The Complexity of Kanji

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  • čas přidán 9. 06. 2024
  • This video is all about Japanese Kanji and some of their features and complexities that make them both mystifying and fascinating.
    Click the link to get a free account to JapanesePod101: bit.ly/japanese-pod-101.
    (Full disclosure: if you sign up for a premium account, Langfocus receives a small referral fee.)
    Credits for this video:
    Paul Jorgensen: Producer, host, video editor, and co-writer
    Willow Groundwater: Writer
    Support Langfocus on Patreon: / langfocus
    Special thanks to my awesome Patreon supporters:
    Brandon Gonzalez, Zhiyuan Shi, Vincent David,
    Andres Resendez Borgia, Rosalind Resnick,
    Atsushi Yoshida, Paul Boychuk, Nicholas Gauci,
    Jacob Madsen, Yuko Sunda, Victoria Goh,
    Adam Fitch, ShadowCrossZero, Michael Arbagi,
    Trevor Lawrence, Pomax,
    John Moffat, Auguste Fields, Guillermo Jimenez,
    Bennett Seacrist, Ruben Sanchez Jr, Eric Garland, Brian Michalowski,
    Sebastian Langshaw, Lorraine Inez Lil, Sergei Tikhomirov,
    Scott Russell, Florian Breitwieser, Fiona de Visser, Raymond Thomas,
    divad, Justin Faist, Sidney Frattini Jr, Adam Powell, Donald and
    Alexandria Wycoff, Maurice Chou, Scott Fujan, Greg Gibson, Kenneth M Thomas,
    Mikael Uttermalm, Phoebe Churches, Ann DeFeo, Christopher Lowell,
    Donald Tilley, Stephen, Harry Kek, Sean Padraig, Andrew Woods, Jesus Fernando Miranda Barbosa, Leo, Diane Young, Erin Robinson Swink, Stefan Reichenberger, Oleksandr Ivanov,
    Frédéric Fournier, Spartak Kagramanyan, Don Ross, Carl Bergquist, James and Amanda Soderling, Robert (Bob) Dobbin, Ale Hanselka, Joel Mills, Adam Vanderpluym, Theophagous, Rui Rizzi, Mike Forster, Christian Langreiter, Shawn MacIntyre, Dmitry Stillermann, Kristoffer Karlsson, Henri Saussure, James Lillis, Steely Dan Rather,
    Jens Aksel Takle, yasmine jaafar, Tryggurhavn, Benham Esfahbod, JC Edwards, Ashley Dierolf, Steve Decina, Thomas Mitchell, Mahmoud Hashemi, fatimahl, Kevin Law, David LeCount, Carl Saloga, Edward Wilson, Mohammed A. Abahussain, Peter Niktin, JL Bumgarner, Rob Hoskins, Thomas A. McCloud, Ian Smith, Nicholas Gentry, Brent Werner, Kevin J. Baron, Matthew C, Caio Fernandes, Suzanne Jacobs, Johann Goergen, Leo Barudi, Piotr Chmielowski, Rick Gerritzen, Mark Kemp, Éric Martin, Marco Antonio Barcellos Junior, Simon Blanchet, Sergios Tsakatikas, Bruno Filippi, Jeff Miller, Panot.
    Music:
    Intro: “Sax Attack” by Dougie Wood.
    Main: "Covert Affair - Film Noire" by Kevin Macleod.
    Outro: “Rollin' Through Osaka” by MK2.

Komentáře • 5K

  • @Langfocus
    @Langfocus  Před 4 lety +243

    Hi everyone! Are you learning Japanese? Click the link to visit JapanesePod101: bit.ly/japanese-pod-101. A free account gives you access to lots of great content, then you can upgrade if you want ALL OF IT :)
    If you're studying a different language, check out my page on all the Pod101 programs in general: langfocus.com/innovative-language-podcasts/.
    (Full disclosure: if you upgrade to a paid plan, Langfocus receives a small referral fee. But if I didn't like it, I wouldn't recommend it!) :)

    • @Bellasie1
      @Bellasie1 Před 4 lety +3

      Answers as native: kanji are the backbone of the Japanese text. It is harder to read Japanese without kanji.
      Also, speaking Japanese without kanji would mean there would be much less vocabulary than is available now.

    • @toffeekun1717
      @toffeekun1717 Před 4 lety +1

      Are you the CEO of the channels with "Pod101"?

    • @Anonymous-cn6zl
      @Anonymous-cn6zl Před 4 lety +1

      @@toffeekun1717 Yes, he owns the Pod101/Innovative languages company.

    • @hirofan
      @hirofan Před 4 lety +3

      I can’t believe how many
      pronunciations there are
      for the kanji 生. 😣

    • @gabaanakov
      @gabaanakov Před 4 lety +5

      あなたの英語はとても聞き取りやすいです!

  • @morbidmistress5602
    @morbidmistress5602 Před 5 lety +6241

    Japanese class...
    Foreign students: Kanji is the only thing I can’t read
    Chinese students: Kanji is the only thing I can read

    • @pritheebecareful7070
      @pritheebecareful7070 Před 5 lety +543

      All the foreign students should team up with the Chinese students

    • @alanconde1974
      @alanconde1974 Před 4 lety +186

      Scopami they can’t because the Chinese people have different sounds than in Japanese... 😑

    • @megancress1384
      @megancress1384 Před 4 lety +585

      @@alanconde1974 as a chinese student learning japanese, the kanji are the only words that i *understand* whereas all the other stuff i can only *pronounce* so if we all teamed up it'd make everything so much easier

    • @triggeredravioli
      @triggeredravioli Před 4 lety +7

      @@pritheebecareful7070 "Scopami"

    • @Demiurge155
      @Demiurge155 Před 4 lety +5

      Hahahaah

  • @hcmichele
    @hcmichele Před 4 lety +1598

    i wish i knew how the necessity for the kanji "dragons on the move" arose. the curiosity is killing me.

    • @VenomBurger
      @VenomBurger Před 4 lety +201

      It was used in the name of one guy. It was never important, but people think it looks cool, so it's used very rarely in like Shop Names.

    • @rzeka
      @rzeka Před 4 lety +43

      Wikipedia calls it a "dictionary ghost word".
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taito_(kanji)
      There are a couple in English, like "dord"
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dord

    • @chicoti3
      @chicoti3 Před 4 lety +267

      I mean, how else are you going to signalize to your fellow neighbor that dragons are coming?

    • @aman-hl9re
      @aman-hl9re Před 4 lety +29

      @@chicoti3 just say danger danger

    • @aman-hl9re
      @aman-hl9re Před 4 lety +8

      @@VenomBurger cool name

  • @SteveSilverActor
    @SteveSilverActor Před 3 lety +736

    So if you are thinking about starting a band in Japan called "Verbose Dragons on the Move", be aware that it would take a really long time to write it by hand.

    • @smugmedievalman6909
      @smugmedievalman6909 Před 3 lety +70

      The kanji for verbose is quite ironic XD.

    • @angsern8455
      @angsern8455 Před 3 lety +16

      Makes it more interesting, plus, the go around with a wooden stamp.

    • @mattfield3371
      @mattfield3371 Před 3 lety +5

      My question...is this a sort of an example of Onomatopoeia?

