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Thanks! That helped! I found that the link I posted is a parody of the actual advert; a link to the authentic version is below.
Hello! Good luck with your studies.
Welcome and good luck! Sounds like we have similar reasons for studying Japan; I spent 3 weeks in Japan. Where did you stay?
Well thanks :D
Welcome! Good luck with your studies.
Thanks!
Not where I sleep, but here are pictures of:
– where I study Japanese,
– my living room,
– a door next to a pile of junk, and
– me, shortly after I returned from Japan.https://picasaweb.google.com/jose.e.falcon/MyApartment?authkey=Gv1sRgCPzD79_Q2veacw&feat=directlink
- This reply was modified 13 years, 5 months ago by chedkid.
my username at gmail dot com. :D
Hi hashi. Thanks for going through the bounties! Textfugu is great.
Welcome Marcel! I just started a few days ago, but if you want someone to practice with, let me know! Have fun with it.
June 12, 2011 at 10:38 am in reply to: iPhone/iTouch: Which apps do you use to study on the go? #12552To follow up on zeldaskitten, if you are on Android, try JA Sensei. It’s free and offers similar features to Obenkyo.
Good luck, Marvin!
I went to Japan with an American friend who speaks Japanese near fluently. In college, he lived with two exchange students who became his close friends. When we decided to visit, one of his friends offered a place to stay.
My host family had a large house in Ōyama, outside of Tokyo. I had my own room (with a heater, it was winter remember?) with my own bathroom. Better yet, “okasan” made us breakfast everyday and dinner when we were home. There was no dearth of luxury. My first morning there she made me a “western” breakfast as a joke and laughed at me. They laughed at me often, like when I stepped on the genkan with my socks on or when I needed subtitles to watch anime with their son, but it was always in good taste. It was charming. They insisted that I learn, and taught me when I did something wrong, but they never scolded me. I spent long nights talking to them through my friend–it was the most memorable part of Japan. I believe they liked Americans, and appreciated how naive I was. They took it as an opportunity to show me how wonderful Japanese culture (not the unusual and quirky) is.
Hope that gives you a quick idea of what it was like!
Thanks for the warm welcome! I spent a large chunk of my day today going through the introduction, and I’m excited to get started.
whoops. okay. here’s my introduction:
last december i took a two week vacation to tokyo. for some time, i had been interested in japanese culture; it is so different than what i was used to. everything i was exposed to was so unusual and quirky. i enjoyed the seemingly random commercials and tv shows i saw on youtube. so i went, without knowing the language.
the best part of my trip was spending time with my host family who treated me so well even though i could only talk to them through a bilingual friend. i want to learn japanese so that i can revisit my host family and personally thank them for their hospitality.
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