10 MUST-KNOW FACTS about Japanese before you start learning

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  • Опубліковано 6 чер 2021
  • 10 THINGS YOU SHOULD KNOW ABOUT JAPANESE before you start learning | nihongodekita
    Is Japanese EASY?
    In this video, I shared 10 basic facts about Japanese language. After watching this video, you will have a clearer and better understanding of Japanese language, and know what to expect along the way of your learning journey! So... you are now well prepared to get started :)
    Did any of the facts surprise you?
    ⚡️🗣Join my beginner online live courses🇯🇵
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    Hi everyone! I am Sayaka from NihongoDekita who loves teaching Japanese and sharing the culture with you all. My goal is to make learning more FUN and EASY, and share the REAL AUTHENTIC JAPANESE that goes beyond the textbook! :)
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    🎞️企画・撮影・編集
    Scriptwriting, Filming, Edit: Sayaka
    #japanese #日本語 #NihongoDekita #japaneseclass #beginnerjapanese

КОМЕНТАРІ • 2,1 тис.

  • @nothx6420
    @nothx6420 2 роки тому +4387

    As a person learning Japanese here are some things I wish I knew before starting:
    1) There is more than just informal and formal. There is also semi formal and SUPER formal. I really wish I knew this because getting into japanese, i was only aware of formal and informal and was confused when I heard waiters and store clerks speak in super formal.
    2) A lot of japanese people who teach japanese on youtube tend to baby the English speaking audience. Often times they won't include the kanji for a particular word and just write hiragana(if the kanji isn't in the level they are teaching). For example the word かわいい. So many japanese teachers only taught the hiragana and i went many months thinking it was just that. Learning that it had a kanji was so frustrating because i had to essentially learn the word twice.
    3) Don't be scared to learn from non native japanese people. People who went through the process of learning japanese might notice things that native japanese people don't notice. They'll be able to walk you through the logic of the grammar in a way you'll understand.
    4) A lot of translations for japanese sentences aren't 100% accurate only modified in the English translation to make sense in English connotation.
    5) The sentence structure is S-O-V however the verb isn't ALWAYS at the end. its depends on what you are trying to say. This might seem obvious for some but I was told that the verb is always at the end and was confused when it wouldn't be.
    6) A lot of words taught to you will be taught in a incredibly slow matter. We aren't aware of this because we aren't native japanese speakers. But natural japanese is insanely hard and fast to follow when you are used to such slow teachings. Which is why immersion and hearing natural Japanese is so important.
    7) Kanji IS important. Grammar IS important. A lot of japanese learners on youtube try to skip steps or come up with reasons not to learn kanji or grammar. They are important if you want to be fluent. Going half way really isn't as great as some people think. You'll have the understanding of japanese equivalent to that of a child.
    8) Japanese is an INSANELY hard language. People say learning japanese is hard but you don't see the velocity of the statement until you are deep into it
    9) The beginning stages are the hardest only because your brain is so unused to japanese. Someone once described learning a language like going for a swim in the ocean. The beginning, getting past all the waves, is the hardest part. Once you make it into the ocean you start to see the velocity of the what the language really is.
    10) Language learning can be incredibly depressing. Hearing a sentence you cant understand might be like a punch in the gut. Sometimes seeing better Japanese learners can make you feel terrible about yourself. It all gets better though!

    • @ducktylus1820
      @ducktylus1820 2 роки тому +113

      Where did you learn Japanese and can you recommend some UA-camrs who teach it well?

    • @Emily-os1jd
      @Emily-os1jd 2 роки тому +62

      Thank you for the tips, tbh Its not like im learning another whole language. I just want to learn more about my dads native language and so in particular I can pretty much understand Japanese people speaking. Its just I don't know how to write it since I can't speak it properly.🥲

    • @User-pn2yt
      @User-pn2yt 2 роки тому +83

      @@ducktylus1820 search up tae Kim’s guide on Japanese online. I’m using that at the moment to learn and it’ll you grammar and the very basics of Japanese

    • @nothx6420
      @nothx6420 2 роки тому +132

      @@ducktylus1820 @Ducktylus onomappu and misa ammo are good! misa ammo's videos are super long but they provide a lot of context and throughfully explain grammar points. onomappu talks about some really good memorization methods and all of his videos are subbed with japanese and English subtitles. Learn Japanese from zero is also good

    • @ducktylus1820
      @ducktylus1820 2 роки тому +8

      @@User-pn2yt thank you!

  • @akhilk2814
    @akhilk2814 2 роки тому +3029

    Mostly other people are like explaining Japanese to English translation but you explain like whole structure of it❤️ Arigatou 🤗

    • @FutureBoyWonder
      @FutureBoyWonder 2 роки тому +52

      Oh God you used romaji
      Don't ever use romaji when communicating.
      In fact it should never be used learn hiragana etc and drop that other shit

    • @lovehearte
      @lovehearte 2 роки тому +13

      @@FutureBoyWonder there are words in romaji that are in hiragana like "あく

    • @FutureBoyWonder
      @FutureBoyWonder 2 роки тому +16

      @@lovehearte if you're serious about learning japanese the faster you jettison romaji the faster you'll attain a more natural understanding of japanese

    • @rowan4301
      @rowan4301 2 роки тому +87

      @@FutureBoyWonder this is a comment on a video aimed at beginners?? sure, you need to learn your kana, but i dont think anyones japanese is going to be permanently stunted because they typed out "arigatou" once.

    • @FutureBoyWonder
      @FutureBoyWonder 2 роки тому +23

      @@rowan4301 lol yes you're absolutely right boss i needed to be less snotty about it. I just know from personal experience how much it helped forever doing romaji i should have totally said it different though

  • @NathanATaylor
    @NathanATaylor Рік тому +449

    I love that you don't edit out your little mistakes, makes it more friendly and inviting, like actually talking to someone :)

  • @mycocam
    @mycocam Рік тому +105

    you make Japanese sound so easy! no verb conjugation, no distinction between singular and plural, super easy question structure, (almost) no irregular verbs...
    that's very motivating to hear :)

    • @heisst
      @heisst Місяць тому +3

      there's the dark side as well

  • @TaylorCoulon
    @TaylorCoulon 2 роки тому +322

    It still helps me to this day to remember the words "cookie" and "sushi". For the two irregular verbs, you would change "ku" to "ki" and "su" to "shi".

    • @beelzeburger5608
      @beelzeburger5608 2 роки тому +3

      Can you please illustrate with the help of example sentences?

    • @faymelp826
      @faymelp826 2 роки тому +44

      @@beelzeburger5608 I’m still a learner so I might be wrong, but if you are putting one of the two into the て(te) form of a verb you would change it. For example, する(suru) in て form becomes して(shite). The same goes for くる(kuru) which would become きて. Hope this helps!

