Is It Hard to Learn Japanese?

Japanese can take longer to learn than some European languages, but it isn’t inherently difficult. In fact, I found Japanese to be a forgiving language, one where it’s harder to make mistakes.
How hard it is to learn different languages according to The American Foreign Service Institute:
blog.thelinguist.com/how-long...
0:00 - The most important thing to have when learning Japanese.
1:50 - What makes Japanese easier to learn than other languages?
3:38 - Learning the Japanese writing system.
6:15 - What are the difficulties of learning the Japanese language?
7:49 - The formalities of the Japanese language.
10:19 - How I learned Japanese particles.
12:35 - Some books I bought in Japanese.
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#languages #learnjapanese #polyglot

Пікірлер: 737

  • @Thelinguist
    @Thelinguist3 жыл бұрын

    Japanese is best learned by getting used to the language, rather than trying to master grammar. I don’t know any Japanese grammatical rules. I’ve just grown more and more comfortable in the language over time. --- FREE Language Learning Resources 10 Secrets of Language Learning ⇢ www.thelinguist.com LingQ Grammar Guides ⇢ www.lingq.com/en/grammar-resource/ My blog ⇢ blog.thelinguist.com/ The LingQ blog ⇢ www.lingq.com/blog/ My Podcast ⇢ soundcloud.com/lingosteve podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/learn-languages-with-steve-kaufmann/id1437851870 --- Social Media Instagram ⇢ instagram.com/lingosteve_/ TikTok ⇢ www.tiktok.com/@lingosteve Facebook ⇢ facebook.com/lingosteve Twitter ⇢ twitter.com/lingosteve LingQ Discord ⇢ discord.gg/ShPTjyhwTN

  • @jefforymitchell5697

    @jefforymitchell5697

    3 жыл бұрын

    I discovered this recently out of sheer frustration. After months of not making progress and forgetting things I had learned, I set every electronic device I own to Japanese. Now I have no choice but to practice and reinforce, and I've learned more in 2 weeks than I did in a few months. Getting used to the language makes it so much easier to learn and so much less intimidating.

  • @koshobai

    @koshobai

    3 жыл бұрын

    I understand this perspective, and would recommend using the problem-solving approach. Scenario-based learning is key here, as well as the gumption to allow yourself to be misunderstood. Subjects and plurality and gender take a backseat in this language, and the verb is king. Collocations are your best friend. There are no true synonyms. Everything you know about referring to phenomena in the world and general concepts goes out the window. Passive voice is loved and used often with their contingent transitive verbs-intransitive verbs, which can't be used as root verbs in passive sentences, are often used when you might not expect it. Particles will throw you for a loop, and some are used only for contrast. Postpositions replace what most are used to: prepositions. Kanji reinforce understanding, and foreign loan word pronunciation is inconsistent. There's a lot to digest when it comes to Japanese.

  • @motorcitysoul3852

    @motorcitysoul3852

    3 жыл бұрын

    omg you look younger abd younger!!!

  • @christopherluke9658

    @christopherluke9658

    3 жыл бұрын

    I certainly believe you don't.

  • @originalm3233

    @originalm3233

    3 жыл бұрын

    @Steve *I thought you were paid by the Canadian government to learn Japanese to help a diplomat?*

  • @user-zi7bh8uk8c
    @user-zi7bh8uk8c3 жыл бұрын

    As a Japanese, I always get amazed by those who are learning our language despite the fact that it’s not used outside Japan. So, their motivation comes mostly from their pure interest in the language or our culture, which I’m proud of. Edit: Thank you for your comments! I’ve read all of them.

  • @Daviddant100

    @Daviddant100

    3 жыл бұрын

    there are a lot of weebs out there

  • @CharloslivroStudio

    @CharloslivroStudio

    3 жыл бұрын

    Almost all the content I watch is Japanese... I think I need to learn it. But yeah japanese is much simpler than my native language, French. English was simpler to learn , almost 30% of the vocab is just straight up french. But yeah one day at a time. I'm a big fan of the trails series. And yeah the translations are often butched and their released is so distant from the original release.. i want to play them as they release x.x.

  • @SliceGames

    @SliceGames

    3 жыл бұрын

    From Spain, I have always wanted to learn your language because it sounds beautiful. Also, many people love Japanese content and they want to learn it because pretty much all their free time is consumed watching things in Japanese.

  • @justanothergamer7918

    @justanothergamer7918

    3 жыл бұрын

    Bruh I got stuck with a boring ass language. Idk what other countries think of English but I think it’s boring af. I wanted to learn Japanese because it sounds cool. (Note) of course I think the language is boring because of it being my native tongue. Part of the was meant to be a joke. It’s hard to convey that over text. I don’t hate my language. I personally don’t want to be stuck with one which drives me to learn more and have fun with it. Sorry if I offended. Not the intention.

  • @kw7721

    @kw7721

    3 жыл бұрын

    or anime

  • @freehongkong8732
    @freehongkong87323 жыл бұрын

    Steve is like a minecraft enchantment table. The more books this man has around him the higher his power levels.

  • @oicaua7258

    @oicaua7258

    3 жыл бұрын

    And his name is literally STEVE

  • @christopherluke9658

    @christopherluke9658

    3 жыл бұрын

    He needs 3 more block currently.

  • @mysha.a

    @mysha.a

    3 жыл бұрын

    Omg 🤣🤣

  • @sleepsmartsmashstress740

    @sleepsmartsmashstress740

    3 жыл бұрын

    Steve is an authentic linguistic legend.

  • @holyshades6462

    @holyshades6462

    3 жыл бұрын

    Also the music in the background is giving off minecraft vibes.

  • @TheSuperUltraGiraffe
    @TheSuperUltraGiraffe3 жыл бұрын

    I’m sorry but are we gonna ignore those glasses? Wow. Incredible.

  • @austin8762

    @austin8762

    3 жыл бұрын

    Only people with glasses will notice

  • @ivanberdichevsky5679

    @ivanberdichevsky5679

    3 жыл бұрын

    No... those glasses cannot be ignored...

  • @michaels3003

    @michaels3003

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@austin8762 , so all people without glasses cannot see properly?

  • @Stephan5916

    @Stephan5916

    2 жыл бұрын

    Yeah I was thinking the same thing.

  • @dycedargselderbrother5353

    @dycedargselderbrother5353

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@michaels3003 Yes, because they do not have glasses. QED.

  • @4orinrin
    @4orinrin3 жыл бұрын

    "Katakana isn't too common" Me: *laughs in game menus being 50% Katakana English*

  • @Fun-rf9vs

    @Fun-rf9vs

    3 жыл бұрын

    How long have you been learning Japanese?

