Watch This Before You Start Learning Japanese 🇯🇵 | 5 Most Common Mistakes Japanese Learners Make
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- Опубліковано 16 тра 2024
- Hey Guys!
I want to share the 5 common mistakes that many people make during their Japanese learning process. Make sure to stay tuned till the end of the video to learn what they are and how to deal with them effectively.
Hope this helps and let me know what you guys want to see next!
- Download link for iOS:
apps.apple.com/vn/app/mochika...
- Download link for Android: play.google.com/store/apps/de...
- Join MochiMochi - Learn Japanese facebook group: / mochimochi.learnkanji
0:00 Intro
0:26 : Mistake 1
2:04 Mistake 2
4:15 Mistake 3
10:35 Mistake 4
11:48 Mistake 5
14:17 Outro
- Download link for iOS: apps.apple.com/vn/app/mochikanji-learn-japanese/id1463353686
- Download link for Android: play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.mochimochi.android.an&hl=en_US&pli=1
- Join MochiMochi - Learn Japanese facebook group: facebook.com/groups/mochimochi.learnkanji
thank you
Thank youu
tks a lot
thanks for sharing
thank you
Hi King Han! Thank you so much for a nice review of the MochiKanji app. MochiMochi wishes you and your channel more success with the insightful content you bring to your audience.
love this app
Great video as usual! Thank you King Han❤️
I never thought about how an accent may be perceived in a professional setting. Great insight
Good to see you over here again Katie! Yeah its something I realized in my "deep thinking meditation sessions" lol. but its true, the way you look, speak, and present yourself are the first thing people judge you based off of.
Thanks for the support as always!
thanks for the useful video. it's handy and the mochi app is really nice. I've downloaded it already.
love this video, so useful ❤
Shadowing technique does really wonders. If you struggle with pronunciation, try this method
Always great insight from king Han!
Thanks for the support as always!!❤️🙏🏾
MochiKanji is actually helpful for context-based learning
the app you recommended is great. I've tried this and I love its kanji writing exercises the most
Glad you think so!
thanks
that was helpful
Glad you thought so!
I agree, 😃 not immersing enough is bad!
Definitely!
great video as always!
appreciate that my guy!
As someone just starting out with Japanese, this video is incredibly helpful. Thank you for the tips
Glad you found it helpful! Best of luck 🙏🏾
Romaji can only take you so far. Dive into kana early on to avoid pronunciation pitfalls later
100% agree with this
i love Mochi, before going to bed, I always learn a lesson on it ^^
Glad you like it!
writing practice feature on the mochikanji app is actually hands-on. Love much!!!
Great to hear!
Great video with detailed sharring 🤩
Thanks for watching!
Your learning Japanese content is fantastic. I've spent more time watching "How to Learn Japanese" vids than actually learning Japanese (that's gotta stop) and your approach is really fresh and spot on. It's unique. Don't stop. Thanks!
Hey thanks so much for the comment and your support! I’ve definitely been in that phase of watching every “how to learn” video before actually learning lol.
Best thing is to just jump in and get started. Best of luck!
King Han always drops bangers
ayyyy appreciate the support as always🔥🔥
always happy to see you over here!
Kanji has always intimidated me🥺
yeah its usually the most intimidating part but hopefully this video and the other videos on may channel help!
Skill Issue
I'm just commenting to help the algorithm for you, i'm fluent and totally agree with all your points🔥 nice video
Thanks so much😆
有益なビデオをありがとう
見てくれてありがとう!
Hi, more videos like this. So cool
Thanks!
The division of content in MochiKanji into different categories and JLPT levels is convenient. It makes learning kanji more manageable.
I agree :)
I never realized how crucial pronunciation is until watching this video because I think I speak and others understand, that's enough.
yeah definitely! its a long journey but an important one.
I am against using ANKI or any kind of flashcards.
There are many disadvantages with flashcards:
1. They are time-consuming. It may take a long time just to write them. Then you have to read and keep repeating until you get the answers correctly. That can also take a long time.
2. They are boring, tedious, you may lose motivation.
3. They take the words out of context. It is much harder to memorize and understand them. Flashcards are completely inefficient compared to just reading.