    • @ev-ezaye3580
      @ev-ezaye3580 10 місяців тому +3

      @Taylor this is most helpful! Thanks! Arigatou!

    • @crimsoneclipse5677
      @crimsoneclipse5677 10 місяців тому +2

      @@faymelp826Ohh, this makes a lot of sense! Thank you so much for explaining!

    • @faymelp826
      @faymelp826 10 місяців тому +2

      @@crimsoneclipse5677 no problem! Happy to help

  • @edwardoowew
    @edwardoowew 2 роки тому +769

    I've been studying Japanese for a long time but still, whenever I learn something new, the old things I learned disappear even though I took notes about it and it's meaning and specially kanji is like killing me softly 😂 but I must go on and continue!!! Can't wait to visit Japan someday and walk around.

    • @Grux-Grux
      @Grux-Grux 2 роки тому +31

      頑張っ 日本語は難しいね。

    • @alekchris1457
      @alekchris1457 2 роки тому +13

      @@Grux-Grux does the people who live in Japan know all the Kanji?

    • @goodnight2344
      @goodnight2344 2 роки тому +22

      @@alekchris1457 no xd It's probably impossible

    • @alekchris1457
      @alekchris1457 2 роки тому +15

      @@goodnight2344, I am watching a video right now, seems like most Japanese people don’t remember all of them, thank god. Hahah

    • @alekchris1457
      @alekchris1457 2 роки тому +5

      @@goodnight2344, I am watching a video right now, seems like most Japanese people don’t remember all of them, thank god. Hahah

  • @ssmdvaa
    @ssmdvaa 7 місяців тому +28

    I'm from Uzbekistan 🇺🇿. I'm learning japanese right now and my japanese teacher said that it's grammar structure is almost same as uzbek. So I love this language❤️

  • @TheUnhappyporky69
    @TheUnhappyporky69 2 роки тому +487

    Can we all just appreciate that if you're learning English, or if English is your second language, that you've worked hard, and studied greatly.
    English isn't an easy language. As English is my first language, I can confirm that. And I've known so many native English speakers who seem to not appreciate the amount of work people really do have to put into learning any language, including English.

    • @harrynking777
      @harrynking777 Рік тому +33

      If one is a native English speaker, reading books is the best way to improve grammar. The problem today is that many people, including those in the media often make grammatical mistakes. Such people don't read books. They stand out a mile.

    • @nzjpzh
      @nzjpzh Рік тому +12

      I totally agree with you. I started learning English a few years ago by reading books, listening music and occasional duolingo lessons and at times is beyond confusing.
      Even though is not that hard to reach a level of English enough to communicate with friends on a casual basis, is easy to embarrass oneself when trying to write it or speak it on a more formal setting or with unfamiliar people.

    • @TheUnhappyporky69
      @TheUnhappyporky69 Рік тому +8

      @@nzjpzh yeah, I know what you mean. I learned most of my English through extensive reading. Its kind of shocking how reading books makes all the difference in fluency.

    • @Komatik_
      @Komatik_ Рік тому +7

      I'm pretty sure I just wanted to play videogames 😅

    • @TheHappyZappy
      @TheHappyZappy Рік тому +4

      Ya, reading books hammers the structure of the English language into your subconscious. The brain is the most powerful computer, and we can’t control most of it, but with time and practice the subconscious can be trained. To people that read a lot, seeing a word spelled wrong triggers a subconscious response, maybe you didn’t actively know how to spell it, but your subconscious has absorbed the way it looked and you can tell if it looks weird. It’s the same with just grammar in general too! You’ll also hear people like chess players saying the same thing about positions in chess. They’ve played it long enough and from a young enough age, that their subconsciouses can tell when a position is wrong, even if they themselves don’t necessarily understand every step involved. I think I’ve even heard of programmers that can tell when lines of code don’t feel right. Practice practice practice!

  • @mikurealjapanese
    @mikurealjapanese 2 роки тому +367

    さやかちゃんの動画、分かりやすくて、楽しいです❤️さすが!You’re great!!!! 💕

    • @TheKLGamer
      @TheKLGamer 2 роки тому +25

      Hello miku sensei, it is awesome to see you here!!

    • @NihongoDekita
      @NihongoDekita  2 роки тому +82

      みくさん、ありがとうございます🥺❤️もっと良くできるように頑張ります!

    • @bashboshgamer-officialyout5959
      @bashboshgamer-officialyout5959 2 роки тому +5

      @@NihongoDekita No your accent is beautiful and Understanding .

    • @opdhaka
      @opdhaka 2 роки тому +9

      はい! そうですよ! さやかさんのビデオは美しくてすごいですね! 頑張ってください!
      まだ初心者ですけど、私もUA-cam チャンネルで日本語を教えています。😄

    • @strawbxrrymochi8178
      @strawbxrrymochi8178 2 роки тому +2

      Hi

  • @happyvip6151
    @happyvip6151 Рік тому +148

    My native language is Arabic , and i can speak French and English fluently . I can't really expect learning Japanese to be so easy for me but i am surely so excited to start ! Thank you so much for your video

    • @Rblx_rosee
      @Rblx_rosee 9 місяців тому +2

      Oh same my native language is Arabic I can speak English fluently I learn french at school!

    • @stretchypants7140
      @stretchypants7140 2 місяці тому

      @@Rblx_rosee May I ask what country you're from?

    • @o5.council691
      @o5.council691 2 місяці тому

      ​@@stretchypants7140tunisia morocco algeria lebanon one of these countries

    • @sidhu139
      @sidhu139 2 місяці тому

      my native language is gaga, and i can speak googoo and booboo fluently. I can't really expect learning baabaa to be so easy for me but i am surely so excited to start ! Thank you so much for your video

  • @KittyThaliaX23
    @KittyThaliaX23 Рік тому +35

    To me it’s always so important to learn basic phonetics and grammar structure so you can put your own sentences together fairly early on

  • @spysmocking4536
    @spysmocking4536 Рік тому +60

    After watching this video, I am starting to understand why english is so difficult to learn for the majority of Japanese. Having them to to deal with singular/plural and masculine/feminine, a lot irregular verbs and other “complicated” things, I can understand why it is such a chore for them. Very good video.

    • @thatnerdyadventurer
      @thatnerdyadventurer 6 місяців тому +8

      English does not have masculine/feminine. For example: if you want to call something cool you do not have to change the ending or spelling of cool depending on what you are describing. A TV, pencil sharpener, the weather, are all just cool. Whereas in Spanish if you want to describe something you have to change the adjective to reflect the gender of the object you're describing. For example: if you want to call something delicious the word in Spanish is Delicioso or Deliciosa. To call a taco delicious you would say: El taco es delicioso. This is because taco is masculine so you must use the -o ending. To say a drink is delicious you would say: La bebida es deliciosa. This is because bebida is feminine so you have to use the -a ending. Hope this makes sense!

