文プロ(Bunpro) Bunsgiving 2025 - 2025 Yearly Recap (Bunpro Wrapped) & Lifetime Sale - Nov 24th, 2025 - Japanese Grammar and Vocab SRS

Also noticed that の中で is considered N4 while の中で~が一番 is N5… which is not practical :thinking:

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@jprspereira Thank you for your feedback! Hope you had a Merry Christmas! We can see where you are coming from for ても and てもいい and that they could probably use some re-arranging. When we decided upon the current order, we thought that てもいい and ても (while using the same conjugation/structure) were considerably different grammar points. We believed that てもいい would be much more useful for beginning users, while ても is a slightly more difficult structure and can include many more variables. We completely agree that our current order is far from perfect and it is comments like yours that help us structure the site so that it is more intuitive for everyone. We will see what we can do! We will definitely do something about the の中で grammar points. Cheers!

@seanblue Thank you for all of your feedback! As @riccyjay said, how we displayed English sentences was heavily influenced by user requests. We will see what we can do about having separate English toggling for Examples and Study Questions. Also, the summaries directly to the left of the links are paired with the links. Perhaps we can work on the spacing to make it a little more clear. Thank you @riccyjay for your answers. Thank you for your information on linking people directly to certain parts of the page for Tae Kim links. Before Tae Kim’s site was hacked that was how we originally had the majority of the links working. Now we are going back through and updating them with direct links as well as archived links incase the site experiences any issues. We are also trying to figure out the issue with the toggle English shortcut. Cheers!

@Murtada Thank you for your comment. Unfortunately, there is no easy pattern. Determining how and when to conjugate verbs to grammar points really comes down to familiarizing yourself with the structure/rules and seeing how verbs conjugate in context in various situations. We are working hard to make grammar as easy to understand as possible and we apologize for not having a better answer for your at the moment. We will keep working at it! Cheers!

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Awesome finally an website which is kinda simillar to wanikani and also shows which page in genki book we can use to practice more if we don’t get it :wink:

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@amakuzax Thank you for your comment! Please let us know if there is anything that we can do to improve your experience. Cheers!


Quick question; shouldn‘t this be それらの畳はいい匂いしている。

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@Myria Nice find! Thank you for bringing this to our attention. We have updated the site to use the correct particle. Cheers!

Hey, i know a small youtube channel which explains stuff in an good way based on the Genki books
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC1XPh23JO3JaGDV_H0t6Lmg/videos maybe you can add him in the readings? he has some damn good explanations and he would be really happy if you could help him :wink:

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I’m not too sure since i’m a beginner, but should that “-tai” be there?

The ~たり form just describes the “things like” part of the sentence. The EN sentence is about things that you like, that’s why the ~たい is there.

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I encountered one YouTube video on Bunpro so far and didn’t care for it. It’s too hard to go at your own pace with videos.

thanks for clearing that up

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So I’m glad you accept のです and んです interchangeably, but there is a visual bug when you type in the one that is not used in the review question. Basically, it still highlights your text (in the sentence) red even though the answer is accepted.

I bumped into a similar thing the other day. I took it to mean “your answer is ok (therefore it is green) but there is another answer you could have used.” TBH I was also pretty confused by the red text the first time around.
Maybe there might be a better way to highlight different variations?
(e.g. display them in a bubble box next to the sentence or something?)

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I just encountered this review:

and I was quite confused why the “[な]” is displayed to the right. Isn’t that something like a spoiler for the answer? (I’m pretty sure I wouldn’t have gotten the answer right the first time around without it…)
Or maybe I’m totally missing the point?

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@seanblue I’ve run into quite a lot of the red corrections despite being accepted as the right answer.

As an aside, I keep running into the short clue English not giving enough information:

Shall we give assistance to (help) that lady? → didn’t say “shall we” in the short Eng
If you want to go out to eat, let’s go! → didn’t say “want to go” in the short Eng

Those were the only I saved, but there were more.

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I might have figured out when space bar isn’t showing the English. It seems to happen when I have my IME turned on.

好き written in kana. Ok, time to sleep goooood byeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee

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I wanna make suggestion.
I always have problem when to answer あれ、それ、これ、ここ, etc. because sometime I cannot determine what is the subject. A place, or a thing?

Maybe this is only my own problem of inability to differentiate… But I think putting some more explanation may able to help people like me. Example:

“That (thing over there) is good”
or
“There (place near listener) is good”

but again, after some thinking, it is more likely that I need to learn to distinguish them rather than this idea get implemented… I mean, how hard it is to differentiate That and There (apparently it is, for me… :frowning:)

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Reread the the linked oages on each topic or get a textbook

my problem is not that I dont know the different between それ or そこ, but I dont know what the question is asking about. I know それ is that thing, while そこ is that place.

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