I started to learn Japanese last year (2020), right when COVID-19 pandemic begun. I created my own anki deck right from the beginning and kept adding cards as I came across new words. I added 2000 words in 2020 and I have already added 2500 more cards this year 2021, which sums up to 4500 cards so far. Considering that there are still a few months yet to come this year I will probably have added around 5000 words in total or more by the end of this year. Don't be unmotivated to start your anki card, it takes time, but trust me, it is worth it.
I got the basic idea of combining japanese and English subtitle files to make and Anki deck but it would have been great to hear you finish describing this strategy.
I imported the 2k/6k optimized deck, but it doesnt seem to be 'optimized ' at all? It isnt ordered in any particular order, all the example sentences are entirely gibberish to me except for the word on the card itself. I made sure to check that anki isnt shuffling them for the review. Help?
I would say it really depends on your level, im kinda advanced at english so I use like 3 decks at the same time, 1 for vocab, 2 for phrasal verbs and last for prepositions, and as I said it depends on your level, basically thanks to my level I can handle 3 at the same time but I would also say that it depends on the stuff you're learning in those cards
The best deck for Japanese (at least for me) was and still is JLab's beginner course. It's free to download, and after finishing the first half of it I'm finally able to understand something. This deck takes you through the N5 and N4 grammar with more than 1000 examples from Japanese anime and media. Really, it's not advertisement, moreover, the deck is completely free.
the card starts with something like a baseball team in kanji, which I have never learnt considering that I have only ever studied 1-10 and watashi kanjis 😅😅
just keep going at it, don't overthink what terms you're learning, they are the most common ones. Baseball is super popular in japan so most likely you'll see the kanji somewhere in real life.
I think this is too much. If you want not to get bored too quickly I suggest you go for 15-20min in the morning and the same amount of time before going to bed. Anki is incredibly efficient in terms of memorizing words and sentences, however it has not to be your main ressource. Learning a language has to be fun, I would recommend a lot of listening during the day and speaking too (speaking comes with time). This worked for me.
One day I reviewed 600 cards in one day but after that didn't remembered actually those cards lol. But eith a new method that I called brute force I forced me to say the correct answer with only 4 seconds if couldn't then I had 7 seconds to remember it and pass to the next card and repeat. I actually forget a lot of times the same and the same card BUT I noticed that card that made me fail always so indirectly I could memorize that card too,for being too repetitive to watch again and again and because somehow I was tired of looking at it so much times that I just memorized, something like "Bah it's that card that I can't remember easily again! ... But now I just have to remember that this card is the one I always forget!" Just calculate in how much time do you want to learn your cards:) 3000cards for example in 30 days will be 100 cards per day 6000 will be 200 If you do 600 cards per day you will reduce that to only 10 days instead of 30 and so on, in other words is based in how much you can resist studying without boring you Sorry for bad English
@@Narulopo just relax, I always click green and the next day or the day after I'll somehow remember it, I don't force myself in any way, I just look at any word in a flashcard with interest, maybe find some extra info about in a dictionary app and then just click the green button even if I don't really remember it already, somehow I end up remembering it anyway, and I'm learning Chinese, so I remember the character, the pronunciation, the tones and the meaning, no hiragana haha
With 20 cards a day, depending on the length of the sentences and if each one has new words, in about 4 months your reading level in English will already be good.
I started to learn Japanese last year (2020), right when COVID-19 pandemic begun. I created my own anki deck right from the beginning and kept adding cards as I came across new words. I added 2000 words in 2020 and I have already added 2500 more cards this year 2021, which sums up to 4500 cards so far. Considering that there are still a few months yet to come this year I will probably have added around 5000 words in total or more by the end of this year. Don't be unmotivated to start your anki card, it takes time, but trust me, it is worth it.
Pode me passar o link mano?
Can you share your deck, please?
Compartilha o teu deck com a gente aí, campeão.
@@eoungbyul378 Com certeza, atualmente está com 7307 cards: drive.google.com/file/d/1z50-w7Wd7m9-GfUKQ9i-jV62Bnr2vj9u/view?usp=sharing
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I would love to know what you've done after please !
That was definitely the best deck out there, thanks man
I got the basic idea of combining japanese and English subtitle files to make and Anki deck but it would have been great to hear you finish describing this strategy.
I don't know why, my computer stopped recording at some point.
Wow that's awesome advice! Thanks 😎 subbed
I imported the 2k/6k optimized deck, but it doesnt seem to be 'optimized ' at all? It isnt ordered in any particular order, all the example sentences are entirely gibberish to me except for the word on the card itself. I made sure to check that anki isnt shuffling them for the review. Help?
What happened to the rest of the video? It seems very helpful, but what did you do with the text editor after the video cut?
