how i wish i studied japanese differently (tips for beginners + self-studying) 🇯🇵

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 25. 06. 2024
  • Seriously, I have been learning Japanese FOREVER it feels like, and I'm nowhere near as good as I should be. My main problem is that I kept getting burnt out and stepped away from Japanese for about a year MULTIPLE TIMES (!!) Don't do this!! 😂💀 I'm so dumb!!
    Since I've relearned Japanese two or three times (seriously.....) I've realized a lot about how I wish I had studied Japanese differently, especially in the beginning!! So in this video I'll go over my tips for beginners and for people who are self-studying the language!
    It can be hard but don't give up! And nowadays we are so fortunate to not just have to rely on textbooks. There are tons of resources online that if you don't make use of, you won't be learning Japanese as efficiently or properly as you could be!
    Let me know if you have any questions about it!! And sorry for my wonky Japanese at the beginning, speaking on camera made me really stiff since I've never done it before 💀😩 Like I'm a baby again 🥺
    Please be sure to like, comment, and subscribe for more content about Japan in the future!! It helps me out so much 🥰 I post a new video every Tuesday JST!
    And let me know in the comments if you have any future video requests as well ❤️ See you guys again next week!
    🍘 RESOURCES MENTIONED IN VIDEO 🍘
    KANJI SRS LEARNING: wanikani.com
    SRS FLASHCARDS: apps.ankiweb.net
    TEXTBOOKS: Genki (Beginners) | Tobira (Intermediate) | Try! Series, Sou Matome Series, Shin-Kanzen Master Series (JLPT Prep)
    READING PRACTICE: NHK Easy or the Todai Easy Japanese app
    CZcams JLPT PREP/GRAMMAR: Nihongo no Mori (日本語の森)
    Music
    Marshmallow | Prod. by Lukrembo

Komentáře • 806

  • @creatinecutie
    @creatinecutie Před 3 lety +3708

    1. Learn hiragana and katakana
    2. Use a textbook meant for learning Japanese
    3. Learn first 200 kanji for memory but don’t memorize how to write every kanji
    4. Do karaoke in Japanese and say out loud to learn to read faster

    • @user-ft3ie1lf1s
      @user-ft3ie1lf1s Před 3 lety +137

      omw to sing 冬のはなし from given brb 🚶‍♀️

    • @jodishu423
      @jodishu423 Před 3 lety +26

      @@user-ft3ie1lf1s THATS WHAT I DID!

    • @user-ft3ie1lf1s
      @user-ft3ie1lf1s Před 3 lety +20

      @@jodishu423 CULTURED

    • @itsanemmamergency7623
      @itsanemmamergency7623 Před 3 lety +46

      1; I’m learning hiragana and katakana
      2; I have Japanese from zero textbook
      3; all I know is 可愛い、私、笑、日本語
      4; I do it every day

    • @VividAMVs
      @VividAMVs Před 3 lety +23

      If by "Karaoke" you mean find a niche of the language the compels you to do more and absorb - I second that. it's very individual, for me it's mmos and singing anime ops and eds.

  • @meringue3288
    @meringue3288 Před 3 lety +1797

    "I have a lot of experience with learning japanese.... over and over again"
    This is painfully relatable

  • @Barni2212
    @Barni2212 Před 3 lety +2489

    One of the best tips from me to beginners who want to self study: DON'T search forever. One of my biggest mistakes was that I searched for the BEST method to learn Japanese and at the end I ended up using more time to search the best method instead of actually learn things. Be committed. Start one phat and walk on it for a while.

    • @LuMichelini
      @LuMichelini Před 3 lety +56

      Me too, and I've switched between methods so many time it threw off my actual learning process

    • @anamartins6535
      @anamartins6535 Před 3 lety +3

      Soo truuee, thank u for this comment

    • @laciruela7772
      @laciruela7772 Před 3 lety +6

      Well imma tell you the best method. Refold

    • @MrAbyss-rv6bt
      @MrAbyss-rv6bt Před 3 lety +3

      I have to agree

    • @keime5241
      @keime5241 Před 3 lety +3

      Thank you so much

  • @Nikolai508
    @Nikolai508 Před 3 lety +1291

    "I make mistakes all the time". People make mistakes in their native language. Just think about how many times you get tongue-tied in English, how many times you can't remember the right word so just pick another.
    For some reason, everyone (including myself) will hold a second language to a higher standard than our native language.

