All the Kanji taught in Japanese School

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  • čas přidán 10. 01. 2018
  • Kanji From Zero! Book 1 Lesson 5 (video #006)
    In this video we learn six more Kanji after looking at EVERY Kanji taught in Japanese school.
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    BOOK DEPOSITORY: bit.ly/2p9Qbnk
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Komentáře • 569

  • @japanesefromzero
    @japanesefromzero  Před 2 lety +4

    Power up your Japanese on FromZero.com (lessons, quizzes, games, ask-a-teacher)

  • @19sho33
    @19sho33 Před 6 lety +271

    This video is in my "recommended for you" list and I'm from Japan. Thank you, youtube.

  • @uchuuseijin
    @uchuuseijin Před 6 lety +292

    I don't know if someone's already said this but
    The reason they added the extra Kanji that led to the new 2000+ total is that the government decided all public documents could only use the Jouyou Kanji, and without the additional Kanji added to the list, the Japanese constitution would have to be rewritten… which would be an international disaster

  • @shuichiromatsuda5712
    @shuichiromatsuda5712 Před 6 lety +18

    I’m Japanese. My job is to check medical statements so I still encounter many kanji with yamaidare 疒. I’m still learning new kanji even after reaching my adulthood.

  • @mycophenolatmophetil
    @mycophenolatmophetil Před 6 lety +243

    I regret I didnt learn japanese earlier! But its never too late I guess :D

    • @shimke43
      @shimke43 Před 6 lety +23

      At 75, I hope you are right. So far, I have passed third year college Japanese, but still cannot speak. Over the summer, I have been using WaniKani on and off. I just discovered this video by accident tonight. Ate there more videos; I think this one is very entertaining (altho sometimes a bit slow) and instructive, and would like to see more.

    • @safir2241
      @safir2241 Před 4 lety +4

      stanley f. Levine
      If you’re still learning, watch Cure Dolly. She teaches the way grammar is in japanese, fundamentally.

    • @xerasferalos9784
      @xerasferalos9784 Před 4 lety +2

      same

    • @trikayatranslationservices9434
      @trikayatranslationservices9434 Před 4 lety +6

      I regret that I didn't continue my studies. After 2 college semesters and 6 months in Japan, I was pretty good back in 2005. And I wish I'd pursued Japanese translation. Instead I went for Tibetan and Tibetan translation, which I don't regret, but I wish I'd also kept up my Japanese studies. Tibetan translation is not a very good field to work in, at least as your main job. But luckily I'm still not that old, 38, and I have a good memory, so I actually remember a great deal of Japanese and am excited to go forward with it.

    • @gdcoolkid2213
      @gdcoolkid2213 Před 4 lety +6

      It’s too late when your dead. Then you can’t learn anything.

  • @robertyin164
    @robertyin164 Před 6 lety +42

    34:00 yen is an older pronunciation for 円, whose kana notation was ヱン (yen).
    34:43 円 in Chinese pronunciation is yuan2, which we always wrote in another form: 圓/圆. 円 is a Japanese simplified form (Shinjitai 新字体), and 圓 is it's traditional form (Kyujitai 旧字体).

  • @5bitcube
    @5bitcube Před 6 lety +351

    8:35 *brain lags for a few seconds* / *eyes are white* / *regains consciousness* / "Now I know kanji"

    • @cunjoz
      @cunjoz Před 6 lety +14

      ...show me...

    • @LonewolfeSlayer
      @LonewolfeSlayer Před 6 lety +6

      Nice reference.

    • @armelstsrt
      @armelstsrt Před 6 lety +4

      Prove it.

    • @peraperic4118
      @peraperic4118 Před 6 lety

      interesting points ,if anyone else trying to find out how to speak japanese online try Sovallo Amazing Japanese Fixer (should be on google have a look ) ? Ive heard some interesting things about it and my m8 got excellent success with it.

    • @yukongaming5055
      @yukongaming5055 Před 5 lety +1

      Very true

  • @MrZhish
    @MrZhish Před 6 lety +168

    RE: why is 円 pronounced 'yen' in English?:
    Apparently it is a relic of the Hepburn romaji system which placed a y before all vowels, also resulting in Yedo (for Edo) and Yezo (for Ezo, the old name of Hokkaido).
    Interestingly, Old Japanese included the sounds 'yi' and 'ye', but they died out (merged with the 'i' and 'e') before kana was created. In fact, there were also the sounds 'wi' and 'we' which indeed did survive long enough to be granted kana representation (ゐ・ヰ and ゑ・ヱ) but are no longer in use since the reformation of the orthographic system in the 20th century.