  • @4orinrin

    @4orinrin

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@Fun-rf9vs I technically started maybe 2-3 years ago, but one of those years was wasted on Duolingo (although it did teach me Hiragana and Katakana really slowly so the kana systems are almost second nature to me now), the other year I didn't do much Japanese, and around the start of the third year, I found the immersion approach from Matt vs Japan (check out refold.la) so I've been using that for maybe 6-7 months and comprehend about half of Japanese speech

  • @nopale6565

    @nopale6565

    3 жыл бұрын

    I think its because of the era. He didn't find katakana common in the 70s. Nowadays u can slip katakana if u don't know the kanji for it,日本人 most likely will understand

  • @4orinrin

    @4orinrin

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@nopale6565 Yeah I didn't consider when he actually started learning, and yeah I noticed that the kanji not on the Jouyou kanji list are written with katakana (ウサギ、タコ、etc) as well as common words (バカ instead of 馬鹿)

  • @Real_Genji

    @Real_Genji

    3 жыл бұрын

    Twitter and games are literally like all katakana, the rest is kanji. There's like only a few hiragana for particles

  • @csroad2192
    @csroad21923 жыл бұрын

    I’m Japanese and I’m leaning English now But your English is easy to understand for me so I watched this video hahaha

  • @user-qj6kw4zq3r
    @user-qj6kw4zq3r3 жыл бұрын

    Thank you all for learning Japanese and the culture. Love from Japan. I'm learning English now hope I can be fluent as I am in English.

  • @giannilyanicks1718

    @giannilyanicks1718

    Жыл бұрын

    your language is a torture.

  • @maegalroammis6020

    @maegalroammis6020

    Жыл бұрын

    few would be like him in japân

  • @sinistarz0253

    @sinistarz0253

    5 ай бұрын

    英語の勉強を頑張ってください!

  • @OngoingDiscovery
    @OngoingDiscovery3 жыл бұрын

    The easiest thing about learning Japanese is that there is so much high quality media to consume and immerse in. Books, manga, films, music etc. Whatever you're into, you can likely spend your whole day in Japanese for years and never run out of interesting content to immerse in. Given how important input is in acquiring language, this is a massive advantage for Japanese learners over learners of languages with less developed entertainment industries surrpunding them.

  • @gordonbgraham

    @gordonbgraham

    2 жыл бұрын

    I've lived in Japan for 30 years. It honestly took me a few months to be functional, 10 years to be fully fluent and 15 to become literate. Japanese is extremely difficult 非常に難しい

  • @gordonbgraham

    @gordonbgraham

    Жыл бұрын

    @@giannilyanicks1718 Japanese in anime maybe spoken differently, but the Japanese in movies provides various examples of spoken Japanese including the standard Tokyo dialect. Also, one can find plenty of material online in terms of KZread videos in which Japanese discuss a variety of topics besides language learning. The OP is correct in saying there is so much available online that one could literally immerse themselves in Japanese 24/7.

  • @gordonbgraham

    @gordonbgraham

    Жыл бұрын

    @@giannilyanicks1718 How is your Japanese? Perhaps you could post a video so we could see if you are proficient enough to discern whether or not Japanese spoken in movies, dramas etc. is "spoken differently". I mean, sure, voice overs in animation are exaggerated and over the top, but there are plenty of family dramas, talk shows etc. in which Japanese speak standard Japanese.

  • @gordonbgraham

    @gordonbgraham

    Жыл бұрын

    @@giannilyanicks1718 stop using my name in your posts and stop slandering Japanese people and I will stop responding to your piffle. Clearly, you are not fluent in Japanese, so you are not one to inform learners of Japanese what is and what isn't natural Japanese. You have a history of saying awful things about Japanese people and you know it. I'm sure the KZread moderators can search the history you've tried to scrub by using your various aliases, so please go ahead and report anything you like to KZread moderators. I'm sure they will be interested in your history of abuse and slander as I'm certain they can access your deleted accounts' content through their technology. I'm confident mine contains no abusive nor slanderous content.

  • @gordonbgraham

    @gordonbgraham

    Жыл бұрын

    @@maegalroammis6020 Giannil Yanicks and Maegal Roammis are the same person using different accounts to spam any Japanese content with hate and slander.

  • @Goichi-Ichigo
    @Goichi-Ichigo3 жыл бұрын

    日本人です。 コメント欄見て、日本語学びたい人がこんなに多いんだと知ってなんかちょっと感動してる

  • @Im-BAD-at-satire

    @Im-BAD-at-satire

    2 жыл бұрын

    あたしではあるアメリカ人ですよ。かっこいい言語にかける、日本語天才的な言語だって賢いつくね。

  • @StarlitGlitch
    @StarlitGlitch3 жыл бұрын

    I’m fluent in Japanese and live in Japan now and I definitely agree that it’s not as scary as it seems! Especially grammar-wise there’s plenty of European languages that seem much trickier to me. It takes getting used to at first though

  • @sashuo5961

    @sashuo5961

    3 жыл бұрын

    how long have you been learning Japanese?

  • @TwitchCronos100

    @TwitchCronos100

    3 жыл бұрын

    True, and if you take away kanji the language becomes soooo much easier.

  • @angelgcp1282

    @angelgcp1282

    3 жыл бұрын

    You are living what i aspire to do, i will become fleunt some day! How long did it take you?

  • @StarlitGlitch

    @StarlitGlitch

    3 жыл бұрын

    It’s hard to say how many years it took me because it wasn’t always consistent. I didn’t rush though. I’d say language comes down more so to hours you’ve just in than months or whatever spent on it. And I love kanji! I feel like I’m able to get the meaning faster because I can understand what it means from a quick glance before reading it out loud in my head. It also makes understanding and remembering new vocab faster once you’re used to it (you can guess the meaning for a lot of kanji words you’ve never seen before) I’ve dabbled in Mandarin and Korean and I have a much faster time picking up Mandarin vocab because I can associate the words with the characters instead of just a sound

  • @sleepsmartsmashstress740

    @sleepsmartsmashstress740

    3 жыл бұрын

    not as scary esp if you know Chinese & Korean

  • @Elkarus
    @Elkarus3 жыл бұрын

    Learning Japanese it was shocking how easy and hard is at the same time.

  • @pasqualelandolfo3732

    @pasqualelandolfo3732

    3 жыл бұрын

    i agree, the language by itself isn't that hard, but the process of learning it is really tough with a lot of highs and lows

  • @amanofnoreputation2164

    @amanofnoreputation2164

    3 жыл бұрын

    It's not hard, there's just a great deal of it.

  • @KathyakaNina

    @KathyakaNina

    2 жыл бұрын

    I agree too!

  • @justaotter2085

    @justaotter2085

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@pasqualelandolfo3732 it's a journey right

  • @giannilyanicks1718

    @giannilyanicks1718

    Жыл бұрын

    im confused

  • @KochijaLanguageDiary
    @KochijaLanguageDiary3 жыл бұрын

    Is it hard? Yes Is it worth it? Yes

  • @4orinrin

    @4orinrin

    3 жыл бұрын

    Hell yeah it is

  • @giannilyanicks1718

    @giannilyanicks1718

    Жыл бұрын

    no it shouldn't

  • @ryancadima
    @ryancadima3 жыл бұрын

    I got to get some of those Steve Kaufmann magnetic reading glasses to raise my language learning skills

  • @qwertyuiop-hw2sz

    @qwertyuiop-hw2sz

    3 жыл бұрын

    Same here ahahaha

  • @azhivago2296

    @azhivago2296

    3 жыл бұрын

    The glasses of someone who has given up on sex.