    • @cuddlepuddle_gyu
      @cuddlepuddle_gyu Před 3 lety +51

      same lol, my second language is english and my first is bahasa, somehow, my brain explain things better in english than in bahasa 🤡 I find words easier in english than in bahasa too, which is weird

    • @itzyontop
      @itzyontop Před 2 lety +14

      English is my second language and Arabic is my first, honestly they're at the same level bit there are times were I find English less confusing then arabic

    • @fallenleaf3792
      @fallenleaf3792 Před 2 lety +8

      yeah german is my first language and i get tounge tied in it all the time and have to just say stuff in english

    • @smoothbanana
      @smoothbanana Před 2 lety +5

      The most important thing is realising you made a mistake. Some people don't (in their native language) and never take their communication skills as far as they could. I think we are more critical of your second/learned language(s) because we don't quite know what level we're at. I think most people know where they stand with their native languages - e.g. uneducated people will know when they're talking to a smartypants.

    • @itzyontop
      @itzyontop Před 2 lety

      @Austere Player I think your Arabic is really good, I don't write Arabic on my phone a lot either lol, my name's jailan and I'm from and live in Egypt, and yay another haikyuu fan!

  • @josephmessina4832
    @josephmessina4832 Před 3 lety +879

    so true with the katakana, i learned hiragana in a day or two but gosh katakana is such a pain😭 kanji comes easy to me for some reason though

    • @robertoa5948
      @robertoa5948 Před 3 lety +24

      did u memorize all of hiragana in a day? also do u think it’s necessary to put in a lot of time to memorize hiragana? ( by memorize i mean looking at the japanese character and automatically knowing what sound it makes )

    • @josephmessina4832
      @josephmessina4832 Před 3 lety +20

      @@robertoa5948 it depends on the person. i would take it slowly if that’s the kind of learner you are! do what is best for you!

    • @depressedteadepressoespres186
      @depressedteadepressoespres186 Před 3 lety +43

      LMAOO YEAH I hate katakana sm. I literally memorized it involuntarily 😂

    • @devanshisharma2447
      @devanshisharma2447 Před 3 lety +31

      same!!! its taking me longer to memorize katakana (i just watched one video lmao but i retain things quickly) and even kanji is easy-ish,,,, WHY KATAKANA VWKEUQJH SO HARD

    • @melaniecubells1236
      @melaniecubells1236 Před 3 lety +8

      @@robertoa5948 it took me maybe a week bc i wanted to be really sure i knew all the hiragana, and now i have memorized it perfectly. really depends the person though! i just took longer to be safe 😁

  • @stevecriddle3299
    @stevecriddle3299 Před 3 lety +613

    One thing I would suggest for watching Japanese content on CZcams: Set up a second "channel" under your user. This then gives you a second user. If you then use the Japanese user for watching Japanese language content and the main user for watching content in your native language, the CZcams algorithm will offer Japanese content to the Japanese user and not try to mix them in with the other user's recommendations.
    I forget where I heard about this, but it's something I wish I had done a lot sooner.

    • @johnjaleco5683
      @johnjaleco5683 Před 3 lety +7

      What a great idea👍

    • @beelzeburger5608
      @beelzeburger5608 Před 3 lety +3

      I'm confused. What do you mean by second channel?

    • @johnjaleco5683
      @johnjaleco5683 Před 3 lety +56

      @@beelzeburger5608 I think he means a second channel.

    • @default632
      @default632 Před 3 lety +6

      Change your "Region" to Japan. Works a lot better.

    • @stevecriddle3299
      @stevecriddle3299 Před 3 lety +16

      Except that CZcams will still try to recommend on your English AND Japanese content. By setting up a second user, you keep the recommendations separate.

  • @alteredpenguin2073
    @alteredpenguin2073 Před 3 lety +492

    I gave up on textbooks because I became obssessed with buying textbooks. Lol

    • @teerich2011
      @teerich2011 Před 3 lety +11

      I tried to curb that learning Korean, then went buck wild after almost three yrs because of a great Korean sale and cheaper shipping

    • @alteredpenguin2073
      @alteredpenguin2073 Před 3 lety +24

      @@teerich2011 It gets addicting especially when a CZcamsr or a blog suggest a new text that helps them.

    • @andreaferreira4865
      @andreaferreira4865 Před 3 lety +2

      Why is this so relatable LOL

    • @vio3366
      @vio3366 Před 3 lety +15

      I will see that as an advantage as i'm poor and can't afford any textbook

    • @islandgirl150
      @islandgirl150 Před 3 lety

      ahahhaa can relate lol

  • @nattojelly8349
    @nattojelly8349 Před 2 lety +48

    I started learning Japanese around 17years ago. My tips are to write as many emails as possible. When I was young there were not many places were you could find Japanese friends online, mostly mixi, so I can imagine it being easier to find email-pals. Most of my Japanese I learned by just writing as many emails with people as possible. It trains your reading as well and forces you to find the best ways to translate parts using google and other online resources.

  • @TokuyuuTV
    @TokuyuuTV Před 2 lety +333

    I love her honesty about how long she's been studying Japanese, and even saying how she isn't at _that_ high of a level (but your Japanese is really good!!)
    Soo many people just try to flex how they became 'fluent' in 1-2 years by 'just watching anime'. They aren't really passionate about the language, they just care about impressing others.
    Your presentation style is really relatable and easy to follow, I'm sure this video will help out a lot of people _actually_ learn Japanese!