    • @japanesefromzero
      @japanesefromzero  Před 6 lety +33

      Interesting! I always had assumed it was the what the N made the "e" sound like a YE. I am aware of ゐ and ゑ but never knew about the Hepburn romaji system affecting how we still refer to the money system. Nice work.

    • @kingratt82
      @kingratt82 Před 6 lety +4

      Interesting comment. Now I understand why the merchandise from the Ueno Park Hard Rock Café reads "Uyeno Eki" instead of "Ueno Eki", which would be a more accurate transliteration.

    • @HappySingh-mz5lb
      @HappySingh-mz5lb Před 6 lety +1

      kingratt82 Shouldn't it be Uyeno Yeki?

    • @HappySingh-mz5lb
      @HappySingh-mz5lb Před 6 lety +2

      Thanks. Didn't know that.

    • @kingratt82
      @kingratt82 Před 6 lety +3

      I suppose you're right: it should be "Uyeno Yeki" if they were consistent. But I'm looking at my HRC Uyeno Eki shot glass right now, and I guess consistency wasn't what they were going for.

  • @lewiswilson1987
    @lewiswilson1987 Před 6 lety +4

    I bought the Kanji from Zero book and these videos are super helpful as supplementary and revision material! Thank you!

  • @nickh1846
    @nickh1846 Před 6 lety +1

    You're literally the best Japanese teacher on CZcams and your website and books are ultra helpful when it comes to learning Japanese. I tried learning Japanese 3 times but failed every time. Your CZcams channel pushed me to study Japanese to my fullest extent. I finished your Kanji From Zero book but I still enjoy your content and insight! Thank you so much!

  • @mPDC-gh8jy
    @mPDC-gh8jy Před 6 lety +14

    3:00 教育漢字 is the subset of 常用漢字. So 常用漢字 doesn't 934 characters. The slide of the Power point should be:
    1-6 (1006, 教育漢字)
    7-9 (常用漢字 - 教育漢字 = 1130)

  • @dindi380
    @dindi380 Před 3 lety +5

    Hello, I just want to say that your videos are timeless. 3 yrs ago and still very applicable and valid. I like your style of teaching. I watch some of your videos to supplement my online classes in beginner japanese. Thanks for all these videos!

  • @easyfrenchwithsongs8036
    @easyfrenchwithsongs8036 Před 6 lety +113

    One of the most important thing IMO is to pace oneself. I've come to realize it sticks in my brain when I don't pressure myself to learn X amount of kanji per day or for a certain date.
    I learn a couple kanjis when I feel like it and diversify my learning by doing other japanese-related things when I don't feel like it.
    I'm in the middle of grade 2 right now (plus a couple common kanji) and although my pace when it comes to kanji has diminished lately, I'm still very happy with the progress so far. We have to remember that learning a language is a lifelong marathon and not a short sprint, enjoying the process of discovery is what ultimately is gonna make language-learning a sustainable endeavour IMO.
    Keep up the great work, I'm loving every minute of this journey that you have helped me kickstart!

    • @alexandersonmei
      @alexandersonmei Před 4 lety +1

      How are you doing now? How's your Japanese? Just curious

    • @amarug
      @amarug Před 4 lety +3

      I am just chatting with people on HelloTalk and whenever they write a Kanji I don't know, ill look it up. Its amazing how many of them I have learned like this in a quite short while (of course not to write them by hand with stroke order, but i have no interest in that, I want to be able to read them and type them, thats all)

    • @alexandersonmei
      @alexandersonmei Před 4 lety +2

      @@amarug that's quite interesting. Just out of curiosity, How long have you been studying kanji?

    • @amarug
      @amarug Před 4 lety +2

      @@alexandersonmei I only started learning Japanese this January and ignored Kanji for the first two months completely. So I really am quite new, but exactly considering that, it makes me really happy when I manage to read a 15 line long response without having to look up anything (doesnt happen that often, but it does happen :) )

    • @alexandersonmei
      @alexandersonmei Před 4 lety +1

      @@amarug Yeah I also get that sense of pride when I was able to understand. Even if it's only one single sentence! :D (The moment I realized I was "superior" than most people lol)
      I'm also new btw haha. Just started this last month when corona took over my country. Now in the middle of grade 2. Good for you man! Keep it up! :D

  • @tknelson9603
    @tknelson9603 Před 6 lety +3

    So glad for your video! I have been studying and memorizing Kanji for the past few months and I have been feeling really frustrated at my slow progress. It's refreshing to learn how long it takes native Japanese people to learn the different characters, and that it will take me a good amount of time to get to their level.