    • @thejevjeff19
      @thejevjeff19 Před 2 lety +28

      "Can I have your signature?" "Alright wait me 5 minutes"

    • @mcmerry2846
      @mcmerry2846 Před 2 lety +1

      Just read in latinised form

  • @zzzz_020
    @zzzz_020 Před 3 lety +377

    As a Chinese native speaker and I also learned Japanese before, I can say that in the beginning Kanji can be really the easiest part for us to understand but when I’m not a beginner anymore kanji can be the hardest part because I need to memorize their pronunciations while fighting against its Chinese pronunciations

    • @blackcat_wing4115
      @blackcat_wing4115 Před 2 lety +17

      Their pronounce is like "Chinese with Japanese accents" 🤣
      听上去有点像有口音的中文或者方言

    • @chouetteboi3826
      @chouetteboi3826 Před 2 lety +4

      I have this same problem tooo, I've been learning chinese for a while and I really want to pronounce a character a certain way, like 日本, then I say to myself noooo it's nihon

    • @blackcat_wing4115
      @blackcat_wing4115 Před 2 lety +10

      @@chouetteboi3826 and that's why sometimes we Chinese call Japan “霓虹”,which pronounces "nihong",similar to 日本‘s Japanese pronounce😂😂😂

    • @linderoes7832
      @linderoes7832 Před rokem

      @DaGamerGuy Much different.

    • @linderoes7832
      @linderoes7832 Před rokem

      @DaGamerGuy English and Spanish are both a part of Indo-European language.They have similar grammer,but Chinese grammer and Japanese one are much different.

  • @Pining_for_the_fjords
    @Pining_for_the_fjords Před 6 lety +2376

    So if I'm ever in Japan and I need to warn somebody that a bunch of dragons on the move are about to destroy the town, and they want me to write down the warning, I'll know how to do it.

    • @clairee4939
      @clairee4939 Před 6 lety +113

      Does Japanese also have this expression for "heavy traffic" I wonder;
      “车水马龙” ?
      The individual characters are “car water horse dragon”!!! ("che shui ma long" in Mandarin ). Now that is some noteworthy traffic to report! haha!

    • @1love10
      @1love10 Před 6 lety +35

      In Chinese it would be something like this 龘準備要毀滅城鎮。

    • @JayBowen
      @JayBowen Před 6 lety +228

      But by the time you finish writing it, it would probably be too late

    • @1love10
      @1love10 Před 6 lety +12

      jaybow1982 well in fact it only took me about 1minute to write it all out, but yea........ in that case I would probably just say it not write it.

    • @trien30
      @trien30 Před 6 lety +4

      一愛 en.m.wiktionary.org/wiki/%F0%AA%9A%A5 with 4 dragons look more balanced

  • @wanyinleung912
    @wanyinleung912 Před 6 lety +2163

    As a Chinese speaking Japanese learner, kanji was the easiest part to learn😂

    • @jiaxuanliu
      @jiaxuanliu Před 6 lety +82

      Wan Yin Leung So true.

    • @Hussainalmajed
      @Hussainalmajed Před 6 lety +69

      Don't you find some of them obsolete,not used in Chinese at all or found any difficulty with the pronunciation?.

    • @AverageJoe-gi1ur
      @AverageJoe-gi1ur Před 6 lety +151

      Hussain Al-Majed Yes, some of the Japanese kanji is obsolete for mandarin native speaker but only to a limited amount, it won't cause much trouble.

    • @fleursdelilas9487
      @fleursdelilas9487 Před 6 lety +54

      Stop bragging. you're just lucky. lol

    • @essennagerry
      @essennagerry Před 6 lety +32

      Ohoho... bragging, I see... welp, I've got nothing to say, you have your bragging rights. :D I kinda wish I grew up with one of the Chinese languages, learning the characters as well... :'(

  • @LeonardoCaida
    @LeonardoCaida Před 4 lety +391

    funny thing is that 驚 actually means “omg, what the heck is that” (suprised)

  • @Ruminations09
    @Ruminations09 Před 4 lety +508

    When I first started learning Japanese, I dreaded the prospect of learning kanji, but now that I've been studying them for a while, it drastically improves sentence readability. It's certainly a time investment, but one that's well worth it.
    When I come across a word I've never seen before in French, I just look at it and think "yep... that's definitively a series of sounds all right..." and have to look it up.
    With Japanese though, when I encounter a word I've never seen, it usually goes something like this: "I don't know this word, but I do know these kanji. That first one means "ash" and that second one means "color". Ash tends to be a grey color, so maybe this word means grey?" And 9 times out of 10, I end up being correct.
    Sure, I may not be sure how to pronounce 灰色 but I got the important information out of it: what it means.

    • @Ruminations09
      @Ruminations09 Před 3 lety +43

      @@wildfire7268 The fact that you say that makes me thinks you don't know how to type in Japanese, because Japanese 3x4 flick keyboards are super easy to use. And they are much more intuitive than English QWERTY keyboards.
      Despite being a native English, I'm actually faster at typing in Japanese than I am at typing in English - that's how much more intuitive Japanese flick keyboards are.
      What you're suggesting is basically that Japanese be written purely in hiragana, which - as anyone who can read Japanese will attest to - is genuinely an horrible idea. You tried comparing it to Korean, but there is a very important difference: Korean has a much larger phonemic library.
      The Japanese phonology is *remarkably* small - there's a very tiny number of possible sounds you can make in Japanese. The means that many words sound fairly similar to many other words. If you tried writing Japanese purely based on pronunciation, it would be damn near impossible to read. You'd constantly be mistaking one word for another word that sounds the same. Kanji is a vital part of understanding the written language, and virtually all speakers of Japanese agree that trying to read pure hiragana is significantly harder.

    • @jhh113
      @jhh113 Před 3 lety +16

      Absolutely correct. Not a native speaker by any means, but i can often read things i cant pronounce.

    • @yungboy4216
      @yungboy4216 Před 3 lety +10

      @@Ruminations09 jsyk, QWERTY keyboards are intentionally unintuitive. They were organized the way they are because the format was made for typewriters, so that writers wouldn't type too fast and jam the typewriter.

    • @Ruminations09
      @Ruminations09 Před 3 lety +14

      @@yungboy4216 That's actually just a myth.

    • @carmcam1
      @carmcam1 Před 3 lety +6

      just started learning kanji and i am thinking that i will enjoy and detest it at the same time. Thanks for the encouragement.

  • @bakehe3494
    @bakehe3494 Před 5 lety +633

    Personally...As a native speaker of Mandarin, when im learning Japanese it feels like they use the Chinese character in a unbelievably complicated way......

    • @igorspie8241
      @igorspie8241 Před 4 lety +34

      I may be wrong, but isn't that because there was a writing reform in China?