    • @ININ-yc1uf
      @ININ-yc1uf Před 2 lety +8

      Well said, personal channels that focus on language content in general have rubbed me the wrong way. Their not so subtle way of display of skills shows even on the thumbnail. At the end you see that more energy and time have been used to show off then to teach. And i mean if your "guide and tips" dont really teach then its obvious videos are just a tool to flex.

    • @goku_dunker_420
      @goku_dunker_420 Před 2 lety +3

      Wouldn't it be the opposite, and that people that learn to be fluent in 1-2 years from just watching anime or singing songs are more passionate??? What you're saying doesn't make sense. Someone can choose to learn from mistakes that to learn from books/teachers.

    • @Judoteki
      @Judoteki Před 2 lety +3

      @@goku_dunker_420 a lot of people try to flex about fluency online but in reality aren't actually fluent though. I'm assuming that is what they mean.

    • @saturn6563
      @saturn6563 Před rokem

      The people who claim they learned Japanese in 1-2 years by watching anime? They wouldn’t be able to hold the most simplest conversation with a native speaker 😂

    • @based9930
      @based9930 Před rokem

      Anyone who claims they became fluent in a language in a year or two is lying.
      However, 10,000+ hours of listening to japanese is a requirement to become competent. Skill building does not lead to fluency in language learning.

  • @shinyuta
    @shinyuta Před 3 lety +349

    I'm japanese so I don't know why I started watching this, but I am learning Korean so this actually helps a lot! And the Kanji thing is so true lmao. My mom looks up quite a few Kanji, because in real life, there are words that you don't use/read for years.
    (edit: I also plan to relearn French, even though I learned french for like 3 years in school, and am part French. I feel like I learned nothing :/)

    • @teerich2011
      @teerich2011 Před 3 lety +7

      Neat! I am in 4th yr studying Korean, and don't know why I'm here either. Stopped studying Japanese 2 yrs ago. Do want to restart this year.

    • @shinyuta
      @shinyuta Před 3 lety +1

      @@teerich2011 how it going with that? I just started a few months ago, self learning. But it's a lot easier since I already speak japanese (a lot of similarities between the 2 languages)

    • @judas.2915
      @judas.2915 Před 3 lety +2

      Hello! I'm french, so if one day you need help for learn french, i can help you if you need! Good luck!!

    • @theofficialpollo
      @theofficialpollo Před 3 lety +3

      I smell lies. I watched one of your videos and you don't look nor sound japanese at all. No hints of you living in Japan either. People have to stop pretending being something they're not.

    • @bumpsy
      @bumpsy Před 3 lety +14

      @@theofficialpollo people also need to stop coming to conclusions without sufficient information. You don't know whether they grew up in the U.S. or elsewhere. Also, expecting "hints" of somebody living somewhere from gaming-videos or just one irl-video makes no sense.
      Also, he very much does look about "half-asian". Probably one parent from the U.S. and growing up there

  • @keehosgrl
    @keehosgrl Před 3 lety +73

    wanikani is lowkey a life saver

  • @jonna_1012
    @jonna_1012 Před 3 lety +63

    I definitely agree with you that there's no need to learn how to write kanji. The most important thing is you can recognize, read and distinguish them from one another. And know their correct spelling in hiragana.

  • @HeDoesWhatHeWants
    @HeDoesWhatHeWants Před 3 lety +135

    I've been learning since 2013... After sooooo many books, experiences, and YEARS, I finally feel comfortable enough to pass the JLPT N2, which has been my goal for a while. In the meantime, I read manga, TRY to watch Netflix series in Japanese with Japanese subs, and talk to friends.
    PS: LOVE Toidai Easy Japanese!

  • @HowAboutLauren
    @HowAboutLauren Před 3 lety +236

    I can totally relate to the whole learning Japanese over and over again. I studied in college and then completely stopped after graduating and am now trying to relearn. I've forgotten some basics but at the same time know a decent amount of intermediate japanese. It's an odd jumble of levels that I'm at, so thanks for the tips!

    • @AllisoninTokyo
      @AllisoninTokyo  Před 3 lety +9

      Ah yes I totally feel you, I was a jumble of levels when I came back here for teaching and only really stabilized last year I think 😂

    • @Lea-po2jj
      @Lea-po2jj Před 3 lety

      Same. I know so many advanced words and kanji but the I keep forgetting the word for fridge or the readings of 生

    • @monpp7329
      @monpp7329 Před 3 lety

      Resonates with this a lot ! I am in a weird state that I took JLPT 1 10 years ago but now struggling with the beginners grammar and forgetting words

    • @safiraishere
      @safiraishere Před 3 lety

      Sameeee 😂😂😂

    • @Acro_LangLearn
      @Acro_LangLearn Před 3 lety

      @@Lea-po2jj Don’t learn all the readings of 生 by itself, learn it through words.

