Japanese Language

deeroh , in Should I be saying the words out loud when doing Anki?

Language learning is a long, long process, and it’s important to make sure your habits are sustainable. It doesn’t really matter what’s optimal if you get demotivated and stop learning, so above all, you should do whatever keeps up your learning process. Don’t force yourself to speak the flashcards aloud if that will discourage you from the whole thing.

That, and don’t worry about optimal. There are no bad habits that can’t be unlearned (and the value you’d get out of speaking would far outweigh any effort you need to invest in the future if you want to improve your accent). Speaking would be great, but as long as you’re learning grammar and vocabulary, you’re on track.

OrigamiOblivion , in Do any ebook platforms have better integrated dictionaries than Google Play?

I read on a Kindle Paperwhite with these custom third-party dictionaries installed.

I also read on my iPhone and iPad using Immersion Reader with Yomichan-formatted dictionaries installed (I use a ton of dictionaries for better word coverage, both J-E and J-J monolingual dictionaries).

The advantage of using Immersion Reader is that you just simply touch the word, instead of selecting and highlighting it, so look-ups are quicker. Also in addition to installing multiple dictionaries, you can install frequency lists, pitch accent info, grammar guides, etc. When you look up a word, it’ll search through everything you’ve installed, so if you have pitch accent info and frequency lists installed, you can see the pitch accent of the word you touched, including the frequency number to help determine if it’s a word you want to learn.

Then you can save the word to your word list (it’ll also automatically save the definition and the sentence containing the word) so you can later export to Anki.

There also also third party tools that let you export your words from Kindle devices to Anki as well.

Note: some words with furigana may still be difficult to look up correctly on the Kindle and also Immersion Reader, if the formatting of the furigana is weird (a combination of the HTML code and the CSS styling). Sometimes the furigana isn’t clearly separated from the word, but instead jumbled together, so the dictionary may not be able to find the word.

Usually kanji-compound words are fine, but some words with kunyomi reading with a single furigana over it may cause some issues, but it depends on the book, and also it may depend on the particular word you are trying to look up.

To get around this, Immersion Reader has a search function that let you paste in the word (provided you copied it first), so you can fix the spelling (usually it means removing the furigana from the word) and it’ll search through all the dictionaries so you can add it to your word list. You can also edit each entry in your word list in order to manually add the example sentence, or to remove any unwanted dictionary entries.

DigitalAudio Mod , in What are your motivations or goals that make you learn Japanese?
@DigitalAudio@sopuli.xyz avatar

I started because I was super into Japanese music. This was almost 10 years ago already. But over time I’ve come to appreciate the lenguaje itself. Especially Kanji. Now I love it, and is the main reason why I still go out of my way to learn new vocabulary that I may never use.

That being said, I’m also trying to get into a Japanese university for my masters degree, and I use Japanese every day at my job, so it has financial and professional uses for me as well, and has sort of gone beyond a mere hobby at this point

pruwybn , in Is ChatGPT a reliable tool for learning?
@pruwybn@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

Definitely not. ChatGPT is known to “hallucinate”, i.e. make things up, so you can’t trust that everything it says will be accurate.

Zarxrax , in Japanese is harder/easier than other languages in what ways?

Easy: grammar is fairly consistent, not a lot of exceptions. Hard: grammar is totally different from most Western languages.

ianhclark510 , in A modest proposal
@ianhclark510@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

is this loss?

infotainment , in Japanese is harder/easier than other languages in what ways?
@infotainment@lemmy.world avatar

Two other “easy” bits for Japanese:

  • Verbs don’t conjugate based on subject or plurality, which is kind of nice coming from more European languages where you have to deal with that
  • Only two irregular verbs in the entire language
pipariturbiini , in A modest proposal
@pipariturbiini@sopuli.xyz avatar

あらあら。。。

PatrykCXXVIII , in "We are free"
@PatrykCXXVIII@szmer.info avatar

And that’s why you shouldn’t trust automatic translators.

DigitalAudio Mod , in Internet Archive of /r/LearnJapanese Resources
@DigitalAudio@sopuli.xyz avatar

This is amazing, and I’m actually going to pin it, and link it on our sidebar.

As I’ve mentioned before, although this instance is fundamentally different from r/learnjapanese and we won’t necessarily have the same approach as them, that doesn’t mean that we won’t be welcoming and discussing learning resources, so this is an incredible resource for us.

Thank you so much for this post!

  • All
  • Subscribed
  • Moderated
  • Favorites
  • random
  • [email protected]
  • All magazines