  • @vxcvbzn
    @vxcvbzn Před 6 lety +18

    "A lot of people are throwing up right now, I appreciate that."
    I lold

  • @laazforlaaz4287
    @laazforlaaz4287 Před 6 lety +37

    41:42 In linguistics, it’s called ‘allophones’.

  • @joshuagild4327
    @joshuagild4327 Před 6 lety +42

    You're an amazing teacher!

  • @samuraiboy94
    @samuraiboy94 Před 6 lety +11

    Your Channel is awesome! Gearing up for my study abroad trip to Japan, and you’ve been a big help!

  • @christofat2704
    @christofat2704 Před 6 lety +35

    When you say Chinese , it would better to said Mandarin ( recent chinese ), because it may
    pronounce the same way in one of the various southern Chinese dialects which has retained much more the middle( old) Chinese pronunciation! In Chinese hakka, we still same 'tai' not 'da' to say "big'

  • @cameronbunney9708
    @cameronbunney9708 Před 6 lety +5

    I'd been contemplating getting Kanji From Zero 1 for a while and it was this video that caused me to get it, it arrives tomorrow and I can't wait! After my last Japanese class and we were going over essays we'd written (it's mixed ability) and someone called my essay "cheating" after I used kanji, it just made me wanna learn more!

  • @shalashaskalives
    @shalashaskalives Před 3 lety +1

    this video really motivated me, in that it contextualised kanji learning for me, which was quite liberating. I bought Kanji from Zero, but also the Japanese kids book you held up! Both are great.

  • @hanjarake_taro
    @hanjarake_taro Před 4 lety +4

    don't worry guys I am pretty sure that i and most Japanese people are only able to write let's say a half of jouyou kanji. It's totally ok as long as you read them and roughly get the meaning of them.
    Important thing is that kanjis are ideographic letters, meaning if you know the meaning of them you can read through the paragraph super quickly and so instinctively.

    • @yogakudaigaku
      @yogakudaigaku Před 4 lety +1

      That is true a lot of the time pine2pine3, I've found I can get into trouble if I'm presented Kanji with little context sometimes though...

  • @leezhieng
    @leezhieng Před 6 lety +90

    大 still reads as dai in cantonese

    • @leezhieng
      @leezhieng Před 6 lety +15

      円 reads as yuan in chinese

    • @TRA25
      @TRA25 Před 6 lety +7

      Lee it is read as dai in Japanese as well depending on the word.
      E.g. 大好き

    • @no-ds2fb
      @no-ds2fb Před 6 lety +3

      Lee In mandarin it's pretty much pronounced (da)

    • @superman-op9xt
      @superman-op9xt Před 5 lety +1

      大 reads da in mandarin

    • @lilyraimey3499
      @lilyraimey3499 Před 5 lety

      Lee It’s the same in 大丈夫, or “daijobu”.

  • @iPat6G
    @iPat6G Před 3 lety +1

    Great video. This is my very first lesson in kanji study and yet he makes everything so understandable.

  • @Aifvanlopez
    @Aifvanlopez Před 6 lety +1

    George you are awesome. Thanks a lot for all these vídeos. I have been following you for a year so I consider you an uncle. We love you. My japanese is getting better everyday with all your great teaching ideas. 💪😎🇯🇵

  • @XxSnypxX
    @XxSnypxX Před 6 lety +3

    Hey man, I really appreciate what you do. I went through your entire video series on Japanese From Zero in like a month since I was addicted and it really gave me the head-start I needed in understand a lot of sentence structure and grammar concepts that eluded me before (the u-tsu-ru song has helped me a load as well and is always in my mind with conjugation xD.) Keep up what you do man you have really helped a lot of people and I admire the amount of passion you put into what you do!

  • @masayama1618
    @masayama1618 Před 6 lety +7

    30:57 You can use 小鳥(ことり) for Small Birds , but commonly can't use 子鳥(ことり)for Child and Baby Birds. So Please use ひな(雛) for Child and Baby Birds. 子鳥 is very limited usage for it.