    • @FrankBrennosTheGreatest
      @FrankBrennosTheGreatest 5 місяців тому +4

      @@thatnerdyadventurer Spanish isn't even the worst since the ending gives away the gender for the most part. In French you just have to know, there's nothing pointing in one way or the other. And then there are languages that add a third, neutral gender, as if that wasn't complicated enough already... I can't imagine learning these coming from a language that doesn't use any of that.

    • @hangezoeSNK
      @hangezoeSNK 3 місяці тому

      same with hindi lol@@FrankBrennosTheGreatest

  • @stormtrooperelite1453
    @stormtrooperelite1453 2 роки тому +380

    hearing people's experiences with languages is super fun. I learned French in school so Spanish came super easy for me, I picked up a lot of stuff from watching tv shows and I was able to talk to people with little issues, native speakers just don't care if you're using proper grammar or not.

    • @iwanttokillmyself206
      @iwanttokillmyself206 2 роки тому +6

      Currently learning German at school so ive questions ! How long it took for you to learn french ??? I can't wait to be able to speak German T.T (I speak french so if you want to practice in the same time just send your reply in french so i will correct it for you and if you're too good then you don't have just i don't want to waste your time that's why i said that)

    • @stormtrooperelite1453
      @stormtrooperelite1453 2 роки тому +4

      @@iwanttokillmyself206 J'appris Francais a l'ecole, il y avait plus de vingt ans. Maintenant je pense que je peux comprendre les Francais mais seulement s'ils parlent lent (?). Aussi, mon (ma?) vocabulaire n'est bein plus, desole :(

    • @silverblaze9049
      @silverblaze9049 2 роки тому +8

      @I want to Kill myself (don’t, ur great:)
      My sister is almost fluent in German, and she only started learning a few years ago!! You’ll get there eventually, the learning process is different for everyone, but it is possible to learn it in only a few years.
      Concordia Laguage Villages has an immersion program that she used if you’re interested.

    • @the10creative-blinis46
      @the10creative-blinis46 2 роки тому +5

      @@stormtrooperelite1453 the correction would be "j'ai appris" "il y a plus de vingt ans" "lentement" "n'est plus bon"
      but as you said in any language people tend to not care about grammar, only the formal speaking should have it thankfully :D I'm a native tunisian (you may call it arabic, even if it's not really the case), i grew up with french too, learnt english on my own and will hopefully finish my japanese studies this year (also on my own) so I can testify that in all of those, grammar can be omitted outside

    • @stormtrooperelite1453
      @stormtrooperelite1453 2 роки тому +1

      @@the10creative-blinis46 c'est comme j'ai dit , vingt ans :)

  • @Jankons
    @Jankons 2 роки тому +86

    After this knowledge I'm really motivated to learn Japanese because I realize how easy the structure of the words and sentences are in japanese especially in comparison with other languages. So the biggest struggle in learning Japanese is probably learning all the hiragana and katagana (and some Kanji) characters and memoriesing the words.

    • @emiki6
      @emiki6 2 роки тому +2

      Kana is not that hard. A weekend may be enough for hiragana. Writing it down and testing it with kana.pro worked well for me. It took me 1,5 days, katakana should take less, because knowing hiragana helps.
      I recommend the Refold way, it has a lot of free material and up to date methodology.

    • @EvGamerBETA
      @EvGamerBETA 7 місяців тому

      I didn't really struggle with hiragana. You just need to write it a bunch. I just did some excecises from the textbook to read and write hiragana, without understanding the meaning yet

  • @thomasdimattia3556
    @thomasdimattia3556 Рік тому +80

    And I have some really, really, REALLY good news for Japanese students! The MEANING of the kanji actually can be the easiest thing you learn about Japanese! I happen to have had the greatest kanji teacher in the history of the language and he made it so easy that in the two-year intensive language course in Tokyo we would graduate with the ability to pass the JPLT2 (that’s the official Japanese language proficiency test), and in my class sitting next to me, she passed a JPLT1 and got accepted straight into TODAI UNIVERSITY, the #1 university in Japan!

    • @bibuworld
      @bibuworld 8 місяців тому +4

      What is the name of the intensive course you took in Tokyo? Could you tell me, please?

    • @fdf00
      @fdf00 7 місяців тому

      Could you tell where was this course that you were doing?

    • @eldarkorkmasov
      @eldarkorkmasov 6 місяців тому

      Yes, count me in

  • @charlottesmom
    @charlottesmom 9 місяців тому +15

    This actually made me feel a lot less stressed about learning Japanese, yes it will be difficult but I think after this video it will be a bit easier/less stressful that I was making it out to be. I am going to rewatch and take notes, it was very helpful, thank you!

  • @SpinningTurtle66
    @SpinningTurtle66 2 роки тому +128

    It’s so interesting seeing other people’s perspective, I learnt Spanish in school and it was super easy because it has many similarities to English

    • @christophermoore6110
      @christophermoore6110 Рік тому +4

      True, but for me, it was moving too fast and because I hated homework I never studied at home so I suck at Spanish basically

    • @DarkZone68256
      @DarkZone68256 Рік тому +2

      I wish to learn it too .. in fact I like this language, there's some similarities in words between Spanish and my dialect language

    • @TheEarthRealm
      @TheEarthRealm Рік тому +6

      Spanish and all of it's verb conjugations is harder to master than Japanese (speaking, not writing). Fight me. 😄
      Harder than Mandarin too, even with it's tones.

    • @ev-ezaye3580
      @ev-ezaye3580 10 місяців тому

      ​@@DarkZone68256 May I know what dialect that is? Mucho Graçias!

    • @ev-ezaye3580
      @ev-ezaye3580 10 місяців тому +1

      ​@@TheEarthRealm 🙌 🙌 🙌 🙌 no dispute there bruv!

  • @norikosato7823
    @norikosato7823 2 роки тому +18

    As a former university tutor of Japanese who hold Master of Japanese Applied Linguistics, I highly recommend this video for those who are thinking of learning Japanese. This video is encouraging.

  • @venomousraga
    @venomousraga 2 місяці тому +2

    the entire thing about verbs is really encouraging because that’s where i struggle the most with learning spanish

  • @joshulapax531
    @joshulapax531 16 днів тому

    Italian here started to study japanese recently. I learned more from this video than in many hours of study because this clarified many doubts to me 😆
    Thank you!

  • @samisit0
    @samisit0 2 роки тому +31

    Most of the complexity of Japanese is hidden in kanji.
    I feel like learning all the kanjis with all their different pronunciations and stroke orders is equivalent to learning the dozens of conjugations for every single verb in Spanish or most Romance languages, or learning the correct pronunciation for every single word in English.
    I'm so glad that at least Japanese and Spanish are phonetically consistent languages unlike English, at least up to some extent.

