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This topic contains 7 replies, has 6 voices, and was last updated by リンディ 13 years, 1 month ago.
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October 12, 2011 at 3:54 am #19118
Hey guys just wondering how long it took you to pick up each thing? ie hirigana katakana ect ect, would anyone be willing to share some of there learning log with us all?
October 12, 2011 at 4:45 am #19119Hiragana was about a week for me before I could recognise stuff fairly easily, I was using the Hiragana drag n’ drop exercise on a website I found quite a lot. Katakana was a lot faster, only took around 3-4 days! My katakana is weaker though, I’ve not had as much reading practice but that’ll come in time.
It’s really cool walking around New York and now being able to read some of the Japanese signs, like the ones at the World Trade Center memorial. :) It’s like a whole new world has opened up! I do get confused sometimes when I see Chinese because so much kanji is shared between them! >.<
October 12, 2011 at 6:59 am #19121Hiragana and katakana both took about a week to learn for me. Probably a lifetime to master though, along with kanji :)
I’m currently at chapter 5, season 4 and it took me about 1.5 month to get this far, now progressing a bit slower because of school. I’m not very far along when it comes to learning Japanese yet, but consistency is the key, they tell me. Also studying with the Core 2k flashcards, at the 155th, and with 15-20 words a day it took me a week to get here. Memorizing the words ain’t easy though.
Hopefully someone more experienced will be able to share more :p
October 12, 2011 at 11:00 am #19143Best website for drilling Hiragana and Katakana into your brain.
It took me 6 weeks to learn Hiragana because my Japanese tutor was teaching me 10 characters a week and back then I purely used her resources and only learned what she taught me/wanted to learn.
For Katakana, it took me about a week because I finally realised there was such a thing as self learning and the Internet did have resources. :p
October 12, 2011 at 1:34 pm #19151Hiragana took about a week using Heisig’s Remembering the Kana method.
Katakana took 3 hours one afternoon just drilling repeatedly with the iKana flashcard app on my phone.
Though it took longer than that until I could read them without thinking about it, and I still have to think about Katakana sometimes simply because it’s used far less often and some of the characters are so similar (darn you ツ and シ!).
- This reply was modified 13 years, 1 month ago by Elenkis.
October 12, 2011 at 2:20 pm #19155Yeah, Hiragana took about a week for me as well; I used http://www.realkana.com. It worked amazingly well for me! I held out on learning Katakana for a while and learned it mostly just picking it up as I went along. I never drilled it as much as I did Hiragana, and as a result, it’s not as “in my brain” as Hiragana, so sometimes I’ll get some confused like ワ and フ.
シ and ツ were never a problem for me, funny enough. The way I remember them (it’s really stupid, but it stuck) is:
シ the strokes almost lay flat on their side; since し is a reading for 死 (death), and dead people are laying down… yeah.
ツ I actually think of 津波 (tsunami); the strokes stand almost upright (but still slanty), like a giant tidal wave. :DOctober 12, 2011 at 4:19 pm #19163I don’t have a problem remembering which is which.
The problem is when you see just one of them in text like a manga or something, in a word you aren’t familiar with. Without seeing them both side by side, in some fonts it can sometimes be quite hard to tell which one it is. ツ in particular really doesn’t look so upright in some text that I’ve encountered. Or maybe it’s just me and my poor eyesight :)
It’s not like it’s a big problem, but sometimes it causes my brain to pause and think about it instead of just skimming over it and knowing what it says without thinking.
- This reply was modified 13 years, 1 month ago by Elenkis.
October 12, 2011 at 5:44 pm #19165Ohhh, yes yes. different fonts CAN be tricky. :\’,
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