1000 Essential Kanji Vocabulary from Elementary School Level
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- Опубліковано 8 чер 2024
- In this video you will learn 1000 common Kanji Vocabulary that is taught in Japanese Elementary School Grade 1 to 6. The video is divided in parts according to the JLPT (Japanese Language Proficiency Test). It included the Kanji itself, as well as the Hiragana and Romaji reading. After a few seconds, the translation and the English meaning is revealed. Also there will be a picture and sound to help you visually remember.
Click here to jump to different levels:
00:00 ~N5 Level
08:22 ~N5 to N4 Level
41:43 ~N5 to N3 Level
1:06:31 ~N4 to N3 Level
1:40:00 ~N3 to N2 Level
2:05:00 ~N3 to N1 Level
💛 This took forever to make, it would be great if you could like the video and comment!
✅ Of course you can also manually adjust the speed of the video if you are a beginner student. Take a look if the subtitles are available for your native language. Hope you have fun with this japanese lesson for intermediate students.
If you’re still a Beginner and what to practice some Hiragana and Katakana reading, I recommend you these two Quiz-Videos:
Hiragana: • Hiragana Quiz for Begi...
Katakana: • Katakana Quiz for Begi...
#jlpt #japanese #kanji #hiragana
Credit: Countdown Graphic Animation from vecteezy.com
This took forever to make! If you enjoyed it, please like and comment. Also comment if you find a mistake ;)
I appreciate your effort, thank you!!
Thank you for an useful video :D ありがとうございます
Thank you very much :)
Arigato ❤❤
Next Lesson of words in Kanji
Sometimes I really don't get how Kanji's are formed, because the word kosame has 3 hiragana characters but 2 kanji characters 小雨.
The last one is "ame" but as far as I know there is no "kos", but there is ko and sa, should it not be kosaame then?
Japanese is weird… It took me a while to get used to as someone who knows Chinese.
As a standalone word, yes あめ would be the reading. However, as a kanji in a larger word it can be pronounced a ton of ways (ウ、あめ、あま-、-さめ). That last one is how it's being pronounced here. An example of a word with that kanji read differently is the word 雨天 (うてん / uten) meaning "rainy weather".