    • @shemage5932
      @shemage5932 9 місяців тому +3

      It varies from person to person. If you're like me and are only learning Japanese to be a bigger weeb (to watch anime and read manga in Japanese), then stuff like stroke order is not very important, and can be omitted. That being said, I fully agree with your first sentence; the biggest make or break for most people when it comes to learning Japanese are the Kanji. Learning a bare minimum of 2136 Kanji isn't easy, and the only 2 things helping you are the radical kanji (Kanji that exist as part of every single Kanji) and the Kunyomi/Onyomi rule of thumb.

    • @electricfishfan7159
      @electricfishfan7159 7 місяців тому +1

      For most learners, as long as you get stroke order mostly in the ballpark I don’t think it’s that big of an issue, it is primarily useful for looking characters up in kanji dictionaries successfully and for reading stylized text (which you will passively memorize anyway). In the modern day, I don’t think a ton of learners are going to be hand writing letters in Japanese, and in that event you could just be careful to make your characters look good so they come out readable despite any stroke order errors.

  • @bernadettarndt2349
    @bernadettarndt2349 2 роки тому +41

    Thank you for this great video! I'm learning Japanese for 3 months and I found your explanations really useful and delighting! 💕💕💕 日本語が大好きです。

    • @NihongoDekita
      @NihongoDekita  2 роки тому +7

      頑張りましょう!

    • @eliaz_...34
      @eliaz_...34 2 роки тому +9

      OMG I COULD READ THIS!!! I LIKE JAPANESE VERRY MUCH. I am verry new to the language lol.

  • @taiahomology
    @taiahomology 2 роки тому +3

    1) 3:33
    2) 5:12
    3) 5:38
    4) 6:52
    5) 8:03
    These are the ones I found helpful :)

  • @omegahyperes96
    @omegahyperes96 5 місяців тому +1

    Gallagher rants about English and it's hilarious. Thank you for making this informative video, helped so much!

  • @qtabbel9496
    @qtabbel9496 2 роки тому +29

    I'm an English major secondary teacher course student. I had feelings that I regretted taking this major (originally I was supposed to take BSIT-computer programming but because of my mental health and my parents convincing me to take my college here in my home town because they worry about me, I agreed).I wanted to learn Japanese and want to go to Japan someday, I started to take it serious learning it and I noticed it was easier for me to understand unlike back then. I just remembered one of my subjects "Structure of English" that subject is hard and a lot of branches of information in the smallest detail that you can't forget. Because of that subject and being in an English education major, I think I don't regret it anymore.I'm able to study Japanese langauge easier and if I am able to talk, read, and understand Japanese,I will become qualified if I ever thought of becoming an English teacher in Japan ^^.

  • @Lyzlorein
    @Lyzlorein 2 роки тому +12

    I loved how you focused on the positive side of learning japanese. I started learning just a few months ago, It’s hard but one of the things that I love about it is that since my first language is Spanish, I can understand almost all the sounds.

    • @riya3349
      @riya3349 3 місяці тому

      can you recommend me a youtube channel for learning japanese please ?

  • @sagirparkar4115
    @sagirparkar4115 6 місяців тому

    "I watch Nihongo Dekita" - that was brilliant !! loved it ! :)

  • @TanTan-ec9dt
    @TanTan-ec9dt 2 роки тому +26

    As I saw on instagram that you’re starting a UA-cam Channel i was really happy 😍 I love your content. It’s really helpful 😃❣️

  • @TheRikkuShak
    @TheRikkuShak 2 роки тому +35

    This video just gave me the confidence boost to try learning Japanese. I speak German, Bosnian and English pretty much fluently. I also learned French in school for 6 years (but I've forgotten the majority of what I learned, 12 years have passed pretty fast haha). And I really hate to differentiate masculine/feminine/neuter - To this day I mix them up because one word can be feminine in German, neuter in Bosnian and masculine in French ughhh. English is the most convenient out of those. Also no conjugation? Only two tenses? Sounds amazing :') Learning the characters will be hard though (I used to know how to read Cyrillic, but forgot that as well - it really takes practice and repeating it often to not forget it)

    • @ev-ezaye3580
      @ev-ezaye3580 10 місяців тому

      Yeah! The Romance languages can be a real chore with their "conjugations", albeit English is not so far off... there are as many tenses in English-just that most of them are spelt in the same way, leading to so much confusion when you study any Romance language with like 10+ tenses... don't get me started on Akkusativ, Nomative, Dativ and the rest in Deutsch, cannot correlate those in English... very perplexing... so instead of worrying my head 😒 with directives across languages, just learn the new language as is like the natives do!

    • @slyar
      @slyar 9 місяців тому

      There's also te form used for the imperative and continuous

    • @bW9taeH4
      @bW9taeH4 2 місяці тому

      Then it must have seemed strange hearing how English has "so many" irregular verbs. Relative to Japanese, yes. Relative to other European language? Not even close.

  • @Digitalfiendscom
    @Digitalfiendscom Рік тому

    I just found this channel while searching for resources to learn Japanese and I'm very impressed with how clear and concise your videos are. You also deliver the information in an engaging way and in digestible portions for a beginner (not too much, not too little). I think it helps that your English is very strong and you understand how to properly relate Japanese words and concepts to their equivalents in English. Your courses also look rather interesting! Keep up the great work!

  • @ago5022
    @ago5022 Рік тому +7

    Your style of explanation actually makes me want to learn Japanese

  • @yatpaness
    @yatpaness 2 роки тому +11

    Impressive!👍 I used to ask my colleagues (Japanese) about Nihonggo, but, they just didn't bother answering and, simply, gave up. I somehow felt some sort of their stress just by hearing me ask some questions.😅 You, on the other hand, seemed to enjoy helping and sharing your language and culture. I love your enthusiasm. Thank you for your time and stay safe.👍

  • @ninamariawolk4954
    @ninamariawolk4954 2 роки тому +43

    Now I'm motivated to learn Japanese again! Thanks for this video, you seem to be a really kind person :)
    I'm currently going through Hiragana and I've already learned 20 characters! 🇯🇵

  • @jinglesmcjingles
    @jinglesmcjingles Рік тому +2

    Trying to give myself a crash course to learn the basics in the next four months.
    I have a feeling you and your channel will be my best friend this Spring.

  • @jaicrawford9882
    @jaicrawford9882 6 місяців тому

    I like how clearly she speaks so its easier for me to pick up on the sounds of how some of the words are suppose to sound

  • @ky3532
    @ky3532 2 роки тому +110

    ありがとうござます
    I am trying to learn Japanese to boost up my vocabulary in languages.
    I find it a tiny bit similar to hindi with the SOV-oriented and "です" at the end which can be compared to "हैं".
    Kanji seems a huge barrier that I can never conquer, however I'll be trying my best to get past the barrier and be able to compose and understand words and sentences in japanese.