  • @ayastrations
    @ayastrations Před 6 lety +1

    I ordered KFZ! It will arrive wednesday and I am super excited!

  • @kennedybelleman1801
    @kennedybelleman1801 Před 6 lety +1

    You are so fun! I'm a begginer in Japanese and you make it so easy.

  • @willyou2199
    @willyou2199 Před 6 lety +3

    28:10 行 is a pictograph of a crossroad, it has an original meaning or road or to go, but that was 1000 years ago, which its usage has changed over time. It went from walk -> operate/carry out/perform -> able to do x, which is why 行 today is "okay" ie "i am able to do whatever you proposed" or basically "okay"
    Its other meanings also kinda follow this, 銀行 "an operator of silver/finance"
    Stretches the mind abit to determine the use of 行 but its 1000 years of change so, it wasn't immediate.

  • @Helenelisabeth1967
    @Helenelisabeth1967 Před 3 lety +1

    Best Japanese courses I’ve found. Thank you 😊

  • @machinegunpreacher2469
    @machinegunpreacher2469 Před 4 lety +2

    First off, thank you for sharing the video, I'll be buying you book(s) soon as I just discovered your material yesterday. I've been studying kanji for a grand total of 24 hours now and I love every bit of it. I started with kanji and will go in reverse to Hiragana and katakana next week (I know that's out of order, but, as I mentioned in another comments section, I think I saved myself from what I will coin as "kanji shock" that people seem to get after studying the aforementioned characters and then starting kanji).
    Secondly, I would like to add some encouragement to anybody who feels like this can be overwhelming:
    Don't be afraid of the "thousands!" For example, think about how many songs you know. I wrote a song years ago that - not counting repeated lines - has 224 words. If you know 20 songs of that fairly short length (and most people know FAR more than that!), you know 4480 details and can readily recall them!
    Or think about all the video games you could walk somebody through step by step, down to knowing even where different decorative pieces are. If you cook, think of how many dishes you could just go right to the kitchen and slap together almost robotically. You can easily learn (*not* memorize!!!!!!) thousands of details if you apply yourself. You already do, whether you knew it or not; so don't be afraid and don't feel overwhelmed. Good luck everyone!

    • @yogakudaigaku
      @yogakudaigaku Před 4 lety +3

      There's a few language systems that actively teach language through making "songs" out of language...there's the concept of "singlish" also.

  • @palomira
    @palomira Před 6 lety +2

    I just bought that exact same Kanji Book for Kids like a week ago 😂 it's really handy and interesting. Also I just found your channel and a few of your earlier Videos helped me understand why I was struggling with Japanese for so many years. So thank you for that. I really appreciate the existence of your content.

    • @Anime101HxH
      @Anime101HxH Před 6 lety +1

      Darleen Rebecca
      Can you give me the name or the link please

    • @palomira
      @palomira Před 6 lety

      JapFrost Sure 小学漢字 1006字の正しい書き方 www.amazon.co.jp/dp/401010855X/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_ObjwAbFS1KWEV

  • @HappySingh-mz5lb
    @HappySingh-mz5lb Před 6 lety +2

    30:01 wow, that's you!! Amazing. I had watched some of those videos about 11-12 yrs ago. It's deja vu all over again. :)

  • @dillonyoung5502
    @dillonyoung5502 Před 4 lety

    Can't wait to add kanji from zero 2 to my collection! あなたの本をよむのを楽しみにしています、ありがとうございます😍😍

    • @dillonyoung5502
      @dillonyoung5502 Před 4 lety

      Please correct me if anyone sees this, ありがとう🙂

  • @651LYS
    @651LYS Před 5 lety +4

    I pursued Japanese and Mandarin consecutively during college but found I preferred the instruction of Japanese at my institution over Chinese. I concur with you that learning one aids in the acquisition of the other. Although I’ve ended my academic studies, I still make attempts at keeping up Japanese in my leisure. Because my parents’ native language is in the Sino-Mien-Yao language family, I sometimes find cognates in their (our) language and the on-yomi of Japanese/Mandarin. Those Chinese were prolific!

  • @xerasferalos9784
    @xerasferalos9784 Před 4 lety +3

    The amount of Kanji you realise that you have to learn at first can be intimidating but it's good to know that it's not something to worry about. 2000 Kanji, from which you need to know a good set of kanji. 6 years: Kyo iku Kanji (1006) then Jyo you kanji (934) (+ the other 904).