  • @tempchannel101
    @tempchannel101 Před 3 lety +18

    In terms of learning grammar, my primary resource has been a CZcams channel called Organic Japanese with Cure Dolly. I'm only a few months into learning Japanese, but I've found this resource immensely helpful for learning Japanese structure, particularly the "Japanese from Scratch" series. The way the information is presented might be a little strange at first, but once you get used to it, it's amazing!

  • @FaintMouse
    @FaintMouse Před 3 lety +76

    I can relate to the long time learning Japanese too. 15 years now since I took my first class, and Its always been so off and on in my study that I'm just...I catch words but really know nothing. But here I am, trying again, hoping to move to Japan in the next couple of years. So..here we go again!

  • @Yamayorya
    @Yamayorya Před 2 lety +33

    I´m also learning since 2009, I started when I was 14 years old. I took the JLPT N3 test in Dec 2017 and this year or next year I want to get to N2 level :D
    And since 2 years I am a Japanese teacher:D

    • @unpinwino3179
      @unpinwino3179 Před rokem +1

      It's n3 necessary to apply for a job teaching japanese? I'm taking the n3 this year, and I was regretting that decision, I think I should take the N2 to apply for a japanese teaching job (since I'm going to graduate from college next year), since I feel relatively confident in passing n2, but I didn't wanted to take the risk

    • @Yamayorya
      @Yamayorya Před rokem +1

      @@unpinwino3179 そうですね。まず、日本で日本語の教師としてはたらきたいんですか、今暮らしている現場ではたらきたいんですかということを知ってるのは重要です。答えによってどの試験に受けるということを知っている方がいいですね。
      普通に日本で働きたいとき、n2級以上は必要で、それ以外、n3級は結構です。大体初級のレベルだけで教えていくからです。

  • @icarenotreally
    @icarenotreally Před 2 lety +1

    this is the most thorough video on learning Japanese I've seen in a long time, thank you!

  • @cari9157
    @cari9157 Před 3 lety +155

    a tip for anyone who has trouble getting through the text books without a tutor: i've discovered through many errors with not understanding the chapter review questions, that the subreddit /learnjapanese is super helpful! if you post a picture of the problems you have trouble with, someone will always help you better understand what it's asking of you.

    • @lumos_blue
      @lumos_blue Před 2 lety

      what kind of textbooks?

    • @cari9157
      @cari9157 Před 2 lety

      @@lumos_blue I'm using genki but I'm sure the subreddit will help with any

  • @hedobannord1184
    @hedobannord1184 Před 2 lety +1

    Thanks for all the tips! I started learning Japanese a few months ago and am still an absolute beginner but I'm motivated to get better - and the sources you mentioned will definitely help.

  • @Raven_Black_252
    @Raven_Black_252 Před 2 lety +46

    "I make mistakes all the time". My native language is turkish, I know and teach english and now I'm learning japanese. Trust me I struggle most with my native language lmao. Because of the pandemic I haven't been able to speak with anyone other than my mom and the people working at the supermarket but I was able to watch and read everything I couldn't watch and read before the pandemic. I am way more flurent in english now but I struggle a lot while using my native and I keep forgetting every single word and get to urge to throw in some english words. Language is something you should be exposed to all the time. Even if it's your native language, if you don't use it much you will begin to forget things. The same thing applies to foreign languages as well. If you take long breaks while learning japanese or another language, you will end up stagnating. Seriously sitting on a desk with a textbook in front of you and studying language is good, but you can only do that for a couple hours. There are many hours in a day and you should keep exposing yourself to the target language as much as possible. Watch things in japanese, listen to podcasts, listen to songs and sing along, read sth in japanese (manga or sth else doesn't matter) just use it and expose yourself to it. In time, it will become more and more familiar to your ears and your mouth as you keep listening and speaking. Language is a living thing, don't treat it like history or math. There are no formulas and strict ways.

    • @1.merveilleuse
      @1.merveilleuse Před 2 lety

      gerçekten unuttun mu yav

    • @new0news
      @new0news Před 2 lety +1

      Yes! I've heard that kids don't actually learn languages much faster than adults when moving to a new place. It's just that adults tend to have much less time to dedicate to language learning while kids get thrown into school and activities wholly immersed in that other language except when talking to their parents. Parents usually only have a few hours after work that they can really dedicate to language (if that!)