4. The fact that you can answer all flashcards correctly doesn't mean you have learned the subject.
Why not just read a book? In the same time you create and read flashcards you could just read a book. In one hour you can read several pages of a book. In the same hour how many flashcards can you write (and read)? Flashcards are much more time-consuming than just reading. Or, if you are studying something like Physics or Mathematics, you should just solve a bunch of exercises from a textbook. Most textbooks have plenty of exercises for you to practice. All you have to do is solve them. The book author already prepared all the exercises for you, you don't need to write them, unlike flashcards.
If you are learning a foreign language you should read as much as possible. Reading is the best way to acquire vocabulary. You consult the dictionary for the words necessary to understand the text.
Reading is much more fun, entertaining, engaging and pleasant than using flashcards. By reading you always see the words in context.
In the case of JLPT (Japanese Language Proficiency Test) you should buy specific books for it. There are books on sale that specifically help you for the test, offering a bunch of exercises similar to the JLPT questions. It is a much more efficient way to study than flashcards created by someone you don't know. Even if you nailed all the ANKI flashcards, there is no way to know if the flashcards are actually related to the JLPT. Textbooks on the other hand will base their exercises on the actual questions that appear in the exam.
I have been studying Swedish for 3 years now mostly by translating song lyrics. I have translated almost 500 songs. I listen to the songs while reading the lyrics, I get vocabulary and pronunciation at the same time. It is a lot of fun and pleasant, I never get bored. I don't worry about memorization, I only care about understanding the lyrics. In the beginning I was barely translating one song in one hour. Now I can translate more than 8 songs in one hour. And I never study more than one hour per day.
Politeness levels matter more than I think in Japanese. It's not just about what I say, but how I say it
100%
mochikanji has recently added some new features, is that right?
Yep!
Is it necessary to learn to write the hiragana and Katakana symbols?
If your talking writing with pen and paper, then nah. Unless you see yourself studying abroad/working in japan, than nah not really.
Your should know how to type them on a keyboard though.
@@kinghan26 What about Kanji? I’m 4 months into my journey. I know hiragana and katakana, and I am in lesson 4 of Genki 1. Some say that it is too early for me to delve into Kanji at this time…just concentrate on grammar, vocabulary, etc. What do you think?
@@johnnacke4134 I personally don't see anything wrong with getting an early feel for kanji. I would say start learning them as soon as you feel ready, the earlier the better.
I go more in detail in the kanji section in my "How to learn Japanese video", but basically I would recommend learning them through Anki and through mnemonic devices.
Best of luck!!
Love your videos but this one sounds like a ad for mochi There are many good free apps to learn kanji. You have video that gives many free tools it is my favorite video
Appreciate the feedback. Will definitely take this into account going forward 🙏🏾
i mean i'd say you shouldn't learn kanji in isolation, that sounds like a horrible grind as theres nothing to really grasp onto, only as part of vocab, but yes 100% use spaced repition (with anki) and one deck you build from reading native content (using yomichan and ankiconnect) e.g. anime and have the picture be the scene it took it from, and pop the sentence in there too. using a pneumonic is slow as you want to be able to just look at it and instantly know within 1-3 seconds what it is and thats what spaced repition is good for (if you use spaced repition and spend more than 5- and maaax 10 seconds on a card, you're doing it wrong) learning each of the on and kun readings is just a lot of work so 100% do not do that, you can work out the on and kun readings of a kanji easily if you know words that use that kanji, and what on and kun actually refers to. anki anki anki, immersion immersion, immersion. dictionaries and grammar guide (cure dolly). all you need.
100% agree with everything you just mentioned. This in a nutshell is how I did it
Mochi kangi is expensive anki is free
I've been relying too much on romaji. Time to ditch it and focus on mastering hiragana and katakana.
Yea it’ll only take you so far. Best of luck on your language learning journey!
Pronounce, not pronounciate. Sorry, I'm an English teacher. Thanks for the great advice!
Thanks for catching that! I gotta relearn my native language before I start moving on to others lol.
So, I have to study kanji to understand the spoken language? Really dude? No thank you.
Lol
Kanji is a skill issue
Who the fuck only learns with romaji seeing that gives me major headaches
Lmaoo that’s exactly what I thought until I met someone who really thought they could get away without learning the kana…