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>> No.37013479 [View]
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37013479

>>37013439
I am just gonna copy paste my wall of text from the last thread. But if you want books there are graded books: https://tadoku.org/japanese/book/6469/
I am part of the cure dolly faction, she is weird, but it's a way of breaking apart a japanese sentance, which is all that matters.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pSvH9vH60Ig&list=PLg9uYxuZf8x_A-vcqqyOFZu06WlhnypWj
You can also increase the speed of the videos.
But please hammer down hiragana and ideally katakana at the same time, practice it every day because if you don't, you will forget the kana, and you wont speed up your recognition.
If you ever have a question about some Japanese particle or aspect, don't be shy of using google.
Also note that you can pirate books from libgen (so like, tae kim, 20/80, maybe even genki if you just like the school approach and artwork, but it's not really the ideal self learning book).
Anki is useful for kanji (it's ok to start right after learning kana), OK decks are:
>JLPT_Tango_N5_MIA_Omega_Deck
>Japanese_Core_2000_Step_01_Listening_Sentence_Vocab__Images (listening is hard too)
>Kanji_All_in_One_Heisig_RTK__Kondansha_KKLC__Vocabulary_Ex (this one is kinda weird, you won't learn japanese vocab with this, but it will give you radical names, which can give hints to what a kanji means)
You can also lower the amount of new cards every day to avoid getting overburdened.
Don't forget to put yomichan into chrome or firefox, so you can actually translate Japanese without knowing any Japanese vocab.
You can also try wakikana and bunpro instead of anki (if you only pick one, you would do bunpro) if you are a person who uses a phone a ton (and you WANT to pay a monthly subscription).
You can also make your own anki decks, and do so called "mining" (advanced).
Ideally the best way to learn is to apply what you have learned in reading, in listening, in writing, and in person communication.

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