    • @wanda5548
      @wanda5548 Před rokem

      @@1.merveilleuse anadilim türkçe benim de ama en çok türkçeyi unutuyorum kendimi ingilizce daha iyi ifade edebiliyorum mesela şu an gerçekten unutuyorsun araya ingilizce kelime atmak bilerek olmuyor yani refleks gibi bir şey

  • @luckajelinkova875
    @luckajelinkova875 Před 2 lety +1

    This is the most helpful video about learning japanese I've ever watched. Thank you so much for this ❤️

  • @mayabewsher6987
    @mayabewsher6987 Před 2 lety +6

    I started studying Japanese 3 years ago at a language school in Tokyo. I was there for 10 months before coming back to the UK to begin university. Now I’m in my final year of university and just started more advanced language (N2ish level). I think one of the biggest issues we all have is comparing ourselves to others. There are people in my class who are pushing N1 level and are very proficient at speaking, whereas I’m more of an N3 level. I’m proud of my journey so far and definitely hope to come back to Japan for work and to improve my communication ability next year.
    In case anyone is ever curious, the textbooks I’ve used so far are;
    . Beginner= Minna no Nihongo 1 and 2
    . Bridge to Intermediate= Chūkyu Kara manabu Nihongo
    . Intermediate = Tobira, Kanzen master N3Reading, and Kanzen master N3grammar, anki for vocab
    . Upper- intermediate (current texts) = 上級日本語、大学で学ぶためのアカデミックジャパニーズ, Try N2, and Ask N2 単語
    Good luck on your study journeys 😊

  • @ZanezoolanderGaming
    @ZanezoolanderGaming Před 2 lety

    I am going to use a bunch of these points you stated. I will see how well they work for me. Will update when I can. Thanks for the video!

  • @assia84
    @assia84 Před 2 lety

    I LOVE THE INTRODUCTION OF THIS VIDEO SO REAL !!
    you are a good person it shows I hope you will become better in time and reach your goal.

  • @sammakesmusic1
    @sammakesmusic1 Před 3 lety +4

    reading news articles and blogs in japanese can give you a real good feel for formal and casual japanese!

  • @maxantonana5378
    @maxantonana5378 Před 2 lety

    Thank you so much for this video. There isn't really no one that explains the proces of learning japanese and the best way to do it so this reallly helps

  • @jeremieanson8487
    @jeremieanson8487 Před 3 lety +11

    I can relate to this so much. I'm embarrassed to say how long I've been studying Japanese, and I'm studying for the N2 now. It's the long breaks that sabotage progress, you're 100% right. Looking to move there very soon, enough is enough!

  • @JapanesewithTaka
    @JapanesewithTaka Před 3 lety

    Thank you for sharing your method!!
    I really admire you! subscribed 👍
    Thank you from Japan 🇯🇵

  • @owynwithawhy1768
    @owynwithawhy1768 Před 3 lety +19

    I'm just starting to learn Japanese and this was a great video for me. I also like the subtle humor and I think the editing is super clean! Thank you 🙏

  • @Smiling_Dragon
    @Smiling_Dragon Před 11 měsíci

    Thanks, Allison! As someone who has been studying Japanese for a few months now I really appreciate the recommendations you provided. There is just so much to learn that it can be overwhelming on where to start and you gave me some great ideas 😀

  • @yabsyabai
    @yabsyabai Před 3 lety +12

    Hearing you go through your troubles with learning the language and keeping your whole video really authentic to your process has actually motivated me!! It's true, what you said about studying all these materials are kinda hard without a tutor, because in self-study I struggle with tons of distractions ;w;: I will be continuing N4 this summer after half a year of hiatus! Thank you for your tips!! I think it will help me to learn more efficiently!!

    • @AllisoninTokyo
      @AllisoninTokyo  Před 3 lety

      I hope they help!! Good luck!! Yes I’m still a bit garbage without a tutor 😅

  • @CozyCantine
    @CozyCantine Před 3 lety +9

    OMG ALLISON! This is on my recommended section!! I remember you studying Japanese back in highschool - and I've been following your instagram, I'm so happy that you're doing what you love! I absolutely adore your channel by the way!

    • @AllisoninTokyo
      @AllisoninTokyo  Před 3 lety +2

      omggg 😂😂 hi and thank you!! and thank god i’ve improved since high school

  • @user-wl5gx3ci7i
    @user-wl5gx3ci7i Před 3 lety +19

    5:20 I use spotify lyrics(below) and read jpop lyrics, it's really helpful haha

    • @stanskz4630
      @stanskz4630 Před 3 lety +2

      For me it's to put your phone's settings into japanese and using japanese subtitles when watching something in English or any other language,these really helped me (also listen to japanese nursery rhymes,i know it might sound ridiculous but because they're repetitive and easy you'll learn much faster,and also don't focus toooo much on it,it would be overwhelming,this is how i learned English from a super young age,good luck :)!!!)
      One more important thing, never.ever.focus too much on grammar,focus on talking and learn about basic structures,I became super fluent in English by doing the above and i never focused too much on grammar,what you need is vocabulary,I've been learning french for 8 years and i don't know anything because they focus too much on grammar,learn important sentences or general sentences,it's super helpful

  • @shyndashu
    @shyndashu Před 3 lety

    i love the way you speak. it's very clear because sometimes when i listen to natives, it's very difficult for me to understand. that deserves a sub!

