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
This might be stupid to ask but, are all 副助詞 able to appear between ~て and 助動詞 or it depends? For example I saw 信じてなどいらなかった which I'm assuming followed this structure, and also thinking of も and は.
A person with a working brain can only come to one conclusion that it doesn't exist.
Landon Morris
depends on (You)
Benjamin Walker
do your own research
Thomas Lopez
Listen to a song, if you can hum it after listening to it once or twice, you don't need to learn pitch. You'll acquire it naturally like most people. If you didn't need to purposefully learn the pitch or stress in your native language you dont need to learn it with Japanese. Just immerse plenty and you'll be fine.
Christopher Thompson
It matters. Don't trust the manga readers who last heard or spoke japanese 19 years ago.
Easton Lee
is っぽい a rude way to say something has the vibes of something else?
Logan Diaz
You need to know it exists and the basic rules or you will never be able to learn it.
What's the process for learning from movies/J drama? Do I just watch a lot even if I understand very little?
Jacob Torres
Yes, with subtitles. If you feel that a unknown word is reappearing or is important pause and look it up, don't do this too often or it will become boring very quickly. Its best to start with shows you already watched, so you at least know what is going on.
Anthony Harris
>J drama You need to undergo cringe training and then send your certificate to the japanese embassy in your city to receive further instructions.
Pick something that you can follow the plot of even if it was a silent movie. And then just follow the subtitles with your eyes as the characters speak—you don't need to understand everything, but just try to follow it with your eyes like in karaoke and try to understand what they are talking about, but if you don't, go on
And look up words that you are curious about, or words that you see come up often and you don't know Usually there are a dozen of unique words that movie will repeat over and over again, and if you recognize them and look them up you will understand a lot more and learn new words organically But don't look up everything, because you would watch a movie 10x longer and it would be boring and inefficient