Could someone correct my translations >一時に行きますか? Will you go at one o clock? >日本によく行きますか? Do you go to Japan often? >彼は日本に行きません。 He will not go to Japan. >いつ日本に行きますか。 When will you go to Japan? >月曜日に博ちゃんの家へ行きます。 On monday, Hiroshi will go towards home (idk how to translate this one) >今は食べません。 I won't eat now
other languages have homophones too why do japs need so many kanji
Charles Evans
DJT is the best Japanese language learning vtuber shitposting thread on Any Forums for むっつりスケベ共 that are interested in everything Japanese Japanese speakers learning English are also welcome
The only way to learn 日本語: 1. Filter all tripfags 2. Don't waste time/money on ゴミ like: -Anki, garbage videos and youtube channels, shitty apps, translations, learning kanji instead of vocab, Genki, Imabi, RTK, KKLC, Kanji Damage, Wanikani, Duolingo, Bunpro, Kodansha, Tobira, whatever you're using, language schools, Italki, AJATT, JLPT, Kanji Kentei tests and many other scams -Pitch accent doesn't exist (you can say words however you want youtu.be/1RKWcCyD7GI ) -Learning how to write on paper (you can do it later once you're decent at Japanese) Avoiding these beginner traps will cut down your learning time considerably to less than 2 years if you learn every day and never give up. After that it's just enjoying the language and the content while fortifying your knowledge and occasionally learning something new. 3. Fix your health with the grimoire first, it makes life and learning 100 times easier 4. Spend a few days getting familiar with kanas 5. Give Tae Kim a fast read, it's not the most accurate grammar guide but it's the fastest. Look up Japanese grammar on Japanese google/ask DJT later on instead 6. A few years of reading, listening, watching vtubers, shitposting on /djt/ and having your posts corrected by Japanese flags, googling stuff you don't know and you're done! 7. Move to Japan 8. The ride never ends 絶対英語を学べる方法: youtu.be/RJ__1lmPJWY
>On monday, Hiroshi will go towards home (idk how to translate this one) 日曜日に 博ちゃんの家へ 行きます And as for the "go towards" part, refer to hinative.com/en-US/questions/5466857
>Why do they need so many kanji They don't. But it's a part of their culture so they keep it. Same thing as Polish not adopting carons and keeping ó (actually u), ą (actually ǫ) or rz in your writing. Or, closer to the Japanese example, why French spell the way they do (adding all sorts of distinctions that no longer exist in actual spoken French and obviously not because modern French is incomprehensible).
Eli Gonzalez
All of the "new" 20th century born languages (like vietnamese for example) are written and pronounced as-is with no extra fluff added. That's enough to show efficiency was always on the mind of linguists and they just chose not to revise particularly cumbersome languages