    • @somatia350
      @somatia350 Před 4 lety +44

      It might be because Japan borrowed kanji and Chinese words during middle chinese

    • @user-bz3tf7sl8y
      @user-bz3tf7sl8y Před 4 lety +40

      一個字兩個音三個音,又分音訓讀,音讀唐音吳音……入聲占一個音位……還搞出煙草讀tabaco這種玩意……韓語對漢字的適應比日本人好多了,結果還不是為了交美國投名狀去漢字……其實早期漢語並不是單音節的,有兩個音三個音,有前元音和結尾輔音,後來都剝落掉轉化為聲調,就是為了適應漢字,其實研究下去發覺很多很有意思的點,例如漢字漢語也有屈折,正、政、整,漢語也有英語那種一個新事物一個新讀音詞彙爆炸的問題,例如馬配不同的聲旁,不過祖先不這麼玩了而已

    • @DannyCho325
      @DannyCho325 Před 4 lety +29

      @@igorspie8241 I don't think this person means that the kanji are more complicated in terms of strokes

    • @yiumyoumsan6997
      @yiumyoumsan6997 Před 4 lety +8

      To be fair, Traditional Chinese is also freaking harder than kanji so yea

  • @tk-qg5mm
    @tk-qg5mm Před 5 lety +2874

    I'm native Japanese. Eventually you'd appreciate the existence of kanji as you learn, I promise :)

    • @wingsgamingfans5850
      @wingsgamingfans5850 Před 5 lety +185

      303tk4 of course. Id prefer reading in kanji than in kana with spaces

    • @sericsson1996
      @sericsson1996 Před 5 lety +219

      I'm learning Japanese and the Kanji are the cool part. Last time I learned a new language was English and I already spoke 2 languages before it. Mother tongue and the language where I grew up.
      Learning Japanese has been fun because... I already watch anime. I also listen to music. And whenever I pick up a new word from my lessons, it feels so cool being able to finally understand what is being said. And it's cool that sometimes new words I learn I remember them from the anime I've watched :P
      I got much to learn... but I don't mind. It took me since grade school to High School to learn to speak properly in English. Reading & Writing Japanese will take for me around the same time... Years. But speaking won't be easy. I'm much better at listening and reading than speaking.

    • @laurel5432
      @laurel5432 Před 5 lety +42

      @@sericsson1996 It is quite cool indeed.
      I'm taking it very slow and easy as I'm trying to learn the basics on my own, and only then probably look for classes, and it is fun. It's become a nice everyday routine to read on concepts, words, or rehearse the radicals (also try and read any Japanese that I come across Cx ). I've seen people saying radicals are not 100% necessary, but I'm glad I picked them up as even entirely new kanji that I come across are much easier to remember/write, with just rare eventual one stroke mistakes.
      When I listen to music I will often hear a word or phrase and look it up online. Based on what I understand (let's say a core word in a sentence) I will try to use the autofill feature in microsoft keyboard and look for the phrase with the kanji that I'm sure is there. And even when I guess wrong, I can use that mistake to remember it from now on.
      I don't expect to get fluent quick and expecting that is probably the mistake that people make.
      I've wanted to try and learn a new language for some time now and I realised that an asian language might be the best. They're naturally more difficult, be it because of the writing systems alone. Then choosing Japanese out of them was easy since I already find their media appealing.
      Just as the video said it's not just a language but a huge part of their culture and history as well, and it's incredible how you can learn so much just reading about some kanji.
      edit: forgot to mention but it all started with learning kana to understand the sfx in manga but I don't know where in the comment do I put it now so I'll just leave it here :p

    • @user-lh4ir1sp9y
      @user-lh4ir1sp9y Před 5 lety +24

      @@sericsson1996 based on how you spoke and how talkative you are...I bet you're a Filipino.

    • @sericsson1996
      @sericsson1996 Před 5 lety +24

      @@user-lh4ir1sp9y How much do you bet? xD Because it is a lost bet already :) Think further... away from Asia.

  • @Rudolphhhhhh
    @Rudolphhhhhh Před 3 lety +150

    I am learning Japanese for almost 3 years and I noticed interesting facts : the most difficult kanji are not those with many strokes. Actually, the more a kanji has strokes, the less there are kanji that are alike and the less is has different meanings and pronounciations. Some of the most difficult kanji to learn are those with "only" a dozen strokes (or less), because there are many kanji that are alike them.
    Nevertheless, the kanji are intimidating only when we begin to learn Japanese (the learner must read Japanese very often, each day, especially texts that are written for native Japanese people : articles, video games, manga, books, etc.). But the more time passes, the more they seem "easy" and the more we understand why they are so practical in Japanese. Their different "components" or "radicals" become second nature, so it is just a question of "puzzle" composed with different "pieces" that we know very well. So, when we discover Japanese language, we learn the "strokes" that compose a kanji, but later we learn the "components" that compose kanji instead of strokes, which makes the learning much easier.
    And even the handwriting becomes very easy (not easy to remember how to writh ALL kanji, but easy to understand how to write a kanji when we read it). The handwriting helps me a lot to memorize kanji, thanks to "kinesthetic memory".

    • @crocodileman94
      @crocodileman94 Před rokem +5

      Definitely agree on the first part. I have an easier time remembering kanji like 歳 than I have with basic katakana.

    • @youknowkbbaby
      @youknowkbbaby Před 10 měsíci

      I don't think everyone's mind can learn kanji.

  • @farrelathaillah3450
    @farrelathaillah3450 Před 3 lety +769

    Me : i must remember this kanji
    My brain : の
    Me : pls
    My brain : ノ

  • @billyk8397
    @billyk8397 Před 6 lety +593

    Who else gets a nerdy jolt of excitement when Paul uploads a new video?

  • @Voltanaut
    @Voltanaut Před 6 lety +209

    I love the fact a kanji with 64 means verbose. Literally too perfect.

    • @angelolaurenzaMJJ
      @angelolaurenzaMJJ Před 4 lety +13

      You should look the Italian word for "fear of long words"

    • @REVOLUTIONS51
      @REVOLUTIONS51 Před 4 lety +12

      @@angelolaurenzaMJJ Hipopotomonstrosesquipedaliofobia
      Credo sia la mia parola preferita d'ora in poi....

    • @angelolaurenzaMJJ
      @angelolaurenzaMJJ Před 4 lety +1

      @RFT yeah it derives from ancient Greek

    • @simon39wang43
      @simon39wang43 Před 4 lety

      REVOLUTIONS51 something phobia😂

    • @JoseAguirre-ri8tg
      @JoseAguirre-ri8tg Před 4 lety

      @@REVOLUTIONS51 It's in spanish too.

  • @theyoshi202
    @theyoshi202 Před 4 lety +433

    I just realized “emoji” is Japanese, e+moji

    • @VenomBurger
      @VenomBurger Před 4 lety +51

      絵文字・えもじ it's fun eh?

    • @user-sn9bc6hd6r
      @user-sn9bc6hd6r Před 4 lety +7

      Hollow Inside いもじ?

    • @despressso
      @despressso Před 4 lety +63

      @@user-sn9bc6hd6r its not imoji

    • @otanix
      @otanix Před 4 lety +41

      In the late 80s up to early 90s, it used to be called smileys. In the mid-90s up to early 00's, they expanded the smileys to include numerous emotions and started to be called "emoticons" from words emote+icons. But then they expanded those emotive icons to things that don't convey emotions, like a hat 🧢 or a hospital building 🏥 or money 💵 and was called emoji. Emoji used to be popular in online forums and chat rooms but it is actually the Android OS that made emoji adopted by the whole world.
      Source: my 40 years of living alone and lonely by being a true Netizen since the time of tape and floppy disks and dial up internet.
      And oh, yes emoji originated from Japan.