  • @unclephil440
    @unclephil440 Před 6 lety +1

    A great video. Thanks for sharing

  • @MikaelMurstam
    @MikaelMurstam Před 4 lety +2

    In Sweden we have 3x3 years of primary school ages 7-15. 3 years of the lowest stage then 3 years of the middle stage (middle school) and then 3 years of the high stage (junior high). Then we have 3 years of high school called gymnasium, which isn't mandatory but it's free and everyone takes it. And then we have University studies which are also free. They even pay us to study. They did that before as well but then the parents got it.

  • @lilyouyang5876
    @lilyouyang5876 Před 3 lety +1

    such good contextual explanation!

  • @Gabriel78224
    @Gabriel78224 Před 6 lety +1

    Long time no see your videos, but it seems that you are doing great as always!

  • @sherastannie
    @sherastannie Před 6 lety +1

    20:21. Actually you can read two kanji that are put together in onyomi only when they’re Japanese last names, because Japanese last names are always in Kanji (most of the times).

  • @coreremix1090
    @coreremix1090 Před 6 lety +2

    Kanji was created in China, middle Asia, Mongol, Korea, Vetnam and Japan and assembled in China. 窓 means window, there are more than 10 regional characters. Most of the Japanese letters were affected by 呉 or 南宋 dinasty, China. In modern day 呉 is somewhere around Canton.
    So many of letters sounds like 広東語 Cantonese. Greetings from Tokyo.

  • @jimmykaming
    @jimmykaming Před 3 lety +1

    extraordinary work of teaching. like a linguist and I loved it. a lot.

  • @queenhylia2360
    @queenhylia2360 Před 5 lety +1

    you're funny and a good teacher, deserved subscriber.

  • @marceloserafini3470
    @marceloserafini3470 Před 4 lety +1

    Dear George I really respect your extraordinary work and talent for teaching languages

  • @hotelpilot3112
    @hotelpilot3112 Před 6 lety +1

    FYI, in Hawaii, it is 6/3/3 years for the elementary/ middle(intermediate)//high school. Thanks

  • @humanbean3
    @humanbean3 Před 2 lety +2

    46:28 :) this joy of the language is what keeps me learning from George

  • @freddie_video
    @freddie_video Před 6 lety +1

    This video is very useful for leaning English for Japanese. Thanks for share.

  • @MrApaHotel
    @MrApaHotel Před 5 lety +2

    I found a book that could be great for understanding why Kanji represents what they do. The book is "The Key to Kanji: A Visual History of 1100 Characters".

  • @ayu2274genki
    @ayu2274genki Před 4 lety +2

    ジョージ先生、いつも楽しい動画をありがとうございます!I always enjoy your channel to study English and to learn how to teach Japanese. 29:08 Actually we sometimes say “中学” like “来年、娘が中学に入学します。” It means “My daughter is going to enter junior high school. “ I don’t know why but “校” just drops here. 🤷‍♂️ But we certainly say “中学校” which sounds more polite.

  • @ThunderK01
    @ThunderK01 Před 6 lety +1

    Hey George! Although I'm way past the general level you teach (I am going for either N2 or N1 this year) and unfortunately I didn't find your books back when I started (so I can't really use your textbooks ;_;) I still find myself coming here for interesting lectures! Especially kanji ^^ keep up the good work!

  • @receptionhotelcalypsogozo632

    Are you planning to write continuation of Kanji book? So you cover all kanji taught at school? all 2136 signs?
    That wld be really great. Definitely I'd be the 1st one to buy all these books!

  • @iCrimzon
    @iCrimzon Před 6 lety +47

    Gym from Zero, when do we expect that

  • @mrhose3577
    @mrhose3577 Před 6 lety +21

    22:23-22:33 WHAT?! I WAS DYING LAUGHING!!!

  • @stefanie369
    @stefanie369 Před 6 lety +1

    Will there be more videos like this one?
    You just earnt yourself a subscriber

  • @Fuwa_san
    @Fuwa_san Před 6 lety +1

    You do realized that once the Japanese students graduated and out of school. Most of them use electronic nowaday to automatics input the kanji with hiragana, and they are not able to recall the kanji to write it. Surveys had been done in Japan. Forgot if it's Nobita or Yuta that did the surveys.