  • @glossarian7778

    @glossarian7778

    3 жыл бұрын

    +10 Language Acquisition

  • @sleepsmartsmashstress740

    @sleepsmartsmashstress740

    3 жыл бұрын

    magnetic reading glasses raise IQ as well

  • @michaels3003

    @michaels3003

    3 жыл бұрын

    I thought he was showing off a magic trick: "look! I can break my eye glasses, then undo that like it never happened."

  • @mrtsiqsin2290
    @mrtsiqsin22903 жыл бұрын

    2:18 Wow ... your glasses are like an invention of the next century!!!

  • @surr3al305

    @surr3al305

    3 жыл бұрын

    I had to do a double take and rewind to confirm that he just did that

  • @KeithTKO

    @KeithTKO

    3 жыл бұрын

    I tried one on but my head was too big and didn’t fit lol

  • @gretsch_man1525
    @gretsch_man15253 жыл бұрын

    I've been living in Japan for almost 30 years now, so I can handle myself when it comes to Japanese. Your explanations about Japanese are spot on. I would recommend to anyone who really wants to learn the language to spend at least some time in Japan. I would also STRONGLY recommend to learn Kanji. Most foreigners I've met haven't really mastered Kanji and it just shows during conversations. Trying to memorize Kanji words (as opposed to Hiragana/Katakana words) is much more difficult if you don't understanding the Kanji. For example, lets take the word 高熱 (Kōnetsu). 高 (Kō) means high, 熱 (netsu) means fever. Combined it becomes "high fever". So if you already know the Kanji 高 (Kō) and 熱(netsu), memorizing 高熱 is simple.

  • @illusainte

    @illusainte

    2 жыл бұрын

    thanks

  • @gordonbgraham

    @gordonbgraham

    2 жыл бұрын

    I've lived in Japan since 1988. It took me 10 years to be fully fluent and 15 to become literate. Japanese is incredibly hard.

  • @santaclaus804

    @santaclaus804

    Жыл бұрын

    i hear all the time about foreigners who dont wanna learn kanji but i never met one myself 🤔

  • @giannilyanicks1718

    @giannilyanicks1718

    Жыл бұрын

    the foreigners number in japan is going to diminish if billion of people could saw and understand your comment .

  • @falco830

    @falco830

    11 ай бұрын

    Yeah but say it like this, この火の気温が高いと火炎は熱いですよ (This fire's temperature is high, and the flames are hot!) and now 高い(is now takai) and 熱い(is now atsui) change the way they're read and sometimes what they mean... So what you just taught there only applies to specific context, which is why lots of people stop learning Kanji because it highly relies on reading and conversational experience. Which most people don't have access to unless they're living in Japan.

  • @maplelatte3864
    @maplelatte38643 жыл бұрын

    I’m Japanese but if I was not born as Japanese, I would never feel like learning Japanese cause damn it’s even hard for native Japanese speakers lmao

  • @Blade2323B

    @Blade2323B

    3 жыл бұрын

    ねえ、日本語を教えて下さい!! 代わりに英語とアラビア語を教えてあげます~

  • @v3getar1ancarr0t5

    @v3getar1ancarr0t5

    3 жыл бұрын

    Out of curiosity, which part of the language is hard?

  • @maplelatte3864

    @maplelatte3864

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@Blade2323B アラビア語興味あります〜!アラビア語全くわかりませんが、キーボードにも入れてます。特に発音が難しい印象です。 Hi! I’m kinda interested in Arabic! I don’t know about it at all but I even have an Arabic keyboard on my phone haha I think its pronunciation is especially difficult.

  • @maplelatte3864

    @maplelatte3864

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@v3getar1ancarr0t5 It’s kinda hard to tell but I think the variation and flexibility Japanese language has make speaking difficult even for Japanese native speakers. Oh and also Keigo(honorific and humble forms) is a big obstacle for native speakers too.

  • @jezzmaninjapan

    @jezzmaninjapan

    3 жыл бұрын

    There's this saying: Roses are red Violets are blue There's always an asian kid Better than you I think there's some truth to that. You have to be a pretty smart kid to learn all those kanji! I'm guessing there are Japanese people with dyslexia as well, right? That HAS to suck, I'd imagine.

  • @user-fh3xg8bs7c
    @user-fh3xg8bs7c3 жыл бұрын

    I'm a Chinese, and I'm learning Japanese. I think Chinese is more similar with English in structure than Japanese, even though they seem totally different from each other, while Chinese and Japanese kanji look the same. Japanese tend to put the most important part into the end of a sentence, usually predicates, as well as add many structures into a simple sentance which seem kind of meaningless and made the sentences super long compared to their original forms, just to express their emotion, to adjust to a certain environment. Maybe it's more important for a Japanese to read the atmosphere, it's kind of difficult for me but, actually I like it, which allows me to express my emotion in a precise way. "爱" and ''愛", both "love" in Simplified Chinese and Japanese, the difference is that we don't have "心", "heart", in it. Simplified Chinese is more efficient, not just in kanji. We have simplified kanji and shorter verbs, but we speak even longer sentences with overwhelming amount of information than Japanese and Traditional Chinese, which is used in taiwan. In fact, people in taiwan often have trouble understanding mainland movies without subtitles just because we speak too fast and too complex. It does efficient, but we just only stand on our OWN position, no attention to OTHERS side, which made simplified Chinese relatively harder to understand and less emotion, heartless, in other word. Of course, I didn't realize it before knowing Japanese, I think it's the charm of linguistics.

  • @giannilyanicks1718

    @giannilyanicks1718

    Жыл бұрын

    what a torture.

  • @jezzmaninjapan
    @jezzmaninjapan3 жыл бұрын

    I'm studying Japanese at university right now and in first semester we learn (mainly): 1) Desu/~masu 2) Adjectives & want 3) Iru/aru 4) ~Te-form and variations 5) Non polite and variations And that's not even counting the small stuff like numbers/counters/telling time + all the exceptions (telling the day of the month sucks) ; using genkoyoushi ; writing e-mails ; learning bodyparts & expressions for feeling sick ; ~Teiru ; ~Tari ~tari ; Verbs of giving/receiving ; nominalization ; etc... But to get to the point, changing registers (Polite/Non polite) mid-way in conversations is definitely as you say "a clanger" for Japanese people. At least for people you don't know very well. So you might think "fine, I'll just use ~masu all the time". Problem is that in a lot of structures you HAVE to use non polite. From there on out, everything can become a lot more confusing. You'll be saying half you sentence in non-polite and then end with the polite register. Oh and don't get me started on particles... They can get really confusing later down the line. Maybe it will click faster for some people though. Anyways, to everyone that read this: have a great day or great sleep!

  • @green6782

    @green6782

    3 жыл бұрын

    I'm Japanese and I'm very happy that you are learning Japanese. I really respect you.