    • @despressso
      @despressso Před 4 lety +20

      Otan Er no, that’s wrong lmao. the first phones to use emojis were japanese only phones hence why they’re called 絵文字 meaning 絵 (picture) 文字(writing system). they were popularized by phone usage in japan, leading to apple being the first to add an official emoji keyboard in japan. the first to come abroad officially WAS android, but people made apps to unlock it on foreign iphones long before that.

  • @user-wb4dm4gu3g
    @user-wb4dm4gu3g Před 3 lety +150

    im learning japanese, and writting kanji by hand feels so relaxing

    • @speaknowstan.13
      @speaknowstan.13 Před 3 lety +36

      Until you have to take notes fast when your professor is speaking 😂

    • @user-wb7ez9ud4p
      @user-wb7ez9ud4p Před 2 lety +11

      I know! I write caligraphy sometimes when I relax

    • @rauntche
      @rauntche Před 2 lety +4

      Feels great

    • @velocityraptor2890
      @velocityraptor2890 Před rokem +3

      it can be relaxing, fun, and/or challenging, truly an enjoyable experience

  • @Fr33mx
    @Fr33mx Před 6 lety +869

    Lol that last part of video where he types "お前はもう死んでる!!" (omae wa mou shinderu/ you are already dead (a very wide-known meme nowadays))
    made my day
    thanks dude,that was hilarious

    • @Rolando_Cueva
      @Rolando_Cueva Před 6 lety +96

      NANI!

    • @MrYedige
      @MrYedige Před 6 lety +9

      Николай Каледин лол, я тоже ржал как конь когда прочитал это. Paul, i was laughing my ass off like 10 mins in a raw. That was indeed hilarious

    • @Kalvinism
      @Kalvinism Před 6 lety +13

      That was amazing xD I'm glad someone else noticed!

    • @BiglerSakura
      @BiglerSakura Před 6 lety

      Ну а чего ещё ответить, если собеседник первый начал и обозвал "скотиной" :)

    • @hasancan1643
      @hasancan1643 Před 6 lety +1

      made my day lol

  • @Richard_is_cool
    @Richard_is_cool Před 5 lety +565

    They have a kanji for "dragons on the move."
    ...
    ...
    ...

    • @user-je3qf1kp3b
      @user-je3qf1kp3b Před 4 lety +42

      I am Japanese.
      Don't worry, almost all of Japanese people never and ever use this kanji 🙂

    • @4aridmax
      @4aridmax Před 4 lety +8

      As a one piece fan, that kanji come pretty handy in wano to warn that Kaido is coming again.

    • @dzli8284
      @dzli8284 Před 4 lety +4

      龙腾?

    • @ken7796
      @ken7796 Před 4 lety +1

      I am Polish. Japan saved 765 Polish orphans in 1920 and 1922. Around 1920, there were about 200,000 Polish in Siberia. Most of them died. Poland has asked various countries to save Polish orphans in Siberia. But all countries refused to rescue. Poland finally commissioned Japan to rescue Polish orphans. The Japanese emperor and empress at the time immediately ordered the Japanese to save the Polish orphans.Japan soon began rescue Polish orphans.The orphan was in Siberia. Japanese continued to rescue Polish orphans in Siberia. The smallest orphan that Japan saved was a two-year-old child.The orphan was crying near her dead mother. The Japanese immediately rescued the orphan. Polish orphans were sent to Japan for treatment. Japan fed the Polish orphans a hot meal every day. All Polish orphans have recovered. Japan continued to love Polish orphans very much. All Japanese donated money to save Polish orphans. Polish orphans were always smiling. Japan has successfully returned 765 Polish orphans to Poland.
      I will not forget this story. Thanks to Japan. God bless Japan.

    • @wearealreadydeadfam8214
      @wearealreadydeadfam8214 Před 4 lety

      We have dumb ultra specific words no one actually uses too. Murder of crows.

  • @barelu2562
    @barelu2562 Před 2 lety +42

    I've been learning japanese for almost a year now; I'm able to read hiragana and katakana clearly and know enought vocabulary to have small talks, but kanji scares me so much that I haven't even started. This video was very good to show how there's a meaning behind what we see in kanji and that it's not just random drawings that means things, so I feel a bit more motivated to start on it!

    • @phen-themoogle7651
      @phen-themoogle7651 Před 2 lety +4

      Learn Kanji the same way Japanese do, start with kanji grade 1 ( can see a list on Wikipedia), it'll save you a lot of time in the end because they are the most basic and consist of a lot of radicals. If you just master those 80 kanji it'll take you a long way in recognizing shapes. Radicals help so much.
      I've studied Japanese for 20 years, and most textbooks don't teach kanji in a practical order. Generally grade 1 kanji have less strokes too.
      And with just up to Grade 6 kanji, about 1006 you can read like 80% or more of Japanese, which is very nice.
      In the Chinese language I think you need like 2000 or 3000 kanji to read 80% even which is brutal lol

    • @barelu2562
      @barelu2562 Před 2 lety +1

      @@phen-themoogle7651 thanks for the tip, I was actually trying to learn from some of the most common and didn't know about that grade system lol I speak a lot of languages already but japanese is the first with a different writing system so thats mostly why I'm so lost

    • @Ping63ms
      @Ping63ms Před rokem

      Maybe you can learn kanji by reading news articles with furigana. It’s better to learn kanji in words

  • @mainlander3920
    @mainlander3920 Před 6 lety +632

    After watching this learning German seems like a walk in the park.

    • @pauladriaanse
      @pauladriaanse Před 6 lety +72

      I still don't understand why people think German is hard...
      It really isn't, especially not compared to almost every other language xD

    • @mainlander3920
      @mainlander3920 Před 6 lety +60

      Well, from the perspective of a native Portuguese speaker whose only foreign language was English prior to start learning German, and had tried Japanese for a while... yeah, German is certainly easier than Japanese due to Kanji, and it looks easier than languages such a Finnish, Arabic, Chinese, etc... but it's not exactly easy by any means when compared to Portuguese and English.
      Three genders, cases, separated verbs, somewhat cryptic expressions... it looks like a much harder version of English to me, basically. When I speak English, all comes naturally mostly, I don't have to think a lot. Speaking German, on the other hand, feels like solving an intricate math problem... this goes here, that goes there... that becomes like this due to this case... the fact English is much closer to Portuguese both grammatically and in terms of vocabulary helps a lot, but I would say German is harder than English even disconsidering this.
      Portuguese verb tenses are much harder than the German ones, but other than that, I think Portuguese is a really easy language overall. I would say German is intermediary in terms of difficulty.

    • @essennagerry
      @essennagerry Před 6 lety +9

      Roberto Silveira I'd say that English is difficult when you're already at like a B2 and want to become better and better, whereas German is difficult from the get go. But it's not THAT difficult. But it's difficult. :D

    • @mainlander3920
      @mainlander3920 Před 6 lety +22

      English has more vocabulary, is a lot more inconsistent phonetically and has slightly richer verb tenses than German. Other than that, German beats English on difficulty in any other category imaginable, I think.

