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-   -   how to learn japanese (https://www.japanforum.com/forum/japanese-language-help/16525-how-learn-japanese.html)

takiko 06-19-2008 10:28 PM

how to learn japanese
 
actually, I've learned japanese for 3 years in university.....
but I think my japanese is not that good........
is there anyway to improve?

also I would like to buy japanese novel.......
do you have any novel recommend to read?

Seiryuu 06-19-2008 11:11 PM

I have this hunch that someone will tell you to buy a textbook.

duron 06-20-2008 03:34 AM

A friend of mine once said, if you really want to learn the native language get a native speaking girlfriend :p

Nathan 06-20-2008 04:39 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by duron (Post 517946)
A friend of mine once said, if you really want to learn the native language get a native speaking girlfriend :p

Just be careful not to pick up the female-style speech patterns.

Ronin4hire 06-20-2008 04:46 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by takiko (Post 517771)
actually, I've learned japanese for 3 years in university.....
but I think my japanese is not that good........
is there anyway to improve?

also I would like to buy japanese novel.......
do you have any novel recommend to read?

What aspect are you having trouble on?

You've been studying longer than me (I've only in my second year in Japanese study) so you're probably more knowledgable than me. However I managed to get a "language buddy" with whom I speak Japanese with in exchange for her practicing her English. This has helped my confidence loads and has also helped me become comfortable speaking. Just make sure you have a dictionary at hand so that you can express new words. That way your vocabulary expands also.

Anyway hope that helps :vsign:

MMM 06-20-2008 05:03 AM

It's important to keep in mind that Japanese just takes a lot longer to learn for English speakers than, say, Spanish or Italian. Look at a Japanese 4th year textbook, and they are studying what 2nd year French students are. It takes about twice as long. So it is easy to feel like you aren't progressing, but stick with it. 3 years is more than a lot of people make it.

SSJup81 06-20-2008 05:26 AM

I've been studying Japanese semi-formally since October of 2005, and I feel the same way where my skill is concerned, but like MMM said, just continue with studying it.

Of course, the best way to learn any language is to emerge yourself in it, but of course this is easier said than done.

Payne222 06-23-2008 06:26 AM

Yeah, I'm in my 1st year of Japanese and I have the (Kanji) reading and writing level of a kid 1/2 way through first grade. Haha. (^_^')>
But I'm in my 2ed year studying German and I can have full out conversations,
write papers, etc.
It's that most European languages are easier and that's why English speakers
can pick up on it faster. Japanese has all these things which seem crazy
in English.

biohazardchick 06-23-2008 03:39 PM

Yeah Japanese is a hard language to learn. I'm going on to taking my third year this coming fall in high school and I'm still having trouble. When I feel like I'm getting nowhere, I look at my earliest papers and I realize how much I've learned. The first year I took it I got really into it and was already speaking brokenly by the end of the year . Now I can feel myself sliding which is a bit frustrating at times.
Anyways, a good way to practice your Japanese reading is to buy manga in Japanese because it's easy to read and it repeats a lot of the same words through out to help get you familiar with the vocabulary. Hope that helps :)

Hip 06-24-2008 03:18 AM

hmm
 
My girlfriend is Chinese >.> and she speaks Mandarin Chinese...So I hear SOME of what she says and I understand when she's mad, sad or happy. Or when she's talking about me to her father ><....But someone told me that Chinese is a lot harder to learn than Japanese from an American standpoint...Is that true? cause it doesn't seem like it is in my opinion...But that could be because I'm around it and hear it?

Nathan 06-24-2008 03:41 AM

Japanese would seem easier to learn due to it having hiragana and katakana along with kanji. If you forget the kanji, you can write the word in hiragana.

With Chinese, you simply have the kanji. If you forget the kanji.. well don't forget it. Although I did hear someone once say they wrote one with a similar sound if they forgot the exact one (for an informal situation).

Also take into consideration Japanese's simply pronounciation in comparison to the tonal Chinese.

Although I have no experience in this matter, it is said the Chinese grammar is easier that Japanese grammer for someone with an English-speaking background.

Paul11 06-24-2008 03:47 AM

I don't think you can learn a language without being in the country, unless you are really good. Yeah, you might get by in a restaurant or talk about the weather, but you gotta go. Even then, you have to study when you're there.

boycoixuong 06-24-2008 02:06 PM

I study Japanese in university 3 year too!so i think japanese is special languages
and i love it! i want to speak well and want to make friends with everyone

Pls enter my blog and we are good friends

my blog here

or here

chin 06-24-2008 02:47 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by takiko (Post 517771)
actually, I've learned japanese for 3 years in university.....
but I think my japanese is not that good........
is there anyway to improve?

also I would like to buy japanese novel.......
do you have any novel recommend to read?


I have been studying Japanese for 3 years too.
Well, as I am Chinese, Japanese is not that difficult for me.
A lot of story are just originly from Ancient China.
And of cause, the Kanji in Japanese is almost the same.
What I want to say is that stick to it,
you will find that one day you are already a master of the language.
and what's more: enjoy it!:D


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