  • @user-el7rd8pp1l
    @user-el7rd8pp1l Před 3 lety +42

    Idk I haven't bothered with katakana too much. I did memorize hiragana but I feel like I'm doing OK without katakana. I will properly memorize it soon.

  • @_01v4y
    @_01v4y Před 2 lety +9

    im Japanese even me sometimes i feel like Japanese is soo difficult and struggle too but i hope you enjoy learning Japanese more, keep at it!!
    頑張って下さい!!

  • @JapaneseDojo
    @JapaneseDojo Před 2 lety

    Thank you for these amazing tips for learning Japanese! I learned many hints from this video about teaching Japanese to my students 😊!

  • @nononono-zt5sl
    @nononono-zt5sl Před 3 lety +7

    Love these tips! I didn’t realize I didn’t have to write for the JLPT 😭 Definitely will be changing how I’m studying and will pick up some of the Try books!

  • @user-kj5nq2lc3p
    @user-kj5nq2lc3p Před rokem

    You're killing it with your content!

  • @RogerOhayashi
    @RogerOhayashi Před 2 lety

    Thank you for your advice. I'll try some of them!!

  • @beaudenefinger3312
    @beaudenefinger3312 Před 3 lety

    This was super helpful, thank you so much!

  • @andreaferreira4865
    @andreaferreira4865 Před 3 lety

    This video was super duper helpful! Thank you so much :D

  • @jacksonyoung5931
    @jacksonyoung5931 Před rokem

    Excellent advice. I agree with every points you mentioned. Thank you.

  • @katemostreicher
    @katemostreicher Před 2 lety

    loved your tips, especially the karaoke one! I've been studying for a few years and am building back my knowledge that I lost when I fell off from studying for like a year.

  • @Its-Jules
    @Its-Jules Před 10 měsíci

    this video just lit up a lightbulb in my head and connected the dots on how to learn japanese without overwhelming myself. i feel like when i think about learning japanese its so stressful for me, but just now something just clicked, like i have a plan now, im not sure if it makes any sense at all but this video just inspired me so much, ありがとうございます😊

  • @aianamirai
    @aianamirai Před 3 lety +1

    Wow the tip about easy Japanese app was very helpful, thanks!

  • @justmisguided
    @justmisguided Před 2 lety

    You've inspired me to learn Japanese!! Thank you so much!

  • @kamikochi12
    @kamikochi12 Před 9 měsíci

    Great tips! Thanks so much!!

  • @taniadelongchamp
    @taniadelongchamp Před 3 lety +2

    Great video! I moved to Tokyo just a few months ago and have been furiously learning as much as possible! Obviously very beginner, started about 5 months ago and just getting into Genki 2 this month and so this video is especially helpful :)

  • @alexppeters
    @alexppeters Před 2 lety

    This is a really helpful and awesome video!! thank you! :)

  • @rosara2574
    @rosara2574 Před 3 lety

    Thanks a lot for sharing your ideas and experiences 💙

  • @manilil4258
    @manilil4258 Před 3 lety +8

    girl, could not believe that CZcams recommended your video to me... it's a small world and now I know that you are a CZcamsr! Beautiful video, you go, girl!!

    • @AllisoninTokyo
      @AllisoninTokyo  Před 3 lety +3

      I don't know who you are from your username but thank you! 😂

  • @twilight.2978
    @twilight.2978 Před 2 lety

    I like your humor 😂😂 also thank you for the advices :DD

  • @collinhackett5632
    @collinhackett5632 Před 6 měsíci

    Great video. I’m three days into learning Japanese and these tips will be very helpful at this early stage

  • @paulj5833
    @paulj5833 Před 3 lety +1

    Thanks for the advice! Wanikani looks great.

  • @user-jg8ow9mz2o
    @user-jg8ow9mz2o Před 3 lety +1

    tyvm it actually helped me so much, because now i feel like im stuck after learning the base

  • @Yue_mariin00
    @Yue_mariin00 Před 2 lety

    Thank you for the tips!! Love the video a lot

  • @syndhika
    @syndhika Před 2 lety

    i rlly love how tips and how you're telling it is so clear, this is so helpful! and i want to recommend a book too called "japanese from zero" if you're rlly a beginner, the explanation is so detailed and it's also teaching you in a slow pace, as for someone who may just want to have a casual study i really recommend this book, so you don't really get so much stressed by learning, also for people who has learning disabilities this book may be a very great choice! but i don't recommend for people who want to have intense studying!
    and i always put all the kanji and vocabularies to a flashcard app called quizlet to review what i've just learned and memorize kanji characters, you can also learn from other ppl's sets like japanese core vocab/ kanji, that really helps, bc it offers you a lot ways of studying like flashcards, match the words, short answer kinda thing where you type the answers, and there's a test option for you to see how much you progress! good luck, everyone, we can do this!