    • @essennagerry
      @essennagerry Před 6 lety +1

      Roberto Silveira By "inconsistent phonetically" you mean inconsistent spelling/pronunciation?

  • @kekeke8988
    @kekeke8988 Před 6 lety +541

    峠 is not actually a Chinese character. It's a kokuji, or Japanese original. Yes, the 50,000+ characters China already had were not enough for Japan. They had to go and invent MORE.

    • @leewan1472
      @leewan1472 Před 6 lety +67

      Kekeke88 Japanese doesn’t use all of Chinese characters. It is not enough. You use part of it and invent part of it. You Japanese doesn’t have more characters than us.

    • @essennagerry
      @essennagerry Před 6 lety +2

      Ahahahaha, fo real tho. :D

    • @jadeemperor59
      @jadeemperor59 Před 6 lety +29

      Nope.山 is a kanji,上 下 are kanji too

    • @kyoumalee2675
      @kyoumalee2675 Před 6 lety +22

      When English speakers talk about kanji, it's Chinese characters adopted and in use in Japanese.Chinese characters means all the characters systems.when Japanese talk about kanji or Chinese talk about hanzi ,they all mean the whole system (characters)

    • @bobohv4313
      @bobohv4313 Před 5 lety +2

      Kekeke88 you maybe right.

  • @patrickpang4115
    @patrickpang4115 Před 2 lety +23

    Me, Chinese, knowing the correct way of writing “mother” 母 for the first time in a Japanese tutorial video from a European guy

    • @marcinzarebski9089
      @marcinzarebski9089 Před 2 lety +4

      I think he's Canadian, not European.

    • @kyoumalee2675
      @kyoumalee2675 Před 2 lety

      @@marcinzarebski9089 He probably talked about kind of "race", so European descendent Canadian, shorten as " European"

  • @EpicB
    @EpicB Před 3 lety +20

    "Dragons on the move" sounds like the name of a power metal band.

  • @kristofer9776
    @kristofer9776 Před 6 lety +526

    I'm learning japanese (polish native speaker). Kanji are not really that much of a challenge to learn. I just read a lot of stuff in japanese that is on the internet, and every word and kanji that I don't know I just write down in my notebook. When you read a lot, kanji will start repeating, so their meaning and pronounciation just automaticly gets into your head. You don't really have to force anything, the learning process just goes by itself when you read a lot. Right now I have been (self-)learning for about 1,5 years and I have memorized around 900 kanji at this point just by reading stuff.
    And also you don't have to memorize all 2316 (jouyou) kanji to be able to read. Some kanji are used more often than the others. Some statitics that I have found shows that the first 1000~ most used kanji amount to 95% of all kanji used in writing. So right now I am actually able to read quite consistently with only little help from the dictonary.
    Edit: Wow, I just came back to this comment after 2 years and noticed all the likes it has gotten. Thank you all very much for the likes, I have never gotten that many before on a single comment.

    • @druxfilms
      @druxfilms Před 5 lety +25

      This is true, I found this to be alot more productive than actually studying or even using a repetition program or cards for kanji...

    • @wild_insomnia
      @wild_insomnia Před 5 lety +7

      stary,kuzwa,szacun

    • @masonp5
      @masonp5 Před 5 lety +2

      well quizlet helps me but i just started a couple weeks ago

    • @abc249
      @abc249 Před 5 lety +12

      That's awesome congrats on your progress!

    • @baruzool9326
      @baruzool9326 Před 5 lety +11

      So you're saying it's not that hard, yet after 1,5 years you're still not even halfway through to not being illiterate in Japanese? Cool.

  • @fadilnasution5093
    @fadilnasution5093 Před 5 lety +371

    "Omae wa mou shinderu" 13:47
    I don't know why, but I'm kinda happy you made that sentence as an example. Cheers mate!

    • @mikanbox214
      @mikanbox214 Před 5 lety +18

      As you know, it's from a Japanese famous anime, Hokutonoken. The hero of that anime, Kenshiro says these words when he very tries to beat his enemy. But, it is a little different. The correct one is Omae ha mou shindeiru.

    • @Beleidigen-ist-Pflicht
      @Beleidigen-ist-Pflicht Před 4 lety +4

      Oh I might be of assistance here !
      the first one from you "Jui" would be the Hepborn romanization which transcribes japanese characters from Japanese itself to roman letters according to their phonetic value in English
      Whereas the "ha" form from "みかん"
      relates to the japanese System of how Kana are arranged in order , wasn't this called "Gozyūonzu" or "table of 50 syllables" ?
      Well upon not wanting to digress , this is called Nippon-siki and was invented by some Japanese physician as an antithesis to Hepburn , if I remember correctly .
      According to my understanding, there also have been some confusions between the transcriptions itself and than there is also "Kunrei"
      And JSL , Wāpuro and so on.
      So it just might be fine using either... "wa" or "ha" since this particle is a special case of pronounciation and yaughter, yaughter , you get the point
      But I must say I personally have fairly a faible for using Nippon-Siki , it's just so steadily formed, if you have an idea what I want to express...

    • @sen1679
      @sen1679 Před 4 lety

      he also wrote it wrong its shindeiru because its the te + iru form of the verb

    • @SelcraigClimbs
      @SelcraigClimbs Před 4 lety +3

      @@sen1679 and most of the time the い from -ている endings gets dropped in casual informal speech.

    • @edroyfernando
      @edroyfernando Před 4 lety +10

      @@mikanbox214 i know that this is verrrrryyyyyy late, but what Fadil said is still correct. The Hiragana syllable "は" is pronounced "ha", unless it's used as the topic marker, then it's pronounced "wa".

  • @BrendanishLeo
    @BrendanishLeo Před 3 lety +57

    Hey guys, just wanna say, I started learning Japanese, give or take around the time this came out.
    Two years in, I can definitely say, it gets better. Keep it up!

    • @angelmendez-rivera351
      @angelmendez-rivera351 Před 3 lety +3

      I believe it. Honestly, the only difficult part about Japanese at all is in fact kanji. If you ignore kanji, the rest of the Japanese language is actually very intuitive (at least to me). If it weren't because of kanji, I would even be willing to concede the potential of Japanese to be easier than Spanish, (my native language), or English.

    • @wildfire7268
      @wildfire7268 Před 3 lety +1

      Japan needs a text revolution, too. The Japanese language lags behind the keyboard input of the Internet age. It should be transformed into 24 alphabets, not thousands, like Hangeul in Korean.

    • @BrendanishLeo
      @BrendanishLeo Před 3 lety +2

      @@wildfire7268 I'm sorry? Japanese on keyboards is perfectly fine after adjusting a bit. The only issue I've ever had is IMEs not using the correct kanji, but in the worst scenarios, kana works fine.

    • @nitram1260
      @nitram1260 Před 3 lety +1

      @@wildfire7268 No, they won’t. Characters are one of the best thing in both Chinese and Japanese.

