bjbhvhkvhi 3 года назад
I'm in college and we have to learn everything in 3 years. 2 weeks just for Hiragana and Katakana, now we are already starting with Kanji. But I love it.
@oberdamujigae
@oberdamujigae 6 лет назад
I guess I do tend to memorize kanji better from always seeing it written in twitter or video captions rather than memorizing kanji from books >< I really want to read Japanese articles more fluently I guess I just need to read more and get used to the shape of the kanji? Thanks for this informative video! It was really helpful 💕
@Omer-or8pg
@Omer-or8pg 5 лет назад
Can not agree more about the furigana I tried to get rid of it as soon as I could for most words (unless it’s like a name or has a special reading). It really sets you back on your learning and it’s so much easier to grasp the information without being distracted by the furigana. That’s my experience at least.
@serenryuu
@serenryuu 5 лет назад
1+ years later I came to this video because I'm now a Japanese minor in university and even though in the beginner classes we only go over kana and grammar, I'm dreading having to learn kanji. I think if I were just learning Kanji I probably would've been okay with it, but my history with learning Chinese and learning Hanja for Korean at home has totally screwed my vocabulary and grammar over for Japanese lol. What I've been doing recently is getting all the manga I love to read in Japanese and read the furigana along the top. When I see kanji I don't know, I write it down and try to guess what it is based on the context of the situation. Later on when I'm done with a chapter or a page I go back to all the kanji I didn't recognize, see if I got the meanings right or not, and then fix/change them if I was wrong! This has definitely been working for me so far~
@yumiikku_4413
@yumiikku_4413 4 года назад
I'm so grateful that i know most kanji you need to know when learning japanese because i'm chinese
@karlcraftplayskc3776
@karlcraftplayskc3776 3 года назад
I like how I got an ad about iTalki before the video
@kemushichan
@kemushichan 3 года назад
Was I... In it?
@SharapovaFan
@SharapovaFan 5 лет назад
I memorize kanji quickly if there's a step by step stroke pattern guide. When I retrace the strokes with my own fingers or on my phone using the S-Pen, I'm able to effortlessly memorize it as well as quickly identify the radicals that make up the kanji. It's a kinesthetic learning style I suppose. What works for one person might not exactly work for another. I use an app called Takaboto which is pretty much an offline Japanese dictionary that includes breakdown of the kanji as well as step by step stroke order and a lot of other stuff such as usage in a sentence. It's incredibly useful and you can also do a kanji search by radicals. It came in extremely handy right as I'm currently in Japan for vacation. I can easily look up kanji I don't recognize by inputting the radicals.
@MirrorSound95
@MirrorSound95 6 лет назад
this video speaks the truth about learning kanji. i'm so grateful there are teachers out there that realise what works for japanese kids, don't necessarily work for foreign adults.
@ay__ayacoch_official
@ay__ayacoch_official 4 года назад
漢字ってむずかしいですね、、 小学校の時はひたすら書いて覚えてました。 構造を考えて覚えるのは面白いです!
@orti1283
@orti1283 3 года назад
Kodansha Kanji Learner's Course and you'll need nothing more to finally acquire you so desired literacy. It takes the same concept of Heisig's RTK, but takes it to a whole new level, everyone should try it out, I've been studying it intensively for a bit over a month and have reached 1122 already with a really high retention factor. I'm pushing myself at a little crazy pace, but if you already have a decent Japanese language base it's totally doable. It requires a lot of discipline though
@way2girly
@way2girly 6 лет назад
You’re my favorite youtuber ! ❤️💕😍👍🏽
@cojinmango
@cojinmango 5 лет назад
LOL when he talked about learning from dictionaries, which is what I do to learn kanji, I really felt identified. My Japanese teachers have told me before I am very lyrical, or that I use words too complex TT and I get it, but at the same time it's difficult to know when something is used and when not
@GenerationNextNextNext
@GenerationNextNextNext 6 лет назад
He's a handsome Japanese teacher! 😍 Good advice. I'm a novice when learning Japanese Kanji. A complete novice.
