Very true i actually half learned the basics of japanese by watching anime all these years. while reading i do sometimes get confused by what they're saying and what the subtitles say because it's so different. Very nicely explained by you. Great video!
who just want to start learning japanese is there guide for that as i assume i have to take alphabet book of Japanese than see the sentence construction what you say about this
I agree that starting with learning hiragana and katakana is a good idea. Then you can start reading the subtitles on Japanese videos (the Japanese editing style has a lot of text). You won't be able to read the kanji yet, but you can read everything else. Here's an example of the videos I have in mind: th-cam.com/video/G_Uu1Uv7TOY/w-d-xo.html (They let ChatGPT write the script for their show and now they're following it.) If you also want to learn how to practice hiragana and katakana, I have an old video on that :) (Although it assumes that you have already learned them and need to practice the ones that are "shaky".) If you know enough hiragana then you'll probably start noticing that it is mainly used for grammar (が、の、です etc.). For grammar I recommend Tae Kim's guide guidetojapanese.org/learn/ Kaname Naito's videos on YT are also very useful. Once you have the basics down and know some words (which you can learn from Tae Kim's guide), then I recommend you start doing what I'm describing in the video. But even while studying hiragana and katakana, I recommend you listen to videos or podcasts in Japanese to get used to it. For this I recommend channels like Yuyu No Nihongo Podcast or the podcast/playlist "Japanese podcast for beginners (Nihongo con Teppei)". I wish you the best of luck :D Let me know if you have any more questions.
Very true i actually half learned the basics of japanese by watching anime all these years. while reading i do sometimes get confused by what they're saying and what the subtitles say because it's so different. Very nicely explained by you. Great video!
Thank you so much!! 💛I'm happy to hear that you were able to benefit from it even at the beginner level 🤩
@baiburume ALSO YOU ARE SOO TALENTED AND UNDERRATED MAY UR CHANNEL GROW IN THE FUTURE!!
@@kyoshi.i THANK YOUUU 😭💖💖💖
Thanks this was interesting to watch ^^
I'm so happy :) Thank you for letting me know!
@baiburume :DD
who just want to start learning japanese is there guide for that as i assume i have to take alphabet book of Japanese than see the sentence construction what you say about this
I agree that starting with learning hiragana and katakana is a good idea. Then you can start reading the subtitles on Japanese videos (the Japanese editing style has a lot of text). You won't be able to read the kanji yet, but you can read everything else. Here's an example of the videos I have in mind: th-cam.com/video/G_Uu1Uv7TOY/w-d-xo.html (They let ChatGPT write the script for their show and now they're following it.)
If you also want to learn how to practice hiragana and katakana, I have an old video on that :) (Although it assumes that you have already learned them and need to practice the ones that are "shaky".)
If you know enough hiragana then you'll probably start noticing that it is mainly used for grammar (が、の、です etc.). For grammar I recommend Tae Kim's guide guidetojapanese.org/learn/ Kaname Naito's videos on YT are also very useful.
Once you have the basics down and know some words (which you can learn from Tae Kim's guide), then I recommend you start doing what I'm describing in the video. But even while studying hiragana and katakana, I recommend you listen to videos or podcasts in Japanese to get used to it. For this I recommend channels like Yuyu No Nihongo Podcast or the podcast/playlist "Japanese podcast for beginners (Nihongo con Teppei)".
I wish you the best of luck :D Let me know if you have any more questions.