    • @ZK-ff2ru
      @ZK-ff2ru Před 3 lety +4

      @@nitram1260 "one of the best things"
      i dont think that memorizing thousands of characters are not being considered functionally literate by highschool is a good thing while english speakers can learn to write their language in 2 months

  • @davidtang2549
    @davidtang2549 Před 4 lety +35

    One of my friends from Hongkong told me that when he arrived in Japan, he wrote kanji to ask directions.

    • @deadby15
      @deadby15 Před 4 lety +18

      David Tang that’s something East Asians could do for millenniums. Koreans, Japanese, Vietnamese, they could communicate using Chinese characters to some extent. Sadly, Koreans and Vietnamese abandoned them in a shortsighted nationalistic fever.

    • @Heoltor
      @Heoltor Před 3 lety +2

      how would it be shortsighted for korea to develop such an efficient writing system

    • @Gabriel-l
      @Gabriel-l Před 3 lety

      @@Heoltor true. Korea has a very efficient writing system and I sometimes wish that China and Taiwan would modernize their system too. But, I have heard that Chinese characters are used in Korean books sometimes for more context.

    • @QuyTran-bv7cp
      @QuyTran-bv7cp Před 2 lety +2

      @@deadby15 It was not shortsighted when those two languages survived and prospered even under heavy influence of Chinese culture (and sometimes colonialism). Chinese characters were used as a writing system but it was clunky ("Hieroglyphs are an idiotic writing system" - Василий Сардина). So once a better writing system was invented (Korean), or Latin-adapted (Vietnamese), it was quickly adopted. Even Chinese has to develop pinyin adapted from Latin characters, hasn't it? or was it just their "Shortsighted 'inter-nationalistic' fever".

    • @paradoxmo
      @paradoxmo Před 2 lety +1

      @@QuyTran-bv7cp I think it was the right choice to abandon Chinese characters for alphabets in Vietnam and Korea. However, written standard Mandarin would be impossible to read if it were in only pinyin. There’s too many homonyms and undisambiguated characters. And besides, we Chinese speakers are way too attached to our literature to stop using the system that the literature is written in.

  • @harunsuaidi7349
    @harunsuaidi7349 Před 6 lety +558

    Imagine how many puns Japanese can make

    • @WeAreSMC96
      @WeAreSMC96 Před 6 lety +86

      Harun Suaidi it’s their way of life

    • @Labr4tOfficial
      @Labr4tOfficial Před 6 lety +77

      it's truue you see a lot in anime and they also explain the kanji

    • @Skrapeg0at
      @Skrapeg0at Před 5 lety +186

      貴社の記者は汽車で帰社しました。
      Means "Your reporter has returned to your company by train."
      Pronounced きしゃのきしゃはきしゃできしゃしました (kisha no kisha wa kisha de kisha shimashita)

    • @gc3k
      @gc3k Před 5 lety +67

      Dad jokes for days

    • @Double-Negative
      @Double-Negative Před 5 lety +11

      @@Skrapeg0at same meaning with not so many repeated sounds 会社の記者は電車で帰りました。 Though, you might want to change 帰り back to 帰社し if you want to emphasize he is returning to WORK.

  • @Arielscheinermann
    @Arielscheinermann Před 6 lety +146

    the number of ways which Kanji is pronounced is the most troubling..... omg

    • @-haclong2366
      @-haclong2366 Před 6 lety +16

      He skipped over the On-Yomi part, there are actually 3 different variants of Chinese reading, each based on different Chinese dialects from different era's, being the Chang'an dialect, the Hangzhou dialect, and the Kaifeng dialect with centuries between them, so they don't even sound remotely similar.

    • @gelko2676
      @gelko2676 Před 6 lety +11

      haha yes, even as a second language Chinese speaker myself, I get pissed that Kanji have so many different pronunciations (unlike the large majority of Hanzi)

    • @lixiaochen6
      @lixiaochen6 Před 6 lety +4

      gelko as chinese myself I can’t even handle most modern chinese dialects. Facepalm.

    • @SirusStarTV
      @SirusStarTV Před 6 lety +2

      Like in English the number of meanings of same word...

    • @masacatior
      @masacatior Před 6 lety +1

      Well, you could look at it with a different perspective. Each new word you learn you learn how to write it...

  • @user-uq3um5nq7d
    @user-uq3um5nq7d Před 3 lety +18

    Chinese: After memorizing, it's easy to read, though it is hard to memorize at first
    Korean: Basically no Hanja/Hanzi/Kanji, only use Hangeul and have some spaces
    Meanwhile...
    Japanese: Why not both? Use Kanji AND Hiragana and Katakana to make it easier to read. Easier to read, right..?

  • @arielthemermaid3576
    @arielthemermaid3576 Před 4 lety +10

    10:42 wow, that’s such a useful kanji. I can’t think of a single day that went by where I didn’t say “dragons on the move”

  • @9UaYXxB
    @9UaYXxB Před 5 lety +329

    Paul , disregarding for a moment your channel's intent of (I believe) motivating individuals to encounter languages fully by learning them, I find the information you present is a huge education in the origins and architecture of languages and it fills a need in me to understand more appropriately the 'mindset' or worldview of people in other vital parts of our planet. Your content is nothing short of brilliant, many sincere thanks!

    • @robertopascarelli6105
      @robertopascarelli6105 Před 4 lety +13

      Swede McGuire same here. It’s fascinating to dig into the origin of the languages and the differences between them. And all the videos of the channel are very well explained. Congrats Paul!

    • @alsyrriad
      @alsyrriad Před 3 lety +10

      I agree 100%. A language is nothing without its culture.

    • @amys500
      @amys500 Před rokem

      Yes I enjoy the history of each language the most

  • @somerandomguy884
    @somerandomguy884 Před 5 lety +119

    I’m gonna be completely honest here, since young, I’ve not really cared about the stroke rules and order, I just write it the way I thought was faster because notes need to be copied fast.

    • @thomasalberto613
      @thomasalberto613 Před 3 lety +5

      do Japanese people write stuff by hand with kanji? Doesn't that take a lot of time?

    • @cueiyo6906
      @cueiyo6906 Před 3 lety +46

      @@thomasalberto613 "doesn't that take time?"
      _laughs in Chinese_

    • @wildfire7268
      @wildfire7268 Před 3 lety +7

      Japan needs a text revolution, too. The Japanese language lags behind the keyboard input of the Internet age. It should be transformed into 24 alphabets, not thousands, like Hangeul in Korean.

    • @thomasalberto613
      @thomasalberto613 Před 3 lety +1

      @@wildfire7268 you mean characters? You are being quite a dumbass

    • @KineticManiac
      @KineticManiac Před 3 lety +18

      @@wildfire7268 Just so you know, "alphabet" in English refers to the whole thing, not just one of them. The correct word is "letter" or "character".

  • @Lancetier
    @Lancetier Před 4 lety +2

    Paul your channel is amazing, everything is so clear and easy to understand, showing a video of using kanji on a smart phone in the top corner of one of your slides was genius

  • @langshack4552
    @langshack4552 Před 4 lety +6

    I love how well you design your videos, they are beautifully made and I respect your expertise on languages. Thank you!

  • @user-do5or6mo6e
    @user-do5or6mo6e Před 5 lety +404

    Today I learned how and how much is Japanese complicated with fluent explanation by foreigner. Thank you, Mister! I like your video.
    I also want to let you guys know how hard I struggle with learning English in middle school. I'm rooting for all of you.