  • @Kirby-Krios
    @Kirby-Krios Před 6 lety +1

    This George human is awesome! Thanks

  • @kotu_pnd4
    @kotu_pnd4 Před 3 lety +1

    When is the second book coming out? These are great!

  • @jasonchia8484
    @jasonchia8484 Před 3 lety +1

    you're right. The Chinese readings are usually more similar sounding to the words in Chinese dialects rather than Mandarin (because Chinese dialects are closer to the ancient spoken Chinese as compared to Mandarin)

  • @sherrimooncat8368
    @sherrimooncat8368 Před 4 lety +2

    2:11 It is the case for the most of China except for Hong Kong where we use Traditional Chinese and and we have a different dialect as well. Rather than China and Hong Kong sharing similarities in language, it's actually Taiwan and Hong Kong sharing similarities from what I have seen. I could be wrong since I am from Hong Kong.

  • @user-zn7ss6oe5z
    @user-zn7ss6oe5z Před 6 lety +4

    Hi!! This is one of the best fundamental Japanese videos I've ever seen! Thank you a lot!
    BTW, the last word you've introduced in the video, 目, is still used as a literal meaning of "eye" in current Chinese.
    Like we say "目光 (eyesight)," "目擊 (to witness)." Sorry for using the traditional ones because I'm from Taiwan...
    I'm also learning Japanese! 中国語の勉強頑張って!

  • @spacemonkey68
    @spacemonkey68 Před 6 lety +16

    Hi George - thank you, thank you, thank you .... finally, someone who actually says learning kanji takes a long time! I'm British and I've been learning kanji for a couple of years and started taking the kanji kentei tests along the way. I also have shodou classes every couple of weeks and that's incredibly satisfying ... something about being able to get really deeply into the minutia of the strokes is just, well, therapeutic. Actually, I've started combining my other hobby, photography ... using
    long exposure photography to write kanji characters in the air with glow-sticks. I took a practice kanji kentei test earlier this evening, I've got a test on Sunday ... scored 75% ... and need 80% to pass the test. As I said to my Japanese friend, "Winston Churchill said, 'Success is going from failure to failure without losing your enthusiasm.'" ... that's kind of how I view learning kanji ... sure, it takes time, but damn it, I love it ... and so, it really doesn't matter about how long it takes ... as long as I enjoy it, I'll stay enthusiastic ... and that's going to get me there ... eventually.

  • @wanyinleung912
    @wanyinleung912 Před 6 lety +3

    15:05
    I think the kanji wasn't really "鳥" but "烏" instead (the 6th one in the 1st row counted from the right).
    If so, it doesn't mean bird!
    (They look similar though)

  • @kylewelsh_krossdesu7700
    @kylewelsh_krossdesu7700 Před 6 lety +1

    I saw someone ask about Kindle versions of the JFZ series along with your response regarding those editions being released once revisions are complete. I'd like to know: does that include plans to release Kindle versions of Kanji from Zero too? I just finished book 1 of JFZ and I'm working on Korean too (book 2!). That said it'll probably still be a while before I begin realllly going after Kanji, but it'd be nice to have it on my device when the time comes. Thanks! I hope the new year is going well for you!

  • @nobodyz2700
    @nobodyz2700 Před 6 lety +7

    @17:25 In 大夫 there is Dai reading, however it is the only exception. "Daifu" which means a doctor. I guess it comes from old Chinese reading then.

    • @japanesefromzero
      @japanesefromzero  Před 6 lety +4

      大夫 isn't one I have seen for Chinese. I have seen 医生 (yishang) for doctor though.

    • @nobodyz2700
      @nobodyz2700 Před 6 lety +2

      Yeah, Daifu and yisheng are related to the same profession. I was just lucky to learn both of them. I just found that interesting and worth sharing :) And btw, I am studing Chinese now thanks to you, because you metioned that in one of your viedos (mb 1 year ago). I enjoy studying both Japanese and Chinese.
      Thank you for uploading videos on youtube.

    • @vandamme6379
      @vandamme6379 Před 6 lety +1

      George can I recommend Nciku.com? It's really good for learning new words in simplified Chinese. I only use it for new words then I have to change it to traditional.😁😁

    • @anatheistmyself
      @anatheistmyself Před 6 lety +3

      +Learn Japanese From Zero!
      大夫 and 醫生 are both doctors.
      大夫 is the more ancient way of saying doctor.