@21BJBBVIP
@21BJBBVIP 6 лет назад
That's like how we learnt Chinese too. Haha except when we really don't remember then the teacher usually tells the "Story" behind it. But I'm not sure if every single Chinese word has a meaning behind it anymore. Most of the words that had meaning were those traditional words.
@cianandez
@cianandez 3 года назад
We just started learning kanji in my Japanese class, but we’re only learning how to use/pronounce it based on context. That way we just naturally integrate it into our writing because we’re learning how to apply it!
@nieshamae
@nieshamae 6 лет назад
so motivating...
@animegirl16091
@animegirl16091 5 лет назад
It's hard for me to learn the kanji without the furigana so I think it's useful especially since I am a begginer. It helps me memorise the kanji. And the on yomi and kun yomi.
@lanyuchiha
@lanyuchiha 4 года назад
My goal is be able to talk to Japanese native speakers as you do. People like you really inspire me. ^^
@paolakoh3472
@paolakoh3472 3 года назад
At my language school we have two books one for exercises and topics and the other one is about kanji, we have to write like 10 times and it helps. But I woul like to try learning with radicals, it looks interesting :)
@tenlosttribes.3331
@tenlosttribes.3331 6 лет назад
最近の日本人は漢字を読めるけど書けない人も多いよ私もだけど(笑)
@user-jv4iu1oo3k
@user-jv4iu1oo3k 6 лет назад
貴方だけじゃない?普通の人は書ける
@tenlosttribes.3331
@tenlosttribes.3331 6 лет назад
眠いzzzさん 毎日キーボード入力ばかりなので簡単な漢字でさえ書けない事もあります(笑)
@heavenmaccha45
@heavenmaccha45 6 лет назад
Ten lost tribes. 分かります~。私もちょっとした漢字をあれ??って思い出せない時あります😅
@user-rg3fg9fz2d
@user-rg3fg9fz2d 6 лет назад
本当にそう!年齢が上がれば上がるほど、読めるけど書けない漢字が増えていきます…
@user-li9sm8ni3i
@user-li9sm8ni3i 6 лет назад
それな感じ読めるけどかけぬ
@AshleyWade
@AshleyWade 6 лет назад
I actually decided to start reading Japanese kids' books and Harry Potter was one of the first ones I found without issue. I've been stuck since I'm at the point where I need to immerse myself to learn more. I intended to get to Japan long before now. Still working on it :) Duolingo works really well as a learning app, too.
@jaimevupandakyo
@jaimevupandakyo 5 лет назад
you two are both so pretty that it hurts. Thanks for the video![:
@andymounthood
@andymounthood 5 лет назад
I also like that, in Japan, there are short stories to review all of the kanji of a particular elementary school grade level. All of the kanji learned that year are included in words within the story. You can find some of them by searching Amazon Japan for the number 1006. Once you find a book you want to buy, you can copy its ISBN to another online bookstore that you want to buy it from, such as AbeBooks. An example of a book that includes all 6 years in one book is ISBN 4780704421. There are also series that have one book per grade level--e.g. 4780711355. Of course, if you can find real schoolbooks (science, history, etc.) from each grade level, they also include those kanji. A lot of novels for older children are aimed at a particular grade level, and all of the new kanji have furigana, but kanji which should already be familiar often don't. The biggest difficulty in learning to read Japanese--for me, at least--is not the kanji, but the grammar. By the time I tried to read books for 4th graders (such as the Chronicles of Narnia translated into Japanese), the sentences are long and complex. From time to time, I study a lot of grammar, and then when I come back to these novels, they're a little easier to understand. Intermediate Japanese textbooks (such as Sura-Sura) introduce grammar which is commonly found in written form, so they're helpful, too.
@user-xz8ny1zm9w
@user-xz8ny1zm9w 3 года назад
that furigana part is really right lmao I really need to stop myself from depending to much on furigana XD
@TheBilly
@TheBilly 5 месяцев назад
2:00 This is close to the correct method for an adult (the method of Heisig's Remembering the Kanji) but if you're still forgetting many, it's because you shouldn't just make "stories", where you have some little phrase you associate with the pieces.....you need to really concentrate on a whole scene in your head that uses those pieces, a situation, where the meaning of the pieces are integrated into the scene. The first...say...30 pages of RTK is just an explanation of the method emphasizing that it needs to really be a scene that connects to your experience as deeply as possible, rather than just a mental "picture" or a catchphrase As she mentions, if you just try to use pictures or one-off sentences, this starts to break down when you encounter similar characters. If you do the heisig method correctly, you start moving past seeing the components as strokes - they take on their own character and become units that you gain familiarity with, and then, in your mental imagery, these little cohesive units become much harder to mistake.