    • @VenomBurger
      @VenomBurger Před 4 lety +10

      頑張ってください~!

    • @TheGamer2336
      @TheGamer2336 Před 4 lety +15

      you're doing great!!

    • @ninaj6051
      @ninaj6051 Před 4 lety +23

      You're doing great indeed! I'm not a native English speaker, yet I often struggle to form proper sentences. I realized I need to spend so much time writing short paragraphs, and I hate how my grammar is overall quite far from perfect, even though I still can communicate about everything, just extremely clumsy. And, when I somehow manage to have perfect grammar (as per the Grammarly app), I sound too formal.

    • @levilive9705
      @levilive9705 Před 4 lety +1

      日本語わかぢません!!

    • @drakesmith471
      @drakesmith471 Před 4 lety +12

      @@ninaj6051 give yourself some credit. I only am able to speak English right now, but I am trying to learn Japanese and Spanish, both of which I can't say I am doing even close to comparable to how you are. I find that sometimes if I can't remember the word or even am blanking on something more basic, I sometimes do a thing called circumlocution which is pretty much talking in a roundabout way to describe something. It sometimes leads to me sounding more formal, though I talk formally to begin with, so it is normal. I will admit, others may find it weird, but talking formally can benefit you, and if that is the way you prefer talking, go for it, let it be something of yours if you will. Anyways though, great job.

  • @Suldrun45
    @Suldrun45 Před 6 lety +192

    I don't understand why this "dragons on the move" kanji is not part of the regular kanji... Isn't it the kind of word one would use on a daily basis? :p

    • @guitaristssuck8979
      @guitaristssuck8979 Před 6 lety +104

      Pierre Arnould It was common when dragons were common

    • @ragamuffyn6360
      @ragamuffyn6360 Před 6 lety +9

      龘 (tō, dragons on the move) can be written as 龍が行く (Ryū ga iku, dragons on the move)

    • @guitaristssuck8979
      @guitaristssuck8979 Před 6 lety +1

      Bern0d how do you know?

    • @Mike-vi6lu
      @Mike-vi6lu Před 6 lety +4

      It's kind of a game. Chinese also have some super complex characters that people hardly use.

    • @sodinc
      @sodinc Před 6 lety +36

      It was invented just in case of game of thrones

  • @RalphBellairs
    @RalphBellairs Před rokem +32

    As as native English speaker studying Japanese I was intimidated by Kanji when I first started learning, but, after I had learned hiragana and katakana, I found the Kanji fascinating and the most interesting aspect of the language. Doesn't make learning Japanese much easier though! 🙂

    • @2oqh
      @2oqh Před 9 měsíci +1

      I personally found the grammar much more tedious, since it wasn’t very interesting. Kanji was a pleasure to learn, and there’s only around ~2100 you need for to be at a very comfortable level. That’s really not too bad, especially since you can usually tell the meaning or remember the kanji easier depending on the radicals it’s made up of.

  • @pureawkwardness415
    @pureawkwardness415 Před 4 lety +24

    Kanji vs Hanzi:
    The main difference between the two is that because Japanese is agglutinate and uses lots of inflections, this means kanji can have double pronunciation or multiple pronunciation depending on the context of a sentence. For instance, the word for 7 is the same in both languages, 七, is usually pronounced なな, (nana) in Japanese, but in the sentence, It's 7 AM, 午前七時です。, its pronounced shichi. (gozen shichi ji des(u)) Meanwhile the word is always pronounced qi in Chinese, as in 是早上七點。This is the hardest part of learning Japanese.
    Hanzi's biggest hurdle is learning the tones, which differ depending on the language specifically. However Mandarin has 5 tones, and once you begin to remember the specifics of their pronunciation, it's much easier to remember than the multiple pronunciation kanji can have, which can be completely different in their romanizations. However those tones are much more important since in Japanese, if you say for instance, nana ji and not shichi ji, then most people will still understand what you said. Tones can change a meaning drastically, like the infamous sì and sí (4 and death). Watch Langfocus's video comparing the 2 languages for more info because I'm not a professional.

    • @Fei_jisoo1407
      @Fei_jisoo1407 Před 9 měsíci

      and hanja? These are the Chinese characters used in Korean...

  • @saptarshikolay7366
    @saptarshikolay7366 Před 6 lety +37

    I'm a student of Linguistics. I have interest in writing systems. Thank you Paul. I learn a lot from this video.

    • @_heed
      @_heed Před 6 lety +1

      Saptarshi Kolay hi my fellow liguist to be!

    • @saptarshikolay7366
      @saptarshikolay7366 Před 6 lety +1

      Hello Abdurrahman Syahid. ....... Thanks to reply me sir 😊😊😊

  • @johndotto2773
    @johndotto2773 Před 6 lety +112

    The last kanji that Paul used as a "surprise kanji" (驚) that is exponentially more difficult than the other ones he listed that were easy means "surprised".
    *Get it???*
    *Because the kanji was a "surprise"???*
    ok.

  • @michaelregis1015
    @michaelregis1015 Před 3 lety +6

    What a beautiful and complex writing system!

  • @audreymay9378
    @audreymay9378 Před 2 lety +3

    Your channel is the best thing since sliced bread. I appreciate the education. I feel so enriched and fortified with knowledge.

  • @medsamid
    @medsamid Před 6 lety +43

    It's much more complicated than I thought !

  • @hebneh
    @hebneh Před 5 lety +17

    The fact that Japanese and Chinese speakers are using keypads of the LATIN alphabet to write their own native languages is a huge and very fundamental change in how their brains are perceiving their own words and symbols. This is really earth-shattering, yet for some reason I've never encountered a Japanese or Chinese speaker who seems to see this situation the way I do. Now, when they think of a word they want to "write" (actually type), they think first of the phonetic equivalent in the foreign Latin alphabet, like "ba" or "ro" or some other syllable. I think this is a major cultural shift.

    • @hebneh
      @hebneh Před 5 lety

      I was told hiragana keyboards are not as common and most people use the Latin alphabet one...what about on phones?

    • @aaa5064
      @aaa5064 Před 5 lety +2

      @@hebneh Thats right ,most Japanese use the Latin alphabet keyboards,
      and use Kana Input on Phone.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_input_methods

    • @bocbinsgames6745
      @bocbinsgames6745 Před rokem

      there do exist systems for typing chinese where you map the latin keyboard to components, so that you're actually pircing together the characters rather than using a latin intermediary
      ... it's just difficult. I've been using one for over a year and it was definitely intimidating to learn

    • @hebneh
      @hebneh Před rokem

      @@bocbinsgames6745 I believe it. Relying on memory to piece together the different elements of thousands of symbols would be intimidating.

  • @demo_AAA
    @demo_AAA Před 2 lety +72

    Trust me, it gets easier when you’ve memorized a thousands characters

    • @user-wb7ez9ud4p
      @user-wb7ez9ud4p Před 2 lety +6

      And yes that might sound hard but it is but it's also not XD

    • @shewee-
      @shewee- Před 2 lety +3

      不需要记住数千汉字,外国朋友记住1000个汉字就可以交流了,中国有100000多个但是中国人常用的只需要3000就可以涵盖90%

  • @aca4254
    @aca4254 Před 4 lety +2

    Stunning work! Thank you!