    • @jiagengliu
      @jiagengliu Před 6 lety +1

      大夫 is more polite. Like when you are visiting the doctor you would call him/her 大夫. 医生 is used to refer to the job or a third person.

  • @user-bu4sc7ei7i
    @user-bu4sc7ei7i Před 11 měsíci +1

    Thank you George for your wonderful books and videos... Your comments make so much sense. Japanese have many years to learn grammar and Kanji... and already have a huge vocabulary before attending elementary school. So why do Japanese Language Schools expect students to be N1 or N2 in 18 months to 2 years... (starting from barely knowing hiragana). I loved my year in Japan at school, (albeit it was during Covid), but the speed at which I was expected to learn all aspects (including handwriting) of the Japanese Language really detracted from the whole experience. Thanks for your videos and books, which have got me back on the Japanese learning trail...

  • @mekabare
    @mekabare Před 6 lety +1

    Awesome video! I love how slow you're going and the detail you add. Also did you lose some weight? Looking real good

  • @riccardosarti3234
    @riccardosarti3234 Před 5 lety +3

    Hi! Love your channel, you’ve been doing a great job! Just 2 questions:
    1) is there a rule for the exceptions to the general rule of KUNyomi-alone, ONyomi-together? I ask that because sometimes it’s the opposite, e.g. with numbers.
    2) why, when writing the furigana of a kanji that must be pronounced with the ONyomi, do you use hiragana instead of katakana?
    Thank you so much!

    • @ShitajiMado
      @ShitajiMado Před 4 lety +2

      1. There is no rule, odd combinations are to be memorized individually.
      2. Furigana is usually written in hiragana, including kun-, on- and irregular compounds. I cannot recall any instances of furigana written in katakana in any pieces of texts I’ve read.
      Hope that answers your questions if you hadn’t still found the answer.

  • @multibrandan
    @multibrandan Před 4 lety

    Funny that you’re drinking that. I actually found tea bags at Costco. It looks awesome n every time I go there I always like to look for it

  • @sadgoy.
    @sadgoy. Před 6 lety +1

    In roughly the 38:00 you were talking about
    円い(まるい)
    and
    丸い(まるい)
    right?
    Yeah, japanese words themselves can be written with different kanji but BE the same word. So, both words are written differently but it's essentially the same word.

  • @SeanORaigh
    @SeanORaigh Před 6 lety +1

    円 in 中文 is yuan2. As far as I know, it just means yen. Probably doesn't get used much, if I had to guess.

  • @yukosjapanesetime1607
    @yukosjapanesetime1607 Před 6 lety +1

    around 24:15
    high school is tall school but high school which is 高校 is actually literally means high school. 高is tall but also has meaning of "high"

    • @anatheistmyself
      @anatheistmyself Před 6 lety

      +Yuko's Japanese time
      In Cantonese, it is also 高校-gou haau.
      In Mandarin it is 高中-gao zhong.

  • @TheFormActually
    @TheFormActually Před 6 lety +60

    George, why are you getting younger ? how ? what are you drinking man ?

  • @firebreathingmoonbeam3961

    When do you recommend us starting with Kanji from zero?
    With your videos I am going through your books pretty quickly.
    Lol though I am using ankidroid/anki to help remember the vocab in your books. :)

  • @multibrandan
    @multibrandan Před 4 lety +5

    Just saw your bit about your “cute Japanese” iteration. U got a laugh from me ;)

  • @saoliath5000
    @saoliath5000 Před 4 lety +2

    i dont think kanji necessarily means someone knows a lot about speaking Japanese, but it helps with reading which helps with learning more Japanese.

  • @kennylaysh2776
    @kennylaysh2776 Před 6 lety +2

    Can you imagine if we were still learning new English letters in HIGH SCHOOL? OMG. I think maybe I've bitten off more than I can chew in trying to learn Japanese! I love hiragana and katakana, it's the kanji that makes me not sure about continuing to learn.

    • @no-ds2fb
      @no-ds2fb Před 6 lety +2

      Nefrai Laysh Well If you think about it, kanji are the building blocks of words and can be words themselves. It like learning new words in English class everyday

  • @robertmartens7839
    @robertmartens7839 Před 5 lety +1

    at 23:10 you say naka by itself is not read as chu by itself but on a menu the beer size is written simple as chu

  • @Magkuuuuuus
    @Magkuuuuuus Před 6 lety +1

    Hey! I just found ur channel some days ago and watchin the Japanese From Zero! Playlist. Is the playlist complete or what should i watch when i finished it? :) Btw i already subbed :)

  • @user-gc7gf9ql5p
    @user-gc7gf9ql5p Před 6 lety +1

    29:00 In some situation, 学 is omited, like in「中学入試」「中学生」「中学受験」「小学生」

  • @wanyinleung912
    @wanyinleung912 Před 6 lety

    Very informative!

