Working in a restaraunt thats owned by Japanese. Or finding a war veteran that knows the language well. Along with your text books. (*!*)
2006-12-18 10:07:13
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answer #1
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answered by Moose 6
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The best way is to take classes and find practice partners. Trust me learning on your own can be a challenge and a drag. With a teacher, when you don't understand something you can just ask them instead of losing hope trying to figure it own on your own.
For reading and writing, get some kind of audio that you can read along with and try to recognize which sounds go with which characters. Songs worked well for me because I could get the lyrics, words are said in a way that you can hear them, and they have repeating parts so you can become familiar with each hiragana quicker. Try to avoid using romaji, it can cause confusion with pronunciation, and meanings and it won't help you if you ever want to read Japanese.
Try to have fun. It will make learning that much easier and be patient, you won't wake up one morning and just know Japanese.
2006-12-18 10:20:13
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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Try taking Japanese categories on Saturday. Everywhere I've been constantly host Japanese categories. Check out your regional group core. Watching Japanese suggests, dramas and anime will typically coach you the fundamentals for those who watch adequate. From what men and women inform me, they suppose its convenient. But once they do talk it, they announciate it weirdly do to the truth that they do not have this Japanese accessory.
2016-09-03 16:57:22
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answer #3
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answered by ? 4
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The easiest way would be to go to Japan and attend classes, or meet a few Japanese people. I have a Japanese tutor and that helps. Try looking in workbooks, and start with Hiragana. Then Katakana, the Konji. Listen to audio probably, and replay it a lot. That helps me.
2006-12-18 10:24:44
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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Taking a class with a native Japanese speaker. It would be really helpful if you have a friend who speaks Japanese fluently. He/She would be able to help you a lot.
If your school offers Japanese one of its courses, you should try it.
2006-12-18 10:15:10
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answer #5
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answered by XD 2
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If you cannot go to Japan or attend a Japanese class in your country, I suggest trying to learn hiragana and katakana all by yourself. If you can get that far, you probably have enough determination to learn 1,945 kanji and grammatics. Kanji and grammar books are boundless and endless everywhere.
For speaking, Skype is a good place to go because you can find Japanese learners and native speakers.
http://www.sharedtalk.com is good for reading and writing.
2006-12-18 10:09:59
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answer #6
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answered by Belie 7
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audio tapes
2006-12-18 10:11:45
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answer #7
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answered by Hermione G 1
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use computer
2006-12-18 10:24:57
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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