Hot Topics | |
---|---|
FG Lurker wrote:Have you ever met a Japanese student who studied English using katakana notes?
omae mona wrote:FG Lurker wrote:Have you ever met a Japanese student who studied English using katakana notes?
Have you ever met a Japanese student who didn't use katakana to study English? I thought they all did.
omae mona wrote:Katakana-think is responsible for more than just pronunciation problems. I think it's the cause of a poster I saw in a Haagen-Dazs store years back, advertising their "Corn Sundae" (written in English). As believable as it was (TIJ, after all), they actually were trying to sell a Cone Sundae.
GomiGirl wrote: (So Shibuya is Shibuya and NOT Shibuya like most westerners say and bugs the hell out of me)
Studying Japanese using romaji will do the *same thing* to your Japanese as studying English with katakana does. The biggest difference is that Japanese people will never figure out what you want to say. Honestly, they will think you are speaking a different language.
maraboutslim wrote:FG Lurker wrote:Studying Japanese using romaji will do the *same thing* to your Japanese as studying English with katakana does. The biggest difference is that Japanese people will never figure out what you want to say. Honestly, they will think you are speaking a different language.
Let's not exagerrate too much. Sure, the best would be to drop romaji as soon as you can but it is possible to speak japanese well even if you studied using romaji. I hardly ever studied with japanese only books and my pronunciation is pretty decent and no one has to figure out what I'm saying. Some people just have the ability to mimic sounds they hear and some people don't. Just like some people can sing and some can't, and some can learn music by ear and some can't, etc.
Lifer wrote:Since nobody commented on it,
Lifer wrote:I did, I posted in regard to double vowels, not consonents.
My bad - shoulda said LONG vowels
Samurai_Jerk wrote:Pencilslave, can't your Japanese teacher help you or are you self studying?
Lifer wrote:Since nobody commented on it,
Remember every kana in Japanese is like a beat in music so double vowels are just two beats of the same note (2 quarter notes make a half note). Other than that, it's like Adhesive said, mentally break the long words into their respective parts and they become a lot easier to say.
(Try Japanese toungue twisters as a fun way to improve speed.)
Socratesabroad wrote: Japanese seldom use romaji themselves except when dealing with foreigners.
Pencilslave wrote:Samurai_Jerk wrote:Pencilslave, can't your Japanese teacher help you or are you self studying?
I'm self studying.
maraboutslim wrote:If you guys are in Alabama, you're screwed regardless. Gotta learn Japanese in Japan.
maraboutslim wrote:Yes, some do use a kana keyboard. I haven't done any research to know what percentage type using kana keyboard and which ignore those characters and type via a romaji like entering system. How about you guys working at Japanese compaines? Which do your coworkers seem to use most? (i personally don't know a single japanese who types in kana but my sample is limited these days).
One other thought: I don't know what the heck it is, but sometimes when I seem to be pronouncing the words correctly, my voice seems to lower almost down to a bass.( I'm a baritone.) Anyone else find that their voice rises or lowers when they speak Japanese?
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 3 guests