  • @jezzmaninjapan

    @jezzmaninjapan

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@green6782 Thank you for the kind words. :) I hope I can visit Japan soon!

  • @giannilyanicks1718

    @giannilyanicks1718

    Жыл бұрын

    @@green6782 of course you only respect the foreign people who speak it fluently.

  • @2u29wjiowk2iswj

    @2u29wjiowk2iswj

    6 ай бұрын

    @@green6782 I'm not learning Japanese because the culture or the anime or things like that. The language itself sounds extremely beautiful thats why :]

  • @TheAlanFFM
    @TheAlanFFM3 жыл бұрын

    I use to think it was so silly that I had to learn hiragana and katakana until someone pointed out that we also use two writing systems in English. We don't think about capital letters as a seperate script, but to a foreign speaker, learning the capital Latin script is akin to learning a completely new set of letters.

  • @4orinrin

    @4orinrin

    3 жыл бұрын

    Even more similar how there are quite a few similar Katakana and Hiragana

  • @amadeusferro
    @amadeusferro3 жыл бұрын

    I'm brazilian 16 years old boy. I became semi-fluent in japanese, studying 6 hours all day in 1 year. Now I can understand 80% a hard anime, and I tricked a japanese native girl, speeking for 1 hour, she thought who I'm a japanese. Edit. Using anki, and starting with brazilians youtube chanels, after english blogs, and now I learn japanese in japanese.

  • @letod2675

    @letod2675

    3 жыл бұрын

    brabo

  • @ZipfelmannKD

    @ZipfelmannKD

    3 жыл бұрын

    that's impressive, especially at that age while most kids just wanna play videogames all day :D

  • @amadeusferro

    @amadeusferro

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@ZipfelmannKD I liked to play games, buy my PC was very old, so I like so much anime and japanese culture, since I was kid, because this I started learn japanese. I find a very good youtube channel in portuguese who teaches japanese. Fortunately them teaches like Steve said, I learned how to learn a language with them, so I saw all the videos. I always have a good understanding leavel in english because games and school, so I start to learn english, watch poliglots videos like Steve, linguistics videos, at the same time studying Japanese to this day. My hobbies is study (japanese, english, korean, russian, mathematics, phisics, chemistry, bilogy, philosophy, japanese culture, programing, chees, linguistics), I also like watch animes, play chees, do karate, play basket. Sorry for my writing errors, I almost never write in English.

  • @amadeusferro

    @amadeusferro

    3 жыл бұрын

    @Zach Schullian Good man, learn languages with culture we like is very in fun.

  • @elianmariano

    @elianmariano

    3 жыл бұрын

    No começo, como vc acompanhava conteúdos em japonês conhecendo poucos kanjis por exemplo? Digo isso, pois pra mim está sendo um pouco assim porque eu só sei o hiragana, katakana e alguns kanjis, então ainda é um pouco difícil para acompanhar conteúdos com áudio por exemplo. Gostaria de saber como vc saiu dessa fase para conseguir assistir conteúdos como animes, pelo menos com legenda em japonês?

  • @LymonAdd
    @LymonAdd3 жыл бұрын

    I agree that Japanese is very flexible and forgiving: after year and a half of Japanese classes I can say much more complicated sentences than after a year of German classes, but German vocabulary of course is much easier to acquire and memorize (I’m Ukrainian)

  • @MuhammadAli-jd2ut

    @MuhammadAli-jd2ut

    2 жыл бұрын

    Love to Ukraine from Pakistan . ❤🌹

  • @2u29wjiowk2iswj

    @2u29wjiowk2iswj

    6 ай бұрын

    @@MuhammadAli-jd2ut damn

  • @digitalwillis9594
    @digitalwillis95943 жыл бұрын

    awesome. im always mesmerized by the book shelf. someday ill have that many books 😁

  • @David-zp5uh
    @David-zp5uh3 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for the info Steve! I'm about to start learning Japanese so this was really helpful

  • @KathyakaNina
    @KathyakaNina2 жыл бұрын

    Teach us your ways スチブー先生! Love the video as someone whose been doing self study on this language for about 2 years

  • @JibAtTheFence
    @JibAtTheFence3 жыл бұрын

    Thanks, Steve! I think you have said before also that the difficulty of a language also depends heavily on how much interesting content we can find. I think I remember you saying you struggled with Korean because of this reason, despite it being similar to Japanese grammatically.

  • @jebaseball1
    @jebaseball13 жыл бұрын

    Currently living, working and studying Japanese in Japan. This is really helpful information for a struggling student!

  • @mariotaz
    @mariotaz3 жыл бұрын

    The way you snapped those glasses together was so cool! haha

  • @aleksasarai8658
    @aleksasarai86583 жыл бұрын

    3:41 -- Serbian has two writing systems in common use (latin and cyrillic). Their usage isn't interspersed in every sentence as kana and kanji are in Japanese, but they are both very commonly used.

  • @alexeltroll
    @alexeltroll3 жыл бұрын

    I love your videos Mr Kaufman you are a huge inspiration

  • @jessebrettjames
    @jessebrettjames2 жыл бұрын

    As always an excellent, informative, and motivating presentation. Concerning the three forms of Japanese script - a samll note of interest. The Georgian scripts are the three writing systems used to write the Georgian language: Asomtavruli, Nuskhuri and Mkhedruli. Although the systems differ in appearance, their letters share the same names and alphabetical order and are written horizontally from left to right. Additionally Arabic the letters, as you may or may not know are modified according to their position in a word or sentence, thus giving isolated, initial, medial and finial

  • @David-hw7js
    @David-hw7js3 жыл бұрын

    Thanks Steve, interesting discussion. I have a long history with Japanese, but let's say I've been studying it seriously (and consistently) for 3 years now. I still find it a very difficult language. I'd guess that I'm at a B1 level. I think one of the biggest problems for me is that I don't live in Japan, so I'm not immersed in the language. In the last 3 years, I've only been able to spend a total of 4 weeks in Japan. I love the language and generally my motivation is high, I try to read and listen every day. And the fact that it's difficult makes progress that much more satisfying. I think the basic grammar is easy enough, like you said. But now that I'm at an intermediate level, I'm trying to interact with more native content. It amazes me sometimes, reading a news site for example, that I can in theory know every word in a sentence, but I can read the sentence 5 times and not understand what message is trying to be conveyed. I've been using Wanikani for the last year and a half and I can read around 2000 kanji now, so my next goal is to move from kanji learning to kanji immersion (more reading). But the way complex sentences are built in Japanese is just so different than English (my native language), I'd say objectively Japanese is a difficult language to learn for English natives. One last thought, I started learning French a few months ago. I know progress in the early stages of language learning is always more noticeable, but wow, what a reminder it was for me the difference between learning a Romance language and an Oriental one! In any case it's definitely true that the more similar the language is to your own, the quicker you'll be able to pick it up. Thanks as always for your advice and giving us all motivation, Steve! Sorry for the long post but it's a relevant video for me and stirred some thoughts :)

  • @Eric-le3uu
    @Eric-le3uu3 жыл бұрын

    Using LingQ for 2 years. Reading news, blogs, novels, all in Japanese. Also, watching a lot of KZread channels and listening to podcasts. Up to 12K words now.