    • @sakuraka2018
      @sakuraka2018 2 роки тому +13

      ありがとうございます ‼️👋😃

    • @titangaming600
      @titangaming600 2 роки тому +2

      That's right bro , but the Sov is same in Hindi

    • @starpeep5769
      @starpeep5769 2 роки тому +1

      bro its not sov order.
      You can do any order you want and even omit some of the parts of sentence, as long as context makes the sentence make sense. if you're making the sentence start and it doesn't make sense without context, just include everything. s, o, v. for example watashi ga tabemono wo tabeta = I ate food
      tabemono wo watashi ga tabeta = I ate food

    • @ky3532
      @ky3532 2 роки тому +2

      @@starpeep5769 the same would be applied to hindi in that contextual sense.
      "Main paani se peeta hain"
      -I drink water.
      "Paani se main peeta hain"
      -Water (is what) I drink.
      Thanks for the suggestion though, it did give me some more of an insight towards Japanese grammar structure for sentence composition, and I'll keep that in mind. This did help in giving me a boost.

    • @starpeep5769
      @starpeep5769 2 роки тому +1

      @@ky3532 also verbs can describe nouns

  • @parparisa
    @parparisa 2 роки тому +28

    I started learning Japanese by myself recently and I was kinda scared to start studying grammar since I'm really struggling with my English grammar but your video gave me the motivation I needed ; ;❤
    and based on your words it seems like Japanese grammar is actually similar to my first language's grammar [which is Farsi btw] and that makes me relieved ^^
    ありがとうございますさやか先生!!とてもたすかりました!!

    • @lydiawang4481
      @lydiawang4481 2 роки тому

      can I ask a question with Japanese katakana and hiragana is there just a couple to remember not like kanji there are so much hiragana and katakana is easy to remember right ?

    • @parparisa
      @parparisa 2 роки тому +1

      @@lydiawang4481 yep. Katakana and hiragana are like two sets of separate ABCDs (they are alphabets) and you can remember them by practicing ^_^

    • @lydiawang4481
      @lydiawang4481 2 роки тому

      @@parparisa okay thank you lol I was worried that there would be a lot to remember what about kanji you just have to know a little right

    • @parparisa
      @parparisa 2 роки тому +1

      @@lydiawang4481 i guess it depends on why you are learning Japanese and how/where you want to use it. If you just wanna be able to speak and write a little, then you only need to memorize the essential ones. But if writing is more import to you, then you should definitely study more kanji.

    • @lydiawang4481
      @lydiawang4481 2 роки тому

      @@parparisa oh ok I get it now thank you

  • @Jamnexec
    @Jamnexec Рік тому +1

    I just started my learning Japanese language journey and am even more excited after watching this video. Thank you Sayaka, I love your enthusiasm!

  • @autumn08.__.
    @autumn08.__. 2 місяці тому

    Today is my Day 1 of learning Japanese. I kept seeing you on instagram and I'm glad you have YT. This was really helpful, thank you!😊

  • @AbuChanOfficial
    @AbuChanOfficial 2 роки тому +34

    I love this. simple, with examples and fun to watch. Looking forward for next videos. BTW : i gotta step up my editing skills lol

    • @NihongoDekita
      @NihongoDekita  2 роки тому +2

      Thanks Abu! Well...editing is really difficult eh!😂 I also have a lot more to learn...

  • @chodeydev
    @chodeydev 2 роки тому +9

    I like how there's 0 dislikes!
    You deserve it...

  • @nightlion606
    @nightlion606 Місяць тому +1

    さやかさん、ありがとございました!❤😮

  • @Jotaro-o
    @Jotaro-o Рік тому

    This gave me hope in learning Japanese again. Ive been struggling a lot and kept questioning myself whether I could learn it and now i feel encouraged to keep going. Thank you.

  • @chubsontv
    @chubsontv 2 роки тому +6

    I am really happy to be able to learn with you from the start. It will help me a lot, thank you! 🙌❤️

  • @andrei-stefanradoi2808
    @andrei-stefanradoi2808 2 роки тому +4

    Thanks so much for the video, it motivated me to continue with my Japanese learning

  • @FactionalSky
    @FactionalSky Рік тому +2

    As a German, Japanese is somehow easy but also difficult. It's easy because so many things that complicate German just don't exist in Japanese or don't need to be considered, and Japanese also simplifies a lot of things related to context, which is relatively rare in German. I can't just leave out the salutation in German just because the person is standing right in front of me. Well I can do that, but it's just wrong because it's not a complete sentence. People will do that sometimes but it's still wrong. But it's also difficult because so many things that are perfectly normal and used all the time in German just don't exist. For me, the main difficulty in Japanese is the symbols, the emphasis on pronunciation, and understanding when to use what and what forms don't exist. However, if you were to use the German phonetic language writing regularly, similar to Japanese, our writing would also be much more complex. From this point of view, Japanese is simpler here, too, because it largely specifies the tones, while German has very little indications in its used alphabet. The informal or formal is relatively easy for me to understand, since in principle it also exists in German, in a fundamentally simpler way ofc. In German, this happens via the salutation, but it is important in a similar way as in Japanese.

  • @user-ze8wg6zm3y
    @user-ze8wg6zm3y 7 місяців тому

    You have an amazing energy 🥰 thank you💛

  • @0Onyx13
    @0Onyx13 Рік тому +6

    Thank you so much, I was getting overwhelmed trying to learn Japanese because duolingo is now introducing kanjis, and I've read someone saying "your first year of learning Japanese you should learn 2000 kanjis" and I think if I learn, as in be able to write them from memory correctly, 3 of them, it would already be a miracle. So I really needed this, and knowing the grammar is so much easier than English, which to me is the easiest language I've learned (my first languages are French and Italian, and a bit of German which I'm trying to re-learn, and damn is it hard, same for Italian but thankfully I grew up to it, but Latin, old Greek, and Finnish, all languages I tried at one point to learn, are so much worse than those 3, so I just abandoned them, cause I also like to learn languages, but not if I feel like I'm going insane!), the kanji thing will still always be an issue but you've reassured me so much! I'm also learning Norwegian at this time, and I'm surprised by how easy it is, yet grammar wise, Japanese seems even easier. The tough part will be when I'll have to learn kanjis and all the various degrees of formality. I imagine that if and when I'll be able to visit Japan, people will give me a pass if I'm being too formal or not enough, and will just appreciate the effort, but I really want to learn it well, sooo... yikes! But for now I'll just focus on learning katakana (hiragana I've already memorised, so that's good) and then we'll see!

  • @Adalannn
    @Adalannn 2 роки тому +6

    It was realy great ! Interesting, clear, natural ! All we want after this is to learn japanese with you !

