![]() , Maggie-sensei’s grammar,, Imabi (pretty in-depth) Tae Kim’s Grammar Guide and Japanese The Manga Way. The sources I recommend for beginners are: A few words have some dank memes or VN references, too.Īlong with this vocabulary, I highly recommend that you read a supplementary Grammar source. (Check out the one for the word 御三家 for example). Some just easily illustrate a difficult concept, and so I added them. I’m also not making any assumptions about people knowing words like いいえ、とても、おいしい、ドキドキ、and so on, so they are in this deck. Some obvious words were included because katakana practice is always useful. バイク refers to a motorcycle rather than a bicycle. キャラ for example is in regards to one’s character or personality, but can also mean a fictional character. Some were obvious words, but a lot may have semantically different meanings from the English. Katakana words from English, and common “Anime” words: You’ll find that you’ll be able to skip a handful of grammatical sections because you’ll have learned some concepts as words, and can quickly make the connections with the grammar. However, I do try to sneak some grammatical patterns into these vocabulary words, by including things like それだけ, それほど, and some others. This is meant to be a beginner/fundamental deck, and I don’t want to overload beginners with the kanji for words like それ and これ. “What about words like 馬鹿、僕、駄目, and so on that are written in kanji but may often appear in Hiragana.”įor most of these cases, I put the kanji if it had a high usage across these VNs, alongside the furigana, so you may be exposed to the kanji for 「だめ」, which is 「駄目」, but you may have to make a separate card.******* I included some shortenings of words that appeared in the analysis, like ところ -> とこ, because of possible alternate meanings, and for clarity’s sake. I didn’t want to overload the deck with grammar, but I did include a lot of the simpler grammar with 1 or 2 primary meanings, that you can essentially learn as words/phrases. I’ve included some of the more simple grammatical words, like しかし、っぽい, ところで、ついで. I went through the commonly used words, stripped out grammatical words that were found in my text analysis (listed below in the pastebin) and names, some kanji used for names. The VNs: Aiyoku no Eustia, Angel Beats, Hatsuyuki Sakura, Hoshi Ori Yume Mirai, Irotoridori no Sekai, ISLAND, Sakura no Uta, Subarashiki Hibi. I did a 144,000 line text analysis across 8 VNs (18k lines from each VN). Hundreds of these words I actually had to request from Forvo while I was learning them. Some words may not have audio for every reading, due to the lack of audio on Forvo for some readings. This vocab deck is to help you to make the connection between the Japanese word, and some familiar English metaphors, so that when you go on to read, you have something as a reference point. ![]() Because of the Japanese language and its words that serve a variety of different contexts, a lot of words don’t have perfect, simple translations.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |