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- index startersguide - LearnJapanese - Reddit
The Japanese sounds system consists of a total of 23 consonant sounds and 5 vowel sounds (Compared to English with 24? consonant sounds and 14 vowel sounds) When spoken, the Japanese language is formed using either vowels or a consonant-vowel pair with the exception of the "n" sound which is the sole single consonant sound used
- Learn Japanese - Reddit
Welcome to r LearnJapanese, *the* hub on Reddit for learners of the Japanese Language
- A Fast, Efficient, and Fun Guide to Learning Japanese for All Levels
He's been studying Japanese for a nearly 10 years I think and he definitely knows what he's talking about His views and methods can be a bit controversial in the community, but overall, everyone agrees that immersion and sentence mining are essential to learning languages fast Reply reply grownOnMars •
- [Review] I finished the Duolingo japanese course - Reddit
The Japanese course on Duolingo is mainly a word learning course Each unit will introduce you to a couple new words (between 15 and 30), then it will incorporate some of those words into sentences, and finally those sentences will try to teach a couple grammar points as well Assuming, you get each unit to max level, most words are gonna stick
- Japanese People Twitter - Reddit
r japanesepeopletwitter: Tweets but JapaneseMangaka forgor her character's birthday, and questions why she even set birthdays on them (Aki Hamazi and her alt account)
- How to say How do you say~? - Japanese Language Stack Exchange
But I had a Japanese native tell me it was more natural to use it with the verb 言う (polite form is 言います) So, to break it down, you're literally asking "What is ~ called in Japanese?" or "What do you say for ~ in Japanese?" 言う = to say と = grammatically necessary particle used with 言う to indicate a quotation
- What is the difference between the nominalizers こと and の?
(This question had to show up eventually… :) For my answer, I'll be borrowing most example sentences and categorizations from pages 176-179 of 初級しょきゅう を 教おし える 人ひと のための 日本語にほんご文法ぶんぽう ハンドブック and from this PDF Cases where only の is allowed When the following verb deals with one of the senses: 聞きく, 聞き
- etymology - When did 「ヤッホー」 become a popular greeting? - Japanese . . .
The etymology of the very casual greeting 「ヤッホー」 appears disputed and undecided Various theories and hypotheses have been suggested This site lists German, Hebrew, and 山伏 as possible sources A l
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