  • @aca4254
    @aca4254 Рік тому +2

    Your videos have restored my motivation to learn the beautiful language that is japanese! Thank you so much! Also I love the hapiness that comes out of your videos, it's a real pleasure to watch them :)

  • @jameshatch5722
    @jameshatch5722 24 дні тому

    Thank you, for your encouragement. I shall try do my best 🇺🇸🤠

  • @jason007smith
    @jason007smith 2 роки тому +3

    You make learning so enjoyable,
    ありがとう!

  • @MatchdayMarvelz
    @MatchdayMarvelz 2 роки тому +13

    Great content as always teacher 👩🏼‍🏫 💯!

  • @user-cf3og1nj6z
    @user-cf3og1nj6z 3 місяці тому

    Sayaka, thank you for making things easier, you are special.

  • @katsuyaki7605
    @katsuyaki7605 Рік тому

    Thank you. This was extremely informative. A lot of this I'd already picked up, but it was nice to have it confirmed by a native speaker.

  • @Ashley-gs8do
    @Ashley-gs8do 2 роки тому +6

    This video is so helpful! 🤩
    Also on another note, I volunteer as tribute to practice Spanish with you!

  • @Manceroy
    @Manceroy 2 роки тому +16

    Great video! As a native Spanish speaker leaning Japanese I guess we're even when it comes to suffering from learning these languages lol. Looking forward to your next videos! +1 sub :)

  • @DonJohnSpain
    @DonJohnSpain 7 місяців тому

    You are not only gorgeous, you are also very funny. Great sense of humour

  • @williamjayaraj9257
    @williamjayaraj9257 8 місяців тому

    Thank you very much for this guidelines.

  • @levileme8062
    @levileme8062 7 місяців тому

    I watched all of your videos. Hope to see more. Best of luck.

  • @johncowen8798
    @johncowen8798 2 роки тому +52

    さやか様はとても良い先生です、ありがとうございます
    (i started learning Japanese about a year ago but the kanji seemed like some huge overwhelming labyrinth i could never conquer.... however i feel like i've finally broken the back of it, like i can see the light of at the end of the tunnel, thank you so so much for such an inspirational, educational video).
    Wish i could've seen your videos a year ago, then i would've been more inspired to learn Japanese :)
    Good luck with learning Spanish also, you remind me of my sister, she studies Spanish also, i'm sure you'll do great at it, you're so intelligent :D

    • @honey-chanhaninozuka506
      @honey-chanhaninozuka506 2 роки тому +7

      A trick to learn kanji: just learn words written with kanjis. Yes, the meaning, kun and on-yomi are useful, and the stroke order is important, but you shouldn't focus on it as it just gets complicated and will not help you learn Japanese overall. Just learn the words! Start with easy ones, and try to learn them in batches (for example, numbers, time-related (day, month, etc.), etc.). You are going to remember them way more easily, and the more words you learn, the easier it will get because some simple kanjis will be present and help you memorize. And since kanjis are ideograms instead of phonetic characters, it will give you mnemotecnic tricks to remember words.

    • @johncowen8798
      @johncowen8798 2 роки тому +2

      @@honey-chanhaninozuka506 THANK YOU SO MUCH, THIS IS WHAT I REALISED, OF COURSE I'M STILL SO THANKFUL FOR YOUR GREAT ADVICE

    • @honey-chanhaninozuka506
      @honey-chanhaninozuka506 2 роки тому +1

      @@johncowen8798 Are you saying Japanese people told you that? I would be sad if that were the case, but not surprised... tolerance and open-mindedness culture-wise is not known to be their forte. And I would personally say the worst part in translation to Japanese or from Japanese is how omissions are common. When translating to Japanese, you basically have to strip your sentence of many things considered unecessary, eventhough they don't seem that way to you, and from Japanese, you basically have to guess the missing parts.

    • @johncowen8798
      @johncowen8798 2 роки тому

      @@honey-chanhaninozuka506 Definitely not, it was english people who told me that. But I'm so lucky to have made amazing friends from Japan who appreciated my efforts more than the morons from my own douchebag country, I wouldn't even be able to sit here saying I feel like I know I can eventually reach fluency without my amazing Japanese friends, Thank You all so much

    • @honey-chanhaninozuka506
      @honey-chanhaninozuka506 2 роки тому

      @@johncowen8798 You're American I guess? No, wait... a**e instead of a**, I'm thinking British

  • @Maybeeee.itstsukii
    @Maybeeee.itstsukii 2 роки тому +5

    Hi! Here a Spanish girl! Honestly even for me it's difficult, the grammar is really difficult not gonna lie, sometimes i can't talk correctly just because of the grammar but trust me, you can do it!

  • @melonapie1209
    @melonapie1209 8 місяців тому

    I found this video recently and it motivated me to study Japanese! Thank you so much!

  • @mitchelevans4587
    @mitchelevans4587 Рік тому

    This is a great intro to Japanese. Very clear and concise. This video takes some of the overwhelm of starting out the learning process. Thank you!

  • @sanchezcarlos1986
    @sanchezcarlos1986 2 роки тому +3

    00:22 真夜中のドアをたたき 🎵

  • @diaexists969
    @diaexists969 2 роки тому +95

    Aaa you make learning so enjoyable & you’re giving me so much motivation!! Can’t wait to learn more from you >w

  • @jussimas1
    @jussimas1 Місяць тому

    I enjoyed this video! I have a few comments:
    1. Japanese is a pitch accent language. Every word has one of four pitch accents. Sometimes the proper pitch accent is very hard for a non-Japanese speaker to make out; if you really want your Japanese to sound natural when you are an advanced speaker of Japanese, you’re going to have to have ear training so that you know which pitch accent to use. You can take classes in pitch accent, and there are books written about it. It’s not necessary to have proper pitch accents to speak Japanese, though, unless you want to sound natural and native.
    2. Just to clarify: there are definitely ways to express plural: there is a plural marker which you can put on some words (although it’s probably not used much by native speakers, my guess) and you can use counters to express how many of something you are talking about. You can also use words like many, few, and so forth to express plurality. Japanese is a full language, so you can express anything you want to in Japanese, even if you have to express it in a different way than your native language does. (there was some other language feature, she said Japanese doesn’t have; I’m sure this language feature is present in Japanese, but like plural it is just expressed in different ways.)
    3. Japanese has counters. Every time you want to say how much of something there is, you use a different word to designate the set of objects that thing belongs to. This is not unbearably difficult, but it’s another lexical feature of Japanese that you have to memorize.
    4. Japanese verbs are much easier to learn, I agree, than English verbs. But the verbal system is a little more complex then it sounds: there are two major categories of verbs (along with the irregular ones) with different conjugation patterns, and some forms of some verbs are irregular (though these seem to be very common verbs that you learn immediately as a beginner, so they’re not too hard).
    5. There are two types of adjectives, each with their own sets of markers. Again, not too hard, but some thing you have to take time learning in Japanese.
    All this being said, Japanese is a lot of fun to learn. Enjoy!