  • @100kAnime_
    @100kAnime_ Před 2 lety

    It was actually informative! Thanks

  • @robertnoall8847
    @robertnoall8847 Před 2 lety

    Thanks for the video! Really helped !

  • @marticarreras
    @marticarreras Před 2 lety

    Thanks for your very useful advices!

  • @LiviaTavNaether
    @LiviaTavNaether Před 2 lety

    I loved your video, you are so nice! Thank you for sharing all these information. I could related to you so many times in the video. I am also a slow learner and tried a couple of times last year to learn Japanese. I was depressed and feeling very bad, I jumped on and off of it like 3 times. But I am ok now and very happy learn. It again with a freed mind! I think the biggest mistake is that we are always comparing ourselves to other learners. I wish you all the very best in Japan 🙂

  • @jamiethestranger91
    @jamiethestranger91 Před 2 lety

    Got my first Japanese textbooks, and I’m so excited!

  • @claire6397
    @claire6397 Před 3 lety +20

    i feel like i could do pretty well learning other languages apart from the fact that I have the memory of dory

  • @willbeach8232
    @willbeach8232 Před 3 lety +3

    Interesting video! I'm self-studying Japanese too so thanks for the tips! Looking forward to more videos :)

  • @cameronmilan1467
    @cameronmilan1467 Před 3 lety

    This was so helpful thank you!!

  • @1polyron1
    @1polyron1 Před 2 lety

    I subbed after the 1st minute. Just seemed so relatable.

  • @williamjayaraj9257
    @williamjayaraj9257 Před 10 měsíci

    Thank you for the tips for self studying
    Japanese language.

  • @coolbrotherf127
    @coolbrotherf127 Před 2 lety +3

    I've wrestled with trying to decide if I really want or need to learn various languages, but there's something about Japanese and the culture that keeps pulling me back in that no matter how many times I've taken a break from it, so eventually I just fully dedicated myself to it and after some time studying it became a habit regardless of my current motivation or energy level. It takes a lot of patience and work to get to that point, but it's worth it when I finally started achieving the goals I set for myself.

  • @foreverkei-chan
    @foreverkei-chan Před 2 lety +1

    You accent is phenomenal, as well as your voice pitch and mannerisms. Very Japanese. I’m amazed. I’m studying for N3 and you are my life goal!

  • @user-wm4qp7mg9g
    @user-wm4qp7mg9g Před 3 lety +8

    ありがとうございます! I also recommend HelloTalk, I actually learned a lot by talking to Japanese people there. A lot of foreigners are also willing to help 😊

  • @ZethTheGoat666
    @ZethTheGoat666 Před 2 lety +5

    I've been starting out with Duolingo, it's very good imo.
    Especially the katakana and hiragana learning is made very good

  • @florencesaine-loiselle8680

    Such good tips!

  • @alinebermudez551
    @alinebermudez551 Před 2 lety

    Thank you! I had no idea where to start

  • @AlyssaSaldana1
    @AlyssaSaldana1 Před 3 lety +2

    I came here as soon as I could!

  • @ArtyGirl808
    @ArtyGirl808 Před 2 lety

    This was super helpful, thank you! I'm now getting really serious about learning Japanese, once I get better I'm going to start pestering my friends in Japanese :)

  • @Gardosunron
    @Gardosunron Před 3 lety

    Arigato gozaimasu! This was very helpful Allison.

  • @birviva
    @birviva Před 2 lety

    I like the Ditto Pokémon at the background! By the way, thanks for the advices! :)

  • @seantiwanak
    @seantiwanak Před rokem

    Thank you for your sharing your experiences!

  • @sergiorangel7000
    @sergiorangel7000 Před 2 lety

    Thank you, this is so helpful. Im gonna save this video for when i buy textbooks

  • @coreyscornersaxophone
    @coreyscornersaxophone Před 2 lety

    This was so extremely helpful i feel like I'm your twin with your process of learning Japanese, admittedly I am close to the beginning but I have been making some nice progress using my own method and using advice from tubers like yourself! I've been having big breaks and then forgetting then jumping back in it's been quite toxic lol organisiation has been a big killer along with Katakana as soon as I got Hiragana down my brain just said "k bro no more" 🤣

  • @silentsong2923
    @silentsong2923 Před 3 lety

    Great advice, thank you.