  • @ugur76

    @ugur76

    3 жыл бұрын

    super did you study before?

  • @asukaakusawang2511

    @asukaakusawang2511

    3 жыл бұрын

    tsuyoi

  • @Eric-le3uu

    @Eric-le3uu

    3 жыл бұрын

    @ニール 本とか諸説とか記事とか読んでいる。SNSあまり好きじゃない。

  • @Eric-le3uu

    @Eric-le3uu

    3 жыл бұрын

    Personally, I enjoy the fact that I can build my own custom library within LingQ. The new updates will improve the experience. Looking forward to 5.0!

  • @Eric-le3uu

    @Eric-le3uu

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@ugur76 No. I lived in Japan (Tokyo) before but never studied and didn't know how to hold a basic conversation. All friends spoke English and my job was at a Japanese company doing English sales...

  • @Mrammer
    @Mrammer3 жыл бұрын

    2:17 That’s when you know someone’s figured out life Loved the video. Thank you for your advice!

  • @Nemo37K
    @Nemo37K3 жыл бұрын

    If you already speak a language that has an SOV structure (languages like Marathi, Turkish, Mongolian etc.) then learning Japanese (minus Kanji) will be structurally comparable to an English speaker learning a romance language (French, Spanish, Italian, Romanian, and Potuguese) and take less time as the grammar will be easier to comprehend. It will take longer to learn Japanese if you speak English because the grammar is SVO (subject verb object) in English and we only have an alphabet, not three separate ways of written communication. That said there are plenty of foreign loan words in Japanese, you just have to get used to pronunciation. All languages have their quirks and tricks and the real determinant in your ability to learn a language is your ability to grit through the frustrating bits and actively engage with the language in a meaningful way. That means practicing pronunciation and doing both study and immersion. It also depends on what you want to accomplish in learning the language; if you want some easy phrases to navigate is not the same as getting an N2-N1 certification to work in Japan. Patience, persistence, immersion, and passion. All the best

  • @nopale6565
    @nopale65653 жыл бұрын

    Writing memorization hits me hard. While reading, listening and understanding is quite bearable since i love the pop music and manga.

  • @londonerlearnsjapanese3337
    @londonerlearnsjapanese33373 жыл бұрын

    The formality issue did bother but like you said "getting caught up in the mood of the discussion" naturally helps me

  • @Liliquan

    @Liliquan

    3 жыл бұрын

    Just by some crazy chance, might you be a Londoner that is learning Japanese?

  • @londonerlearnsjapanese3337

    @londonerlearnsjapanese3337

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@Liliquan loooooooooooooool!!!

  • @artiesolomon3292
    @artiesolomon32923 жыл бұрын

    A most fascinating intro to Japanese of which I knew nothing. Thank you, Steve.

  • @osamahabbas3443
    @osamahabbas34433 жыл бұрын

    I have been learning Japanese for a year ,my only problem now is sometimes I don't know the subject because Japanese sometimes omit it ,but I'm getting better,I just need to continue listening and reading ,Thanks steve

  • @ochavezart
    @ochavezart3 жыл бұрын

    always enjoy your videos, I started my aquire for the language 3 years ago. I got side tracked with "how long will it take?" "how long till I get good?" Then I stopped almost for a year. Now I will do it again, at my pace, not what someone else says it should take to finish.

  • @alabamasamurai7703
    @alabamasamurai77032 жыл бұрын

    Nice explanation, however I would have definitely mentioned the counters: the numbers in Japanese change depending on what you are counting(depending among other criteria on the shape of what you are counting, so round objects are ko, flat objects are mai, oblong objects are hon / pon, etc). Three eggs for example is sanko tamago (三個卵), but three days is mikkakan(三日間), three generic things are mittsu, etc. There are hundreds of counters, although you should at least know the most common 40 or so. The other difficulty is the double negatives, which definitely takes some adjusting to, especially during a real conversation. The fact that several Asian languages count on a base four instead of base three is also challenging, especially when dealing with large numbers (so one million has to be said "one hundred ten thousands")...

  • @jttdiana
    @jttdiana3 жыл бұрын

    I’ve been learning Japanese on Duolingo for a while, and I can understand somewhat, but I’m gonna invest in some practice writing books because without the audio I’m completely lost. My memory works much better with auditory stimulus than visual, so I need to work on that. It didn’t take that much getting used to just because I’ve watched thousands of hours of anime, so I already knew a lot of key phrases/terms that helped me feel like it wasn’t completely impossible. Doing it everyday consistently has helped me a LOT. It feels like one of those skills where if you don’t keep doing it everyday, your skills diminish very quickly.

  • @4orinrin

    @4orinrin

    3 жыл бұрын

    1. Stop using Duolingo 2. Try the immersion approach through refold.la. It gives a lot of good information about the approach and I can attest to it working so far as my I can decently understand maybe half of Japanese speech through listening after about 6 months of a decent amount of daily immersion 3. Try using anki for memorising new words 4. Also use Anki to try Remembering The Kanji, a method orders kanji in an order that makes it easier to learn using the parts that make them up and making stories for them (try using hochanh.github.io/rtk/rtk1-v6/index.html) 5. If you feel unmotivated, try finding something that you look forward to as an incentive for learning the language 6. If you feel you haven't learned anything, try finding some anime or something that you watched a while back and see how much more you comprehend. 頑張れ!

  • @frogchild6822
    @frogchild68223 жыл бұрын

    You inspire me so much!

  • @DanielCamargoTalks
    @DanielCamargoTalks3 жыл бұрын

    All the grammar I learned was through speaking. I didn’t know what any particle meant at all because I regrettably went all-in with the Pimsleur approach and zero reading. The particles and grammar just made sense when I spoke. I didn’t know any rules even existed, until I began studying reading, which was actually tremendously easier to learn since I already had a spoken knowledge. Now, I’m rewinding and focusing fully on my input before I do more speaking.

  • @athelling
    @athelling3 жыл бұрын

    Outstanding thumbnail!!

  • @aneiger8706
    @aneiger87063 жыл бұрын

    Hebrew also has 2 writing systems, one is called "Dfus" and is used in print, official writing and how children learn to read, and the other one is called "Ktav" and used in everyday handwriting and in modern use to give an 'informal' sense to the text.

  • @georgelandon1828
    @georgelandon18283 жыл бұрын

    Hi Mr. Kaufmann! It is always a pleasure listening to you. For me Japanese is a very beautiful melodic language, there are some advantages of Japanese when learning it like there is no gender , no conjugation of verb, it is more a contextual language. I was learning it for 2 years , I know well hiragana and katakana and I learnt like 100 kanjis but I stopped it as it is for me a big struggle with Kanjis and it is as well very time consuming.I love the language but I realised I have to study for 10 years minimum to have some kind of fluency 😅 ありがとう ございます

  • @jeffh384
    @jeffh3843 жыл бұрын

    hi steve. im a new japanese learner (3 months), and have been using lingq for the past month to great success. i think on that issue with the word parsing it would be helpful if when highlighting a phrase you could manually select any arbitrary characters instead of being limited by the site's parsing. although honestly, it would be a convenience at most. after reading through the mini stories i learned how to tell well enough what is what on my own. which is a skill that everyone needs to develop

  • @Thelinguist

    @Thelinguist

    3 жыл бұрын

    we are dependent on third-party parsing software. Hopefully in the future we can do a better job. I still find that learning Japanese on LingQ is much more powerful than anything that was available to me when I was learning.