  • @gianglai6242
    @gianglai6242 Před 4 lety +10

    Hmmm... "Anime"-styled woman on the cover. I buy the book.

  • @hugefan4572
    @hugefan4572 Před 4 lety +1

    Wow this is from 2 years ago? Damn lol well cheers to another great video sensei💯

  • @giannisniper96
    @giannisniper96 Před 5 lety +1

    amazing! keep it up!

  • @tehpillemannerator
    @tehpillemannerator Před 4 lety +1

    Love the flashbacks

  • @HappySingh-mz5lb
    @HappySingh-mz5lb Před 6 lety +1

    27:30 小 - In Mandarin, XIAO is 3rd tone. I hope you don't mind me saying this, but when you said it, it sounded like the 4th tone, and also like SHAO. Thanks.

  • @firebreathingmoonbeam3961

    This is for myself because I'm going to revisit this video several times.
    15:50

  • @partialintegral
    @partialintegral Před 6 lety +1

    行 is used for 'go' in Chinese, e.g. 步行 take a walk

  • @teewhaay
    @teewhaay Před 6 lety +1

    I know there's much more books to cop other than the two books that you got on display. I JUST KNOW IT. Cause 6 years is an extremely long process for anyone to learn Japanese. I'm looking for a good Japanese Kanji to English translation with the Japanese phonetics either over it or under it. That'll help me memorize at least the two Elementary Grades from 1 and 2.

  • @Chocolategaijin
    @Chocolategaijin Před 6 lety +1

    im gonna buy this book next friday! i cant wait! xD

  • @Kurumiinho
    @Kurumiinho Před 5 lety +1

    I’m definitely buying that book, I’m always studying japanese in middle of my school days hahaha that would help me a lot because I wouldn’t need my phone

  • @raymondtm9559
    @raymondtm9559 Před 6 lety +1

    Great video 👍

  • @SeanORaigh
    @SeanORaigh Před 6 lety +2

    I'm learning Chinese alongside Japanese and the week that I learned pinyin, I focused mostly on Chinese and it stuffed up my pronunciation of しょしゅしゃちゃちゅちょ a fair bit.

    • @bmedve3427
      @bmedve3427 Před rokem +1

      Thank you for mentioning this. Was wondering, as I have a short Chinese crashcourse still ahead of me 😊

  • @drewharnedy8038
    @drewharnedy8038 Před 6 lety +1

    Arigato gozaimasu Trombley-sensei. I live in the states and have no intention of moving to Japan but am studying Japanese on my own so I can explore parts of Hokkaido that tourists never see. Say-oh-nah-rah!

  • @ymgaki7715
    @ymgaki7715 Před 5 lety +3

    No wonder you look and sound so familiar to me. I realised after seeing your George and Keiko clip. Was a huge fan! What happened to Keiko san? 頑張れジョージさん!

  • @Dadiddy97
    @Dadiddy97 Před 6 lety +1

    haha I know like 10 kanjis, I'm not in a rush to learn them but I knew how to read naka because of Terrace House because it's in Minori's last name and I always thought her kanjis looked pretty, very geometrical.

  • @kekekk4273
    @kekekk4273 Před 4 lety +9

    1:54 It’s probably because japanese people already know how to speak Japanese. They use the words from kanji on a daily basis. They have time to learn kanji, since they already use them. On the other hand, we foreigners don’t know how to speak Japanese.

  • @7coloreddrops
    @7coloreddrops Před 6 lety +1

    27:05 「~中」っていうのは一般的に「書き言葉」ですね。確かに話し言葉では一般的ではありませんが、全く使わないというものでもありませんね。
    口語体と文語体が混在するのも難しさの一つですよね。
    英語で日本語を学習する奇異な感覚は新鮮でした。楽しく見させていただきました。
    因みにワタシは elementary school までアメリカ在住経験のある native Japanese です。

  • @yourinternetboyfriendasmr

    I have a Kanji dictionary from amazon and it teaches the school kanji and kanji used in names and it has 3,002 kanji with stroke order and words using the kanji