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cenic wrote:My "Must-haves" that I've accumulated over the years:
A Dictionary of Intermediate Japanese Grammar Provides an in-depth and organized listing of grammar, with usage and examples.
cenic wrote:
Japanese Vocabulary Cards Perhaps more for the beginner. I know when I first starting learning these came in very handle. Particularly because I am a lazy bastard and these provide a fundamental base of vocabulary without me having to research and create my own vocab cards.
Just as bad as Japanese text-books are the Otaku Japanese learners who can't say anything in Japanese but who insist you use proper stroke order
Andocrates wrote:People have it ass backwards. You can't learn Japanese from a book. Speak Japanese, mimic Japanese, hear some Japanese then use your book to figure out why.
Andocrates wrote:Books are to learning Japanese as threadmills are to losing weight.
Books on Japanese are a hindrance to learning Japanese. Japanese isn't an intellectual pursuit, it's a life skill.
It's like opening a cook book, memorizing all the recipes, writing them out by hand 10 times then entering a cooking contest. No where is the failure of Japanese education more evident then in Japanese text-books.
It's like reading all about how to play guitar, memorizing the chords and all the famous guitar players then trying out for Aerosmith. Just as bad as Japanese text-books are the Otaku Japanese learners who can't say anything in Japanese but who insist you use proper stroke order and try to confuse you with words like like "gerund." Give me a break. My 2 year old had no idea what a gerund was and she can talk fine now.
People have it ass backwards. You can't learn Japanese from a book. Speak Japanese, mimic Japanese, hear some Japanese then use your book to figure out why.
ichigo partygirl wrote:Hey Charles you said that Michio was planning on releasing an Advanced Grammar Dictionary - Have you or anyone else heard if/when that will be released??
I actually find the intermediate volume a more beginner/intermediate than leaning towards advanced.
Also just a question - although my Japanese is getting there im still making stupid mistakes with particles(mostly just ni and de) so if anyone could tell me a good book for just particles that would be great
Charles wrote:If you want a really good book on particles, there was a book in the Kodansha Power Japanese series called "All About Particles" but I think it has recently been republished under a different title.
gboothe wrote:If you're are referencing Chino's book, it is probably most easily available at Amazon at http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0870119540/104-3246216-9543112?v=glance&n=283155, or at The Japan Shop at http://www.thejapanshop.net/books/allaboutparticles.htm
What I really want to do is get a business card scanner and put them all into the computer, and drill them in randomized order.
People have it ass backwards. You can't learn Japanese from a book. Speak Japanese, mimic Japanese, hear some Japanese then use your book to figure out why.
omae mona wrote:Charles wrote:The modern pedagogical method is "4 skills," you must equally develop all four skills of speaking, listening, reading
... and counting!
milQuetoast wrote:Charles, have you seen this site? (Joyo kanji set is still incomplete, but the different drill options are kinda nice.)
I was describing a set of vocabulary cards. Quite a different matter.
Amongst the THREE skills of the Spanish Inquisition are speaking, listening, reading, writing and.. uh..
milQuetoast wrote:In that case, have you seen this site? (See bottom of page for tab to select between different levels.)
jingai wrote:What Charles describes is exactly what I do. I make flashcards that are big enough to put a word and example sentence from where I found it (manga, movie, newspaper, etc) on the front and the meaning on the back. That way I learn how to use it and as I read the same text or watch the same movie a few times, it gets reinforced naturally.
I don't think these sorts of "naked vocabulary" drills are very effective. It's hard to just memorize lists of words.
milQuetoast wrote:Well, welcome to the human race.![]()
Do whatever kind of study it takes to learn Japanese on your own. I never advocated these sites as the be-all, end-all of language resources -- I only referenced them as I thought they might be useful additions to a language-learning curriculum. That being said, if you can't pass the occasional "naked" drill these sites offer then it's time to start asking yourself what you're even studying this language for.
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