A Kanji Card Set is available. (34 cards + 30 pages of PDF, $5 for now. The price may increase) smilenihongo.com/kcards You can practice spelling 175 Kanji words with the cards based on it's reading or meaning.
"There are soooo many Japanese words that have the same pronunciation". And when you start studying kanji that becomes painfully obvious. lol Furigana is awesome! Great example sentence too. I've noticed a lot of times where words that should be written as katakana are instead written in hiragana. That is really confusing.
Yuko sensei, you've explained beautifully and so well for a beginner to understand. Thank you so very much. I've learned certain things that I didn't know earlier. Thanks again.
I started learning kanji awhile ago but didn’t know why there are so many readings. I’m looking forward to seeing this course. As always your videos teach me so much ありがとうございます先生!
ありがとう ゆうこせんせい, very well explained . Kanji is definitely beyond the shadow of a doubt essential to start learning the Japanese language seriously enough besides hiragana and katakana ahead of moving forward in the learning process. This will definitely accelerate and improves mastering of the language.
Thank you so much Sensei. Now I am able to know clear about how kanji become in japan. I am interested about kanji. So, I am willing to learn continue from you it.
if the word is a noun composed of two or more kanji, most of the time you use ON-readings, and if the word is only a single kanji word it's usually KUN-reading.
@@drekforder2952 yes, but if you know what the kanji/word means, you might not even need to know how to read every character accurately to understand a text. It's a funny side effect of this system.
You do not need to memorize the on or kun readings. What is important is you know the word. Once you know the word, familiarizing yourself with the Kanji is easy.
I really need to thank this great teacher of mine in RU-vid, Yuko Sensei thankyou very much, you almost cleared any confusions for us foreigners, hope to be atleast N4 passer this year 2021 with your help. Thanks Maam!
Hello Sensei, Like this lesson very much,helpful and practical Hopefully more lessons creating this to be seen. I ought to give you a like. Thank you Greetings from HK.
Is there a video to explain when to use the onyomi or kunyomi? Or is there another channel that explains that? Either would be very helpful. Thank you! :D/
The "there/their" example isn't really that accurate. It's actually quite rare that the spelling is different for words with the same pronunciation but a different meaning. It's much more common that one word has many different meanings, and you just have to consider the context to figure out the meaning. So in European languages it's even worse; there are no kanji to tell you what word the writer meant to write.
I wish Japan had a Japanese version of Atatürk , then he would have simplified the language from the beginning, would have added some spaces between hiragana words and we wouldn't have to suffer with bloody Kanji 😖😖😫😫😫😫
ーーーーーーーーーーーあり がと ご ざ ありがとう ございます→有 難う 御 座います 花💐鼻👃 はは は はな で はな の におい を かいだ。 母 は 鼻 で 花 の 匂い を 嗅いだ Japanese learn kanji in form. Japanese people don't learn much about particles and okurigana. You need to get used to speaking.
I started learning kanji awhile ago but didn’t know why there are so many readings. I’m looking forward to seeing this course. As always your videos teach me so much ありがとうございます先生!