  • @MT-cn3qs
    @MT-cn3qs3 жыл бұрын

    Hi Steve, thank you for a good video. I am from Ukraine, studied in Canada and living in Japan now. 初めて聞いたロシア語、ウクライナ語、と日本語を話すことできます。驚きました。すぐにチャネルフォローしました。 Когда я узнал что вы начали учить языки в возрасте, вы меня вдохновили! Если честно, японский язык мне деться тяжело, сейчас на N2 level но после того как узнал о Вас и на скольких языках Вы говорите понял, что у меня все впереди. Дякую!

  • @dathyr1
    @dathyr1 Жыл бұрын

    Yes What you say is what I see as a true beginner and looking at learning Japanese. I am trying to learn it on my own which is probably even harder to do. I am trying to learn basic words an phrases to start out with and the Alphabet pronunciations. I use KZread allot to hear how everything sounds. Then i use google translate to say the Japanese and see if the English truly indicates I said the correct words. I know it is a tough language, but willing to give it a try.

  • @mishapurser4439
    @mishapurser44392 жыл бұрын

    The particles were one of the major things that tripped me up when I was learning Japanese years ago

  • @tedc9682
    @tedc96823 жыл бұрын

    I studied Japanese a bit in the 1980s. I didn't get very far, but I still know the grammar and some basic words. Verbs at the end, particles-- the grammar is nice. The kanji (Chinese characters for word roots) is the biggest problem. I am studying Chinese online now (I chose it over Japanese kanji) using many of Steve's ideas. Maybe I'll start Japanese next year.

  • @dosgos
    @dosgos3 жыл бұрын

    Great video. Japanese is a difficult language and varies wildly from western languages. The wide variety of sounds and meanings for each kanji delay basic reading and writing for non-Chinese speakers. Grammar is both unstructured & structured at the same time; lots of "made phrases" need to be memorized. Verb conjugation is easy (but you also have to conjugate adjectives and adverbs). I never met a westerner who could read native texts and newspapers with fluency. I think Spanish is much easier for the beginner but it becomes very difficult indeed.

  • @AlexC-O_O
    @AlexC-O_O3 жыл бұрын

    I have been learning Japanese for 7 months now and by talking to more advanced learners, a few things came up: Japanese vocabulary is endless, they got like 100 different words to say 'I'. Kanji seems very hard at first but it s just a matter of grinding it. Using the wrong politeness levels, pitch accents as a foreigner is not a big deal (Japanese people are very humble and forgiving), but if you want to sound native or work in japan, it can be. It may be because I am only 7 months in but for me japanese grammar is hard and it does matter. There are things like transitive/intransitive verbs and you need to conjugate adjectives.

  • @southerntowhere

    @southerntowhere

    3 жыл бұрын

    Yeah, you can pick it up among 私、俺、僕、わし、sometimes自分😆

  • @SeraphimShow

    @SeraphimShow

    3 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for the valuable information!

  • @alexheise110

    @alexheise110

    2 жыл бұрын

    If there is no gender in Japanese, then what do you conjugate adjectives for?

  • @namb5886

    @namb5886

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@alexheise110 Hi. For time and negative "tenses". Weirdly enough, not all adjetives in Japanese get to be conjugated, only those that end with an i (there are exceptions). 赤い (akai, red present), 赤くない (not red, present), 赤かった (red, past tense), 赤くなかった (not red, past).

  • @giannilyanicks1718

    @giannilyanicks1718

    Жыл бұрын

    as worse as hebrew , arab, greek or chinese.

  • @figgettit
    @figgettit Жыл бұрын

    i learnt japanese in japan in my 20s and am now in mexico learning spanish in my 40s and i find spanish so much more difficult. infinitely more difficult. everything you say about the flexibility of the grammar is probably not something a beginner wants to hear necessarily but is totally true and lies at the heart of learning it.

  • @myselfme767

    @myselfme767

    8 ай бұрын

    It might appear this way, because you already know Japanese. The age difference when you learn each language matters too.

  • @michaelrespicio5683
    @michaelrespicio56833 жыл бұрын

    Can you do a video like this for Indonesian or Vietnamese? Just to see what we should be aware of when going after these languages

  • @angelsjoker8190
    @angelsjoker81903 жыл бұрын

    The FSI numbers are a good starting point to give you an idea of how much time it will take you, regardless of whether you spend that time in a classroom or spend it with self-study and immersion input. There is no way around spending a lot of time with the language if you want to learn it. The only influence you have is how enjoyable you make that time.

  • @erwan6906
    @erwan69063 жыл бұрын

    I agree, It's not a grammar contest as long as you enjoy learning the language !

  • @springlove930
    @springlove9303 жыл бұрын

    You are so smart!

  • @user-ix7yy8hj2d
    @user-ix7yy8hj2d2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for shedding light on learning one of the hardest languages of this planet.

  • @masonfremlin193
    @masonfremlin1932 жыл бұрын

    There is also kyujita /木内た words traditional Japanese words which I found it on KZread just finding some random videos and they’re longer to spell also a lot more difficult than Kanji

  • @sparrow4852
    @sparrow48523 жыл бұрын

    Am I the only one who thinks those glasses are cool lol

  • @khomicsans900

    @khomicsans900

    3 жыл бұрын

    As soon as he clipped them on, I was like,”That Is Sick”🤣

  • @sleepsmartsmashstress740

    @sleepsmartsmashstress740

    3 жыл бұрын

    those glasses are cool

  • @magicalfunnyworld8171

    @magicalfunnyworld8171

    3 жыл бұрын

    it's amazing

  • @notbizzaroyt4006

    @notbizzaroyt4006

    3 жыл бұрын

    You're not alone bruv haha

  • @miguelslv

    @miguelslv

    3 жыл бұрын

    Word

  • @samp1312
    @samp13122 ай бұрын

    As a Japanese learner, seeing someone so proficient be so flippant regarding は and が made me smile. It gave me immense frustration not being able to understand. But now I see your point of view with the whole 'getting used to it' 慣れてきた.

  • @StevenHorton
    @StevenHorton3 жыл бұрын

    I’ve put a lot more effort into learning Japanese than Spanish, and I’m probably a fourth as good with Japanese as Spanish, because of all of the shared words we inherited from Spanish’s related language, Spanish. Often times though, reading Kanji makes things easier, since you might not know the word, you can guess meanings often enough, given context. Especially if you read Japanese comic books.

