What should my goal be with WaniKani?

I saw that website before! It looks a little intimidating, but I’ll give it a shot. Maybe I’ll like it.

Yeah graded readers seems like just the thing. I had found another one in that resource thread. That’s the reading I was talking about that I failed at… Probably should at least try harder!

Haha :slight_smile: Well, an alternative might be Tae Kim’s grammar guide?

Based on how easy the Level 1 books are, I don’t think you should need too much grammar to tackle the Level 0 books. It would probably help to study a little though, because that will probably naturally expose you to some useful vocab that you’re likely to need, like the common movement verbs and so on.

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Hehe, I could read most of that… Except for the Kanji in the final example.

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Somehow that “writing on banana peel” thing seemed really profound. Like making a strong statement about the disconnect between learning Japanese and just Kanji.What you say about learning grammar is pretty encouraging.

Thanks for the advice guys. I’ll definitely try to pick up some more studies on grammar and vocab on the side, but keep up WaniKani consistently because I’m going to want to be able to read Kanji anyway.

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Good luck! You can do it! :sparkles::crabigator::sparkles:

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Think of kanji as a boost. You’ll be learning vocab that uses kanji. Knowing the kanji makes memorizing the word a lot easier. Same with grammar (because it involves reading example sentences, for example). You’ll also be able to increase your reading speed because kanji won’t be a problem. If you increase your reading speed, you’ll learn more. It’s pretty much a domino effect.

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I think the Iknow! core 6000 set is quite good for vocab and comes with example sentences and full audio.
There are some Anki decks which are essentially rips of the entire thing, but the Iknow! site itself has each vocab split into 1000 and each 1000 split into 100, ordered by regularity of usage.

It starts off pretty simple with stuff like “please” and “thank you” and “you”, “this”, “that” and works up to stuff like “import”, “export” by about 3000.
I would recommend doing the first 2000 for a good core set of vocab.

You have to pay for it, but they have a couple of sample sessions too.
I think as exposure to the language, it will be a good start; only problem is all the vocab uses kanji; but this is not bad in and of itself as exposure breeds familiarity.

I would also say, despite what others have said, for me learning kanji seriously has made learning Japanese a lot easier. After a certain point trying to disconnect vocab and kanji and just learn one or the other is self defeating.

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There, I clarified your sentence for you.

Jokes aside, I second iKnow’s Core 6000. The variety of ways it asks questions is nice, and they recently added hundreds of new example sentences. Besides, it’s good to support the actual content creator so they can continue to improve their content for current and future Japanese learners.

Is there a good way to search the site for specific vocab?

Not that I know of. It’s my biggest complaint about the website. Though now that you mention it, I think I’ll submit a ticket suggesting that.

I didn’t know you could do that; I’m just used to devs being none existent.
Maybe I’ll do the same.

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https://iknow.jp/zendesk or click the gear icon and then “Help”.

I was one of those people mentioned earlier who enthusiastically took to WaniKani because while I had studied Japanese for years, I had a kanji-sized hole in my learning which was really starting to hold me back.

All that to say that you could definitely progress for a while in Japanese with very little kanji, but I think for the time WaniKani takes, it’s definitely worth it even for a beginner. After all people who speak Chinese natively usually do quite well in Japanese because while the speech and grammar systems are quite different, they already can understand (most of) the kanji. So getting a good grounding in kanji from the outset would give anyone a leg up.

Another good grammar tool that I’ll put in a good word for is Human Japanese. I went through the free levels because I thought they were interesting. I didn’t buy the whole app because I think it’s pretty redundant for my purposes (I’m already in a Japanese class that meets weekly). But it’s very affordable, and I think very well written and organized. Check out at least the free chapters:
http://www.humanjapanese.com/home

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Oooh, Iknow! looks really cool. I’ll bookmark that for now, definitely giving it a shot later.

Speaking for devs everywhere: “We’re trying our bests, okay? :cry:

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I disagree. I hate looking at a wall of hiragana because I can’t tell where words start and end. Kanji is actually incredibly useful in keeping a sentence readable, and an integral part of written sentence structure. And, I believe that kanji absolutely affects the Japanese worldview, and vice-versa. It’s subtle, and not something people (other than sociolinguists, I suppose) think about very much, but the fact that Japan once considered scrapping kanji altogether and adopting English as their national language, then didn’t, speaks volumes about the Japanese identity. He is right that kanji is not the entirety of the Japanese language, but, duh? Grammar isn’t language. Writing isn’t language. Culture isn’t language. All these things, and more, together, make a language what it is. And kanji is a part of Japanese.

Sure, if you are not studying effectively, like, maybe with Wanikani…

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It’s a curious passage in a useful book. I think you’re right, that the usage of kanji does certainly affect Japanese culture.

Jay Rubin understands way more Japanese than I ever will. He certainly knows his way around kanji (I mean, he translates Haruki Murakami), yet the book is written entirely using romaji to represent the Japanese in the examples he gives. I conclude that he feels the meaning and sound of the language are more important (for him) than how it is represented on paper.

This is wisdom.

I don’t know if you finished Duolingo or if, like me, you only did the beginning… If the latter, maybe you could try LingoDeer. It’s a bit like Duolingo but, in my opinion, much better for Japanese (Duolingo is good for a lot a languages but not really for Japanese despite the big work they did to adapt it).

I finished the skill tree, but around half-way I felt that it isn’t really helping me learn Japanese much. At least not effectively. But what it did do is make me feel like learning Japanese is actually within my capabilities. School had made me give up on learning languages, I always sucked at all language related classes. But Duolingo made me feel like I can actually do it if I try hard enough and don’t give up.
And look at me now! Level three booooiiii! I’m fo’ sho going places. :sunglasses:

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I focused almost exclusively on WaniKani for three years (right now I’m in first chapter of Genki 2). In that time I could’ve become much more fluent had I also focused on grammar, reading comprehension and listening comprehension. So the “WaniKani alone isn’t enough!” argument’s certainly true.

But it’s awesome how easy diving into grammar has been. I almost never have to look up vocabulary, so I can focus exclusively on the grammar part.

Do what you want. Set up your own goals and methods. As long as you have motivation and ability to stick to hard work when the novelty fades, you can’t really go wrong.

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