  • @GordonLee97
    @GordonLee97 5 місяців тому +1

    Your videos are so fun to watch, it's like speaking to a friend rather than listening to a lecture.

  • @JorgePokemonTrainer
    @JorgePokemonTrainer 2 роки тому +55

    Muchas gracias! Mi primer idioma es español y inglés es mi segundo idioma. Espero aprender japonés y he comenzado en la app duolingo. Te deseo mucho éxito al aprender español que eatoy de acuerdo, es dificil aprenderlo y quiero darte las gracias por estos consejos que me han ayudado a mony se que a muchos en el futuro ^^

    • @NihongoDekita
      @NihongoDekita  2 роки тому +31

      Gracias ☺️ Perdón, te entiendo completamente pero todavía no se como responder en español😅

    • @JorgePokemonTrainer
      @JorgePokemonTrainer 2 роки тому +5

      No worries xD it was a fun excercise thanks for the reply! ^^

    • @oscarortega2711
      @oscarortega2711 2 роки тому +2

      Si logras aprender español podrías ampliar tu mercado. Punto para ti.

    • @thursdayeveryday3711
      @thursdayeveryday3711 2 роки тому +1

      Mismo. Pero inglés es mi primer idioma y español es mi segundo idioma.

    • @kirakishoushirobara2898
      @kirakishoushirobara2898 2 роки тому +2

      Una pequeña corrección: se utiliza la conjunción “e” en lugar de “y” cuando la siguiente palabra empieza con “i” o “hi”. En este caso sería “español e inglés”.

  • @shayantanbakshi7256
    @shayantanbakshi7256 2 роки тому +11

    Always wished to learn the Japanese language, thanks to you Sayaka for making it possible, arigatōgozaimashita Sensei ! ❤

  • @williamjayaraj9257
    @williamjayaraj9257 8 місяців тому

    Thank you very much for this guide lines. It is useful.

  • @yenegpo123playz8
    @yenegpo123playz8 Рік тому

    Thank you for giving me motivation! I have been learning Japanese for about a few weeks and I really thank you for telling me this!

  • @nipunabeysinghe1678
    @nipunabeysinghe1678 Рік тому +131

    0:38 Types of Characters.
    2:13 Speech Style.
    2:53 Sentence Structure.
    3:33 Question Sentence.
    4:31 Omitted Nouns.
    5:13 No Singular Plural.
    5:39 No Feminine Masculine.
    6:07 No Noun Verb , Noun adjective Agreements.
    6:53 Verb Tense.
    8:04 Irregular Verbs.

  • @user-tf1sp9vk8z
    @user-tf1sp9vk8z 2 роки тому +44

    As a Taiwanese, it is so wierd to learn Japanese in English, but I like your videos.
    So I think that being a Chinese user, I think it is easier for me to read cause I basically understand all the kanjis' meaning ,and even though I don't know what it means in Japanese I can still infer from the original meaning. This helped a lot in my Japanese learning. I'll keep going~~

    • @arseniix
      @arseniix Рік тому

      Wait, so there's some common meaning behind Kanjis that applicable to Chinese and Japanese?

    • @user-tf1sp9vk8z
      @user-tf1sp9vk8z Рік тому +2

      @@arseniix yes
      for example, 母 means mother in both languages
      but not all kanji means the same
      like 大丈夫
      this means real man in Chinese
      but it means "it's ok" in Japanese

    • @arseniix
      @arseniix Рік тому

      @@user-tf1sp9vk8z oooh, wow. I wonder where all these symbols came from if in both Chinese and Japanese they mean something

    • @user-tf1sp9vk8z
      @user-tf1sp9vk8z Рік тому

      @@arseniix well the two cultures have very close and deep relationship
      Even in Korean there's Chinese symbols, it's just Korean don't use it now

    • @arseniix
      @arseniix Рік тому +1

      @@user-tf1sp9vk8z I always thought that the Japanese, Chinese and Korean cultures are like completely different, even tho they're in close proximity to one another and share somewhat common history. For example, although here in Europe nations lived side by side for our whole history, we all have very different languages here and different cultures.
      However we do share some common words which came from ancient Greek or Latin. Hmmm... maybe this can be compared to kanji in some sense, I guess.
      Also, I do support Taiwan in your wish for independence! I hope everything will be ok in future.

  • @haljordan4825
    @haljordan4825 2 місяці тому

    Sayaka-san is an excellent communicator. Very well presented. Honto ni arigatou.

  • @tw2210
    @tw2210 Рік тому +1

    Great explanation. Subscribed. Best wishes from the UK 🇬🇧🇯🇵

  • @hilalsplacee
    @hilalsplacee 2 роки тому +27

    I am a Turkish and Japanese is very similar to Turkish and that makes me so happy because for two last years I have been learning Spanish and to learn all those masculine feminine words are so boring to me and verb conjugations are harder than Turkish and there are lots of stem changes,irregular verbs,etc. Because of that I really want to learn Japanese.I love your videos

    • @redline2225
      @redline2225 2 роки тому +2

      Yep! I had been learning Turkish for some time and when I started Japanese, I really mentioned it's unexpectedly similar to Turkish.
      As far as I know, Japanese is in same language group with Japanese

    • @hilalsplacee
      @hilalsplacee 2 роки тому +1

      @@redline2225 yeah,they are in the same language group👍

    • @shreddder999
      @shreddder999 2 роки тому +5

      @@redline2225 Yes, indeed- Japanese is in the same language group with Japanese.

    • @TheAerialgreen
      @TheAerialgreen 2 роки тому +1

      It’s really wild how similar Japanese and Turkish are, considering how geographically and culturally apart the two countries are.

    • @midnightsomewhere
      @midnightsomewhere 2 роки тому +2

      @@TheAerialgreen turkic languages originate in far eastern and central eastern asia actually. the turkic are very wide spread and turkey turks is just one of them

  • @mha_kny5885
    @mha_kny5885 2 роки тому +5

    Bruh now I think Japanese would be easier to learn than Spanish 😭 AND NOW THAT I'VE BEEN TRYING TO LEARN HIRAGANA AND KATAKANA IT SEEMS LIKE THAT'S TRUE-

    • @SDL13542
      @SDL13542 25 днів тому

      Trust me Spanish is easy (I’m Spanish so don’t trust me)

    • @cannibaljames7465
      @cannibaljames7465 2 дні тому

      Update?

  • @saraibarahona3826
    @saraibarahona3826 3 місяці тому

    She acts so friendly I love these videos it makes it look easy ❤❤😊 thank you!!