  • @rogerioandrade9409
    @rogerioandrade94093 жыл бұрын

    Very interesting points. As a Romance language speaker (Portuguese) I found the gramatic structure of spoken Japanese kind of simple, when compared to our Western languages, specially romance languages. When I was studying it, building simple, day-by-day phases was not a real pain. The real problem to me is - and will always be - the writing system. It is really too confusing and it takes a lot of work to recognize the symbols, specially Kanji

  • @BigGulpsV2
    @BigGulpsV23 жыл бұрын

    @4:52 Wow my exact thoughts about Katakana as a Japanese learner. Glad I'm not alone in that!!

  • @coolbrotherf127
    @coolbrotherf127 Жыл бұрын

    In spoken Japanese and in casual writing like a text message, I've come to find that the native speakers tend to say things in the most concise way possible that's understandable. They don't usually talk in obscure idioms or long complex sentences which makes things just a bit easier to pick up on and start contributing to conversations as a beginner.

  • @Mobik_
    @Mobik_2 жыл бұрын

    が is to describe something (mostly) and は denotes the subject you're talking about.

  • @Christianmusic191
    @Christianmusic1913 жыл бұрын

    I feel so lucky and thankful growing up speaking a european language (German) that uses time, different levels of politeness, gender, cases and tons of conjugations. English and French, which I started learning in my teens, seemed just easier versions of what I already knew, and picking it up was super relaxed. Even Russian and Portuguese weren't too bad, as I was familiar with the system. When i moved on to other languages I found them difficult, but on levels and subjects that are so much more welcoming for someone who just wants to have fun as I did. As hard as the japanese writing system is, and as confusing the levels of politeness and the particles are sometimes, "forgiving" is exactly the word I'd use to describe it. And the same goes for Korean, Mandarin and Cantonese.

  • @KanazawaKings
    @KanazawaKings3 жыл бұрын

    I got a weird feeling when you pulled out that book about Sake and I looked over my shoulder at my bookshelf and the exact same book was there.

  • @languagecomeup
    @languagecomeup3 жыл бұрын

    Hey Steve, nice video. I would love to see you do another take on Russian video. But of course only if you want!

  • @zacgarcia7164
    @zacgarcia71643 жыл бұрын

    I like this video. What really helped me learn Japanese was watching shows and picking up on key words or following Japanese people on social media to see how they speak. To add to this, I don't like most textbooks or Japanese schools bc they dont teach you how Japanese people really speak in real life. You sound like a robot.

  • @flaviosouza4449
    @flaviosouza44493 жыл бұрын

    Great!

  • @jay_2433
    @jay_24333 жыл бұрын

    Hi Mr. Kaufmann. I know you make a lot of videos on listening comprehension, but I don't know if this specific question that I am about to ask was ever addressed (it probably was). I have been learning Korean for nearly 3 years now and I almost always have to try to understand what I am hearing (I oftentimes envision the words as I hear them, almost as if they are being typed out on a screen). Certain topics come a little more easily to me and require lesson deliberate effort to understand. I know structurally Korean and Japanese are pretty similar, and it's definitely quite tricky for English speakers like ourselves to get use to the overall language, but especially listening to it when it is spoken at Native-speed. I was wondering how long it took you to "not have to think" as you listened to native Japanese speaker, audio, etc.

  • @uther236
    @uther2363 жыл бұрын

    Greetings Steve, could you talk a little bit more about the Korean Language, and your advices for beginners?

  • @LiviaTavNaether
    @LiviaTavNaether3 жыл бұрын

    I really have a thing with Japan, a fascination. I really want to learn the language but I really feel bad when I see people saying how fast they memorized the hiragana and katakana. I really have a hard time memorizing them. I already started and stopped a few times this year. Thanks for the nice video. Really enlightening.

  • @jordanconner3808

    @jordanconner3808

    3 жыл бұрын

    You might be slow but you won't forget

  • @LiviaTavNaether

    @LiviaTavNaether

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@jordanconner3808 thank you. I made me some Flashcards and it seems to help me. I am a very visual person.

  • @saint-simonphilippe5989
    @saint-simonphilippe59893 жыл бұрын

    hello I live in japon...je trouve votre video juste et très interessante ....aligato very beaucoup...

  • @adamsmart2740
    @adamsmart27403 жыл бұрын

    Steve is amazing. I want to be a polyglot myself one day, wish me luck guys :)

  • @marcelosilveira7079

    @marcelosilveira7079

    3 жыл бұрын

    Prepare to live abroad

  • @anthonydellimuti4962
    @anthonydellimuti49623 жыл бұрын

    counting things in japanese is incredibly hard and i think it needs its own video. loved this one btw!

  • @moyga
    @moyga3 жыл бұрын

    The thing is, the only reason that people messing up the gender in French "clangs" more to you, is because you're better at French. Things like the formality levels in Japanese absolutely do matter, they just don't sound as bad to you because (1) you're not a native speaker and (2) native Japanese speakers tend to be extremely forgiving and polite and tend to have extremely low expectations when it comes to the Japanese ability of foreigners. If you were not a foreigner people would react very differently when you use the wrong politeness levels. When you use the wrong pitch accent and unnatural expressions and so on that also clangs for Japanese people, they just wouldn't say that.

  • @SOAD4ever47

    @SOAD4ever47

    3 жыл бұрын

    As everyone should do to someone trying to learn their language.

  • @SOAD4ever47

    @SOAD4ever47

    3 жыл бұрын

    As everyone should do to someone trying to learn their language.

  • @yonnysilva422
    @yonnysilva42210 ай бұрын

    Thanks 🙏

  • @user-ot6sf5mk5b
    @user-ot6sf5mk5b3 жыл бұрын

    他の方の動画で知って、拝見させていただきました✨

  • @Filmdoo
    @Filmdoo3 жыл бұрын

    Hi Steve, amazing video! Can you give some advice on you made great progress learning Japanese (or any other language) when you're also working full-time? For example, for French you went to a French university and I believe you had an intensive year learning Chinese, but for Japanese, you were learning on your own while working full time - how did you manage to make good progress and managed your time if you were also working full time? I am currently working full time and having problems making good progress, so could use your tips on how much time you dedicated each week and how you planned your day as well as how long it took you to become fluent in Japanese! Thank you!

  • @vivida7160

    @vivida7160

    3 ай бұрын

    He's said in a video of another KZread channel that it took approximately 5 years after moving to Japan to become fluent. He had studied Mandarin before so part of his Japanese studying i.e. learning some kanji had already started before that. I don't know if that seems like good progress to you or not, but as an adult, you normally cannot concentrate only on studying in your life, so it's always going to take some time. If you didn't have to work and your mom and dad take care of your well-being, it's a different story.

  • @eudaimonia0221
    @eudaimonia02213 жыл бұрын

    My opinion: learning a language is not difficult if you love doing it. You may suffer a lot while learning, but if you are able to "live" the language, it will be spontaneous! That's how I learned English and currently I'm focusing on German. Next goals: Russian and Japanese. I wish everyone a wonderful language journey!