@gordonwoo8127
@gordonwoo8127 3 года назад
I found Mango to be a very good app/ website for learning Japanese.
@abrahamv.7714
@abrahamv.7714 4 года назад
Thanks for not having the subtitles harcoded on the video, I like to practice listening and sometimes the subtitles gets on the way :D
@kemushichan
@kemushichan 4 года назад
🤓 You know I know. Pst, new Akkie vid coming in a few about 24 hrs for your listening pleasure.
@abrahamv.7714
@abrahamv.7714 4 года назад
@@kemushichan Thanks!
@HinataPlusle
@HinataPlusle 6 лет назад
Furigana indeed won't help you shit with writing, but it's an invaluable tool for learning how to read kanji, especially if you're those kind of people that tend to devour lots of content just for fun. Sure, for textbooks and such (when you're supposed to sit down and work hard on it) it's better to just push yourself (although it's sorta tricky to figure out on-yomi and kun-yomi sometimes by oneself), but it's a good extra. It's a bit slow, but LOTS will just get absorbed naturally with little effort. When I took N3 with nearly no preparation beforehand, there were lots of kanji I could only remember from having read in manga or books with furigana.
@Simkets
@Simkets 6 лет назад
I am wondering if its good idea to learn japanese (so i understand everybody) and learn hiragana and katakana... And after all this i will learn kanji with japanese textbooks (that they use in japan). English is also not my mother language, so when i learn japanese with english... i always need to translate the word "twice" (Japanese > English > My language ) , if you know what i mean. So i wonder, if i learn perfect japanese without kanji and then after i understand i would learn kanji with japanese textbooks (so i would translate japanese to my language only once (Japanese > My language ) Thank you for answering :)
@sasharama5485
@sasharama5485 5 лет назад
If you skip the kanji from the very beginning, I think it will take more time to actually learn. When you see a kanji in a sentence, you can quickly figure out what the subject, the verb etc.and you can also "guess" the meaning of words, cause kanji use radical, and even if you don't know that exact word you'll recognize the "family of the topic". Sorry about mistakes. English is not my first language
@sasharama5485
@sasharama5485 4 года назад
A good method I found is the book "remembering the kanji" . It really helps you. It doesn't teach you the sound of a kanji but the meaning.
@Ashley-mb2qe
@Ashley-mb2qe 3 года назад
I've been learning Japanese for almost 4 months now and I memorized all hiragana and some katakana by consistently writing them down whenever I had the chance to. I think consistently writing kanji over and over again, wi'll help me! Even though it will be tiring because of the stroke orders, do you think I'll still be okay?
Далее
JAPANESE PITCH ACCENT, jlpt & kanji // 7 Easy Tips!
27:50
7 Japanese Study Habits to STOP in 2024!
14:32
Просмотров 10 тыс.
치토스로 체감되는 요즘 물가
00:16
Просмотров 3,1 млн
My REAL cost of living in Japan | STUDENT VISA ed.
19:57
I PASSED THE JLPT N1! // Test Traps and How to NOT Fail
12:13
Things Okay in Japan but Illegal Around the World
8:26
Some people / Some〜, while others in Japanese!
19:32
Can Japanese Actually Read Japanese (Kanji)?
10:14
Просмотров 1,9 млн
Can Japanese Actually Read Kanji? (Interview)
7:33
Просмотров 263 тыс.
I want permanent residency | 3 Big Mistakes.
12:25
Просмотров 23 тыс.
Can Chinese Write Their Own Language? | ASIAN BOSS
9:22
My new 4am work routine in Japan (ft. new baby)
9:50
Было?😂
0:12
Просмотров 2 млн
Все мы немного НИКА!
0:17
Просмотров 2,4 млн