  • @userbutterflyy
    @userbutterflyy 7 місяців тому

    This girl help me understand so much more thank you!

  • @beatricefriso3385
    @beatricefriso3385 2 роки тому +4

    You're smile just made my day!
    Super super useful video, ありがとうさやかさん💓 Out of context but can I ask you a thing? I have this doubt , when we say "4" we can say よん or し. What's the difference? We can use them as we want or there's a rules?? I always had this question 😹😹
    Be ready, I'll ask you so many things in your videos' comments section . I'm so exited to improve my Japanese and by the way I love your teaching methods 💕

  • @halie5910
    @halie5910 2 роки тому +5

    I think the hardest part of learning Japanese is memorizing the 3 literature specially kanji🤣.
    Japanese sentence structure isn't as complex as english. you just half to have more japanese words in your vocabulary.

  • @reanrean5288
    @reanrean5288 7 місяців тому

    It was really helpful ❤

  • @y01cu_yt
    @y01cu_yt 8 місяців тому

    Thanks, it was very informative.

  • @ademirpereirajunior7249
    @ademirpereirajunior7249 2 роки тому +3

    Sensei Sayaka, arigatou! ❤️
    Matana 👋🏻

  • @rzdrafael1490
    @rzdrafael1490 Рік тому +3

    Esse video totalmente recarregou minhas energias, pareceu até fácil aprender esse idioma persistência guerreiros 💪, nos conseguiremos.

    • @kiuute
      @kiuute 11 місяців тому

      Como vai seu progresso?

    • @rzdrafael1490
      @rzdrafael1490 11 місяців тому

      @@kiuute Entrei na faculdade de SI, não deu mais pra estudar ;-;

  • @A3_ra29
    @A3_ra29 6 місяців тому

    As someone who just started learning THIS GAVE ME SO MUCH MOTIVATION AND IT WAS SUPER USEFUL THANKS A LOT

  • @andredebresser1743
    @andredebresser1743 3 місяці тому

    That explanation was brilliant. Thank you so much. ❤️

  • @liltoothless332
    @liltoothless332 2 роки тому +3

    Thanks for this! Learning Japanese as a 3rd language was really tricky because of the way the sentences were formed, nothing like English or Chinese

  • @Akkarri
    @Akkarri 2 роки тому +4

    I think mentioning pronunciatin is also great. In Japanese you always pronounce the letters the same, in syllables. Not like English where you change pronunciation of letter in every different word lol.

  • @vixiliannebrightsun81
    @vixiliannebrightsun81 7 місяців тому

    This was incredibly helpful thank you! You’ve earned a subscriber from me :)

  • @HOLLOWMIND432
    @HOLLOWMIND432 2 роки тому

    Just stumble on one short videos and now i am continuously watching every videos because it's helpful and she is adorable.

  • @zumogerstubchen2340
    @zumogerstubchen2340 2 роки тому +4

    As someone whose native language is german, I love the fact that japanese has such a little amount of irregular verbs and also only two tenses. While my native language has a verb form for every person and...oh wait, we have six tenses. So a verb in german has over 30 versions and a whole lot of irregular verbs.

    • @Cloud-zq3cc
      @Cloud-zq3cc 2 роки тому +1

      We have like 12 articles all depending on the gender of the word, context its used in and the "case/kasus" the sentence is in (Nominativ,dativ,akkusativ,genitiv)
      I would assume german is pretty hard for people whos native language doesn't gender words

    • @hmvollbanane1259
      @hmvollbanane1259 2 роки тому

      And then there are also some dialects like my own (rheinisches Platt) that add even more tenses as we use abundantly progressive forms (which don't exist in High German).
      Ich bin (am) essen.
      Ich war (am) essen.
      Ich werde (am) essen sein.
      ...
      Though in return we only have two Geni in our dialect (masculine and neutrum, so a man is e.g. "d'r Klinzens Jupp" while a woman is e.g. "et Klinzens Kääte")
      (we usually state the family name in its possessive form first, so "der Johannes Klinz" and "die Katharine Klinz" become the before mentioned names)

    • @Cloud-zq3cc
      @Cloud-zq3cc 2 роки тому

      @@hmvollbanane1259 wait....ich bin am essen doesnt exist in hochdeutsch? Dang. I didnt know that. So, that means it basically only exists in NRW or elsewhere too?

    • @hmvollbanane1259
      @hmvollbanane1259 2 роки тому

      @@Cloud-zq3cc it apparently only exists in the south and predominantly west with the rhineland having the highest acceptance for its use. Other regions either don't have any progressive at all or form them differently (e.g. "ich bin beim Essen"/ "im Essen" instead of "ich bin am essen"/ "ich bin essen")

  • @Zhlain
    @Zhlain 2 роки тому +4

    I'm Spanish and struggling to learn Japanese by my own. Both share many things in common, like pronunciation or omitted subjects or questioning with pronunciation. Japanese grammar is a lot simpler than Spanish one, but learning kanji is very confusing. 頑張りましょう!

    • @darianmorat
      @darianmorat 2 роки тому

      I'm also Spanish... Learning English for then to learn Japanese :'3

  • @celadonstudios1345
    @celadonstudios1345 Рік тому

    Wow this is so helpful! Thank you so much for sharing!

  • @DemonIgnis
    @DemonIgnis 2 роки тому

    @NihongoDekita with Sayaka Thank you so much for this video. As a native Spanish speaker and former teacher I know it's not easy. After watching anime for so many years I decided to give it a try and learn Japanese for real. Thank you so much for all these tips. ❤❤❤

  • @vijayvvijayv9978
    @vijayvvijayv9978 2 роки тому +3

    My teacher i never listen to my college than your teaching 😂. arigato ❤️❤️

  • @WesleyWai
    @WesleyWai 2 роки тому +3

    I am learning Japanese as my 4th language, what I think is: although Japanese don't have things like subject-verb agreements, it has much more way way way more complex transformations to remember. 😂😂😂
    For example, "I stop the car" and "The car stop." is using 2 different verb.
    Also, both Chinese and English has pronite forms as a kind of expressions. But in Japanese it is a dimension of grammatical transformations.
    And the story don't sotps here. To my understandings,above the pronite form " 敬体” there is a even more pronite form " 敬語" . And there are a even more pronite form which is specifically is for speaking to the emperor which I think I would never learn that in my life. 😂

  • @moonbeam9142
    @moonbeam9142 2 роки тому

    this was SO helpful! I recently started learning some Japanese in preparation for a trip to Japan and this really helped a lot in trying to understand it better. Thank you so much for these tips ❤😘

  • @wagonr_vs_world
    @wagonr_vs_world Рік тому

    I am just starting to learn Japanese and thought to go through some basic intro. Thank god, I found this. Love the way she makes look learning Japanese so easy.