  • @amadeusmalonje8263

    @amadeusmalonje8263

    3 жыл бұрын

    Your english is good :)

  • @m.l.2871

    @m.l.2871

    3 жыл бұрын

    How is you german going so far? Wie weit bist du mit dem deutsch lernen? :)

  • @Sakura-zu4rz
    @Sakura-zu4rz3 жыл бұрын

    I have a frustrating experience. Not knowing where to begin or hitting a plateau can feel demoralizing and make it hard to hit the books and study like you know you should…Having friends from other cultures makes me more creative. In fresh ways about space and how people create their own world and environment. It is best way to connect between creative thinking and cross-cultural relationships.

  • @speedzero7478
    @speedzero7478 Жыл бұрын

    I learned Japanese my first run around 2003 when I was very young. Back then it was so difficult, I had to buy books, CDs, online was only some free basic HTML sites and such. Right now, its incredible, all the free resources available. You can learn nonstop, all the time, as if you lived in Japan already, if you're really motivated. There has never been a better time to not only learn, but also enjoy a language (can enjoy songs, media, all that very easily)

  • @MR-kr3lu
    @MR-kr3lu3 жыл бұрын

    I was searching for a topic in commercial law (in German Kaufmann means merchant/business man and its essential to now wether someone is a Kaufmann/merchant) and now I am watching a video on learning Japanese. Interesting video though.

  • @user-ww3ne6pz6h
    @user-ww3ne6pz6h9 ай бұрын

    やはり慣れが大切ですね😀

  • @Jesus-77
    @Jesus-773 жыл бұрын

    That is my goal for this year

  • @tangbein
    @tangbein3 жыл бұрын

    Getting used to the language certainly helps. Was watching tons of anime from the age of 14-19 and after high school, when I started traveling abroad and met many japanese people, I recognized a lot japanese sentences and could loosely figure out what people said. Of course before people start typing weeabo, I'm not saying anime is a correct representation of a culture in a country, but language wise it really helps.

  • @revelthot4087

    @revelthot4087

    3 жыл бұрын

    you start to pick up the language the more you’re exposed to it. if i didn’t watch anime i wouldn’t know a single word or phrase in japanese, but because of it i learned many words. i actually think it makes it easier to learn new words because i’m so used to hearing the language and pronunciation isn’t hard.

  • @CrossfireDude123
    @CrossfireDude1233 жыл бұрын

    I wonder if we'll get a video of Steve ranking the languages he knows in order of most proficient to least proficient.

  • @user-zg2co9zd7k
    @user-zg2co9zd7k3 жыл бұрын

    True. I still really find it hard reading カタカナ even though I already somewhat mastered it a couple of months ago.

  • @thedoomslayer185

    @thedoomslayer185

    2 жыл бұрын

    カヌカメ is kanukame I believe

  • @jbucata
    @jbucata3 жыл бұрын

    Regarding languages with multiple writing systems, would you describe traditional Chinese characters and simplified characters as two distinct writing systems?

  • @Sb129
    @Sb1293 жыл бұрын

    Japanese seems like talking would be a bit easier in some aspects like you said but the sentence structure of the verb being in the "wrong" spot compared to English or Spanish seriously gets me, that's the hardest part other than learning Kanji and Kana

  • @maximebeaudoin4013
    @maximebeaudoin40133 жыл бұрын

    I am still learning Japanese, however being a native French speaker (and also native level English speaker), I feel Japanese's level of difficulty is often exaggerated. Ok the writing system is quite the hurdle. But spoken Japanese is very simple. The particle system is intuitive in the way that it works. You have present and past tense as well as negation that is indicated by a suffix on the verb or adjective. Then learning vocabulary is unavoidable in any language. Although I love French (It helps with Japanese sound pronunciation), it's a freaking monster when it come to the grammar, syntax and even spelling. So yeah... loved the video added nuance to the topic. I do agree in the end it is only a question of motivation and investment no mater what you're trying to learn.

  • @rebeccamiko9156
    @rebeccamiko9156 Жыл бұрын

    I'm an American who lives in Yokosuka, which is very close to the American military base, so I actually see a decent amount of katakana on the signs and stuff, maybe used to translate certain proper nouns 😊Living so close to other Americans and where most services are translated into English kills the motivation to learn Japanese lol. My goal is to learn Japanese enough so that I can have a basic conversation with a native speaker and take private lessons from a tutor who is a native speaker. If I can learn hiragana and katakana, then I'll be happy. I can recognize some kanji used for the names of cities in Japan, but I couldn't write them for the life of me! The good thing about Japanese is that the grammar is not terribly difficult. There aren't any cases or genders, or even singular or plural. There are just the "joshi" or particles that you have to learn, as well as a completely different set of vocabulary compared to, say, English. I'm excited to learn more Japanese, although I'm a bit afraid of becoming discouraged if I don't progress as quickly as I'd like to.

  • @mathisgilsbach116
    @mathisgilsbach1163 жыл бұрын

    A little off-topic but I am fascinated by these glasses

  • @malgorzatamiroslawakim7187
    @malgorzatamiroslawakim71873 жыл бұрын

    New creating words nowy making by young people, thank you very much ser aligator gozaimashta,

  • @4gr8kidz
    @4gr8kidz3 жыл бұрын

    I love Japanese! I'm teaching myself, and think the phonetic languages are MUCH easier for me. I easily memorized the Hirigana/Katakana, and am working on Kanji, but got kinda sidetracked getting into Korean. Is it ok to learn both at once? I made a language friend in Japan and we have so much in common! We Skype once a week. She's my age & similar in so many things! Now I'm SUPER wanting to go to Japan just to see her!

  • @marcelosilveira7079

    @marcelosilveira7079

    3 жыл бұрын

    Wouldn't be easier to learn Japanese and say German ?

  • @asukaakusawang2511

    @asukaakusawang2511

    3 жыл бұрын

    Japanese grammar is similar with Korean。Japanese and Korean have many vocabulary derived from Chinese, but the pronouncation is not the same。Just as French and Spanish have many vocabulary derived from Latin. I think it is ok to learn both at once。

  • @onbii2347
    @onbii23473 жыл бұрын

    The difficulty of a language should not be of concern, if you are deeply interested / invested in said language.

  • @sundude800
    @sundude8003 жыл бұрын

    I’m eyeing Japanese but right now I’m sticking to Vietnamese! Once I get to a conversational and newspaper reading level, I might go to Japanese. Ahh, if only LingQ had Vietnamese 😔. I’ll trudge through, I’ve got motivation!!

  • @Thelinguist

    @Thelinguist

    3 жыл бұрын

    It's coming & I think I will give it a shot.

  • @sundude800

    @sundude800

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@Thelinguist I hope you do well! Others online have told me that the pronunciation is trickier than Mandarin or Cantonese, but with plenty of listening, and a brief bit of studying and practice, it becomes intuitive...At least for me! :D

  • @michaelrespicio5683

    @michaelrespicio5683

    3 жыл бұрын

    Goes to show you don't need LingQ to learn certain languages. Also trying Vietnamese is probably going to be like what was done with Indonesian and Finnish where you spend a day or two just to see what it looks like. I'm not actively learning Vietnamese but go back to it sometimes.