  • @AbuChanOfficial
    @AbuChanOfficial Před 3 lety

    Thanks for these tips, useful for me

  • @annromey4963
    @annromey4963 Před 3 lety

    Thank you so much for this! This is really good :-)

  • @sean-watching
    @sean-watching Před 3 lety

    Thank you so much for this video you are EVERYTHING!!!!!!!! ♥♥♥♥

  • @3woo
    @3woo Před 2 lety

    I just started 3 days ago and this was so useful!

  • @ninatoffutt1651
    @ninatoffutt1651 Před 3 lety

    Thank you Allison! ☺️❤️

  • @zixrush
    @zixrush Před 3 lety

    thank you so much, it is really helpful

  • @lostcharge
    @lostcharge Před 3 lety +6

    I randomly found your video and I had to comment :) I've lived in Japan for 2 years myself and I'm prepping for the N1
    I LOVE a lot of these tips! The karaoke one is one I always forget - not a super huge fan of doing karaoke solo but I have friends that do it and it's helped their Japanese reading speed quite a lot! I did something similar and just watched a lot of Japanese TV with CC subtitles on :)
    And I agree with the native materials - that's my #1 tip, always. There is absolutely SOMETHING for you to enjoy in Japanese, I promise! I'm not a huge manga reader but I found ones I like, I have dramas I've come to love and movies I've cried over... there's something for you, I promise. Now I'm into novels and while I was worried I wouldn't find anything I like, I've been pleasantly surprised :) to be fair, living in Japan means it's easier to find random books to read... 神永学 is a new favorite author of mine for his high pace but lighthearted thrillers.
    I totally forgot about NHK easy, it's such an awesome resource at the N3 level.
    For N1 grammar, I have also been LOVING this set of youtube videos! Might be of help for anyone taking the N1: czcams.com/play/PL-BKXm34J3LmhwJtvYKpCcYWpdhoEYf-f.html
    Anyways, thanks so much for your video :) bringing back some memories for me.

    • @AllisoninTokyo
      @AllisoninTokyo  Před 3 lety

      Thanks so much!!! Love your tips 🙏 N1...I should take that this winter 😂 Scary stuff, good luck in your prep 😭

  • @Sassenfrath
    @Sassenfrath Před 3 lety

    This video has fantastic tips!!!

  • @user-yi9xe7ww9q
    @user-yi9xe7ww9q Před 2 lety

    This video really helps thank you

  • @mymysslice4868
    @mymysslice4868 Před 2 lety

    this is so helpful thank you!!

  • @hayleyscott3566
    @hayleyscott3566 Před 10 měsíci

    Thank you for normalising the katakana and also I have been learning on and off for years so glad I am not alone :')

  • @shapsharps
    @shapsharps Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you and you just earned another Subscriber. I’m trying to learn and I learned a bit of reading and writing Hiragana. Hehe It’s very interesting. Arigato!

  • @Izzy-bq1rc
    @Izzy-bq1rc Před 3 lety +17

    I started learning Japanese by doing pretty much only WaniKani, I wasn't in a class yet and just occasionally skimmed textbooks without really learning anything but I was doing just under a level a week so I was learning Kanji really fast. Now I'm done with WaniKani and I'm in a second year Japanese class but I'm just worried that having been finished doing reviews and everything that I'll go and forget everything I learned.... My grammar and reading isn't good enough for me to actually read materials complicated enough that it'll contain those less common Kanji that I've learned, so I'm worried I'll have to repeat it (I enjoyed using WK but especially towards the end it really dragged, something like 3 hours a day plus all my Uni work) and that would really suck.
    But seriously having done WaniKani, everything else about Japanese is easier. Reading materials I don't quite understand the grammar of is easier as long as it's written with a decent amount of Kanji, most vocab even if I didn't already know it it's easier to remember if I know those readings and readings for the Kanji, it just feels good to recognize a term from WaniKani. Too bad the native materials I can understand are usually written with very little (if any) kanji. Long strings of hiragana make hardly any sense to me.

  • @juliad6201
    @juliad6201 Před 6 měsíci

    Thank you for saying that you've been studying for waaaay to long and that you still make mistakes. I only ever see people online say how fast they learned Japanese, which makes me feel like I'm doing something wrong, but really, it takes a long time! Great advice to make mistakes and keep learning!

  • @keziaseverina
    @keziaseverina Před 3 lety +2

    it's almost one year since i learn japanese as a japanese literature student in my university, im planning to take jlpt N4 exam. thank god youtube recommend me this video

  • @LilBee20
    @LilBee20 Před rokem

    Wanikani is amazing! I tried it when I found out about it from one of your other videos the other day! I personally feel like its absolutely worth the price! And I'm also using the Genki textbook but I got it in PDF form, so I write parts down I feel like are important. I know it's a lot of work but it really helps! I am saving up to get the workbook tho😂. Love your videos Allison!💕

  • @sharmashari
    @sharmashari Před 3 lety +3

    I am learning now. And I use the writing as a way of memorizing them