I'm planning on making a followup.
ありがとうございます!
How many decks should I be using because I already have 3 but is that too many?
I would say it really depends on your level, im kinda advanced at english so I use like 3 decks at the same time, 1 for vocab, 2 for phrasal verbs and last for prepositions, and as I said it depends on your level, basically thanks to my level I can handle 3 at the same time but I would also say that it depends on the stuff you're learning in those cards
The best deck for Japanese (at least for me) was and still is JLab's beginner course. It's free to download, and after finishing the first half of it I'm finally able to understand something. This deck takes you through the N5 and N4 grammar with more than 1000 examples from Japanese anime and media.
Really, it's not advertisement, moreover, the deck is completely free.
When I import the deck is there any settings I should have to set that you recommend?
Not necessarily. Just learn how to use Anki.
So if i learn the 2k/6k deck i Will be N2?
is there a part 2 for this video ?
Not yet!
bro I'm begging you to upload the rest of the video!
yeah it just stopped ahahahha
I'm working on it
I need the part 2 of the video
I'll try to make it
the card starts with something like a baseball team in kanji, which I have never learnt considering that I have only ever studied 1-10 and watashi kanjis 😅😅
just try to memorize and recall them and if its not possible buy rtk
yes
just keep going at it, don't overthink what terms you're learning, they are the most common ones. Baseball is super popular in japan so most likely you'll see the kanji somewhere in real life.
Can you pass jlpt n2 vocabulary section with this deck?
In theory yes. N2 is 6,000 words. In practice, not sure. You'll need to encounter those words in another context.
how much time would you recommend spending on anki a day? i currently do 1 hour in the morning and 30 minutes before i go to sleep.
I think this is too much. If you want not to get bored too quickly I suggest you go for 15-20min in the morning and the same amount of time before going to bed. Anki is incredibly efficient in terms of memorizing words and sentences, however it has not to be your main ressource. Learning a language has to be fun, I would recommend a lot of listening during the day and speaking too (speaking comes with time). This worked for me.
@@NiimaGh okay, thanks for the advice :)
One day I reviewed 600 cards in one day but after that didn't remembered actually those cards lol. But eith a new method that I called brute force I forced me to say the correct answer with only 4 seconds if couldn't then I had 7 seconds to remember it and pass to the next card and repeat.
I actually forget a lot of times the same and the same card BUT I noticed that card that made me fail always so indirectly I could memorize that card too,for being too repetitive to watch again and again and because somehow I was tired of looking at it so much times that I just memorized, something like "Bah it's that card that I can't remember easily again! ... But now I just have to remember that this card is the one I always forget!"
Just calculate in how much time do you want to learn your cards:)
3000cards for example in 30 days will be 100 cards per day
6000 will be 200
If you do 600 cards per day you will reduce that to only 10 days instead of 30 and so on, in other words is based in how much you can resist studying without boring you
Sorry for bad English
@@Narulopo just relax, I always click green and the next day or the day after I'll somehow remember it, I don't force myself in any way, I just look at any word in a flashcard with interest, maybe find some extra info about in a dictionary app and then just click the green button even if I don't really remember it already, somehow I end up remembering it anyway, and I'm learning Chinese, so I remember the character, the pronunciation, the tones and the meaning, no hiragana haha
@@Narulopo how's it going?
When should you start using decks? Im nearly done with duolingo so should i start soon?
yeah maybe start now because on decks you will see some vocab you learn in duolingo
Dont use duolingo, that thing is a waste of time, better use a textbook
you can start
im at chapter 13 of duolingo using it for 50 days do you think i should start useing anki
@@thedodoplayer8521 I think you should transition to Anki as soon as possible.
The video didn't finish wtf
Wow didn't notice that! Thanks for your comment
@@loistalagrand give me download link
Please finish it.
Just curious though, even if you make your own cards and see the same thing 10 times, you will end up getting bored.
Yes. Try to make cards using Netflix
lol im curious why your website was hacked.. ....
not sure either
Oh fuck i'll have to learn English so that i get these Japanese anki cards
Good luck! How are you now?
With 20 cards a day, depending on the length of the sentences and if each one has new words, in about 4 months your reading level in English will already be good.
You can also mass-translate the cards
How many words a day do you recommend
20
Depends on you. Find a comfortable number that you can handle.
20 is desirable, but depends. Card reviews quickly stack up especially when you forget words. 15 might be a good tradeoff value.
5 is sustainable. 10 is doable, but ambitious. Any more than that, and you'll need to put in a significant amount of time to get your flashcards done.
I'm learning English, do you know of any decks that are good to learn?
Nice muscles
Is this video supposed to be like this? It’s literally cut in the middle of a sentence and voila that’s it?
There was some technical issue, sorry!
Replupload full video