  • @NihongoavecKazu
    @NihongoavecKazu Před 6 lety +630

    As a native speaker of Japanese, I think Kanji is very important to build vocabulary. We have so many words invented to translate concepts that didn't exist in Japanese. This is how Japanese stays academic language that can be taught in universities.
    If Kanji didn't exist, it was very difficult to translate all the new concepts imported from western countries. If we translated those new terms with non-kanji words, each word would have been very long and not convenient to use.

    • @yum2735
      @yum2735 Před 6 lety +59

      European languages tend to use Latin or Ancient Greek words for new concepts, but those words used to describe normal concepts at one point. Scientists retrospectively gave them additional meanings for new concepts or built neologisms from their roots, e.g. "transferre" had the basic meaning "to carry across" in Latin, but now forms like "transfer" and "translate" (supine stem) refer to all kinds of scientific concepts.
      Japanese could do the same thing and give native Japanese words new meanings or built compounds from native Japanese roots. No need for Kanji.
      Only Sino-Japanese compounds would be problematic without Kanji due to the amount of homophones.

    • @kaneinkansas
      @kaneinkansas Před 6 lety +39

      Are you at all familiar with the Korean phonetic system called Hangul? I think it might work better for Japanese than it does for Korean. In korea. They sometimes call it "Morning Characters" because a bright student can learn the system in just one morning and most other people can learn to read inside of a week. I wonder if this would ever be efficacious in Japanese.

    • @yum2735
      @yum2735 Před 6 lety +29

      Tim Kane, Standard Japanese is phonemically less diverse than Korean (fewer codas, fewer vowels), which leads to even more Sino-Japanese homophones.
      The increasing dominance of Hangul even for Sino-Korean words probably still bereft the Korean language of a lot of Sino-Korean vocabulary since homophones become indistinguishable in the written language.

    • @MiracoMango
      @MiracoMango Před 6 lety +16

      I am Chinese.
      We Chinese has absorbed a lot from Japanese especially in terms of various words in the last few hundreds of years.
      I wanna know what do you think of the current translation trends of 'katakana-straightforward-phonetic translation' comparing with 'kanji-based-meaning translation'?
      I know young people in Japan love to use nouns written by katakana.

    • @NihongoavecKazu
      @NihongoavecKazu Před 6 lety +21

      As this trend to translate phonetic in katakana existe way before I was born, it's very normal to me. Especially when I was very little like 10 years old, I used katakana words without knowing that these words were actually loan words. Giving an example, I thought the word "Terebi" (came from television) was japanese word.

  • @atdynax
    @atdynax Před 5 lety +126

    As agerman learning Japanese it's pretty hard.

    • @hiimmeurnot
      @hiimmeurnot Před 3 lety +31

      You missed a space, and I almost asked what an "agerman" is XD

    • @angus9610
      @angus9610 Před 3 lety +2

      @@hiimmeurnot Same😂

    • @hsjbdd7482
      @hsjbdd7482 Před 3 lety +11

      Ah yes, Ager man

    • @marcusw.725
      @marcusw.725 Před 3 lety +18

      I read it as "Anger man" at first. Not a bad description for Germans.

    • @nikouk4513
      @nikouk4513 Před 3 lety +6

      @@marcusw.725 Ach du Kake !
      To be honest though, you're pretty right !
      No, just kidding ! I'm French and travelling to Germany is alsways a great pleasure as they are happy to make us discover their country.

  • @oofmate911
    @oofmate911 Před 4 lety +24

    I didn't realize how important kanji was until I was at a store one day, and these shoes had a tag that said たべません。It took me 30 seconds to realize it said 食べません。Now that I think about it, why did it have that warning about shoes?? 😂😂

    • @marykong6683
      @marykong6683 Před 3 lety

      食 means food

    • @mediumjohnsilver
      @mediumjohnsilver Před 3 lety +2

      @@mattybrunolucaszeneresalas9072 In other words, Don't eat the shoes. 😋

  • @zenists
    @zenists Před 3 lety +1

    Just love your starting part Paul, you are so funny and knowledgable. Internet just make learning so much easier these days.

  • @cuongpham6218
    @cuongpham6218 Před 6 lety +71

    I'm Vietnamese and had learned Japanese for 6 years before switching to German. Since Vietnamese is also influenced by Chinese (approx. 60% of Vietnamese vocabulary derives from Chinese) and Vietnam is one of the East Asian cultural sphere countries, learning Kanji, especially the On-yomi reading, is not really a challenge for me. But the real challenge is the grammar, as well as listening skills, (man Japanese speak really fast). All in all Kanji is for me an integral part of the language and I love learning them

    • @anyaforger8409
      @anyaforger8409 Před 6 lety

      Cuong Pham Not to mention Chu Nom.

    • @Joshayne
      @Joshayne Před 6 lety +3

      I am Cantonese speaker but I don’t know why sometimes Vietnamese sounds like Cantonese but I don’t know what they means LOL

    • @change1657
      @change1657 Před 5 lety +1

      FaZe Up our language totally different so you can only understand some minor word, that same for us when hearing cantonese

    • @mq-mx-xq6315
      @mq-mx-xq6315 Před 5 lety

      I remember you people used to utilize chữ Nôm to write Vietnamese.

    • @change1657
      @change1657 Před 5 lety +1

      @@mq-mx-xq6315 yes that 200 year ago since we dont have our scpirt so we borow hanzi hanji and modifications it and from the han nom but it even harder than hanzi kanji

  • @yuetiansiah8602
    @yuetiansiah8602 Před 6 lety +49

    Chinese speaker here, this video remind me of my first year learning Chinese

    • @Hussainalmajed
      @Hussainalmajed Před 6 lety

      Yue Tian Siah Did you study Chinese in China or abroad. Do you find Japanese easy?.

    • @adult456zig
      @adult456zig Před 6 lety

      你会说日语吗?

    • @adult456zig
      @adult456zig Před 6 lety

      你是美国人还是中国人?

    • @yuetiansiah8602
      @yuetiansiah8602 Před 6 lety

      Hussain Al-Majed Not easy but familiar, it's like you have a set of vocabulary in mind, but now you need to use them in different formats

    • @yuetiansiah8602
      @yuetiansiah8602 Před 6 lety +1

      Sir Etaipo 我是海外华侨,大马人

  • @tellurian7999
    @tellurian7999 Před 4 lety +95

    Learner of Japanese:
    I find that getting the kanji in my short term memory is quite easy after around 3 attempts. However, making sure I still remember it in a month is quite difficult.

    • @BillyBob-qk6vy
      @BillyBob-qk6vy Před 3 lety +3

      Just download an SRS. We aren't in the medieval ages anymore.

    • @tellurian7999
      @tellurian7999 Před 3 lety

      @@BillyBob-qk6vy I am using one

    • @BillyBob-qk6vy
      @BillyBob-qk6vy Před 3 lety

      @@tellurian7999 Are you sentence mining or are you learning individual words and individual kanji?

    • @tellurian7999
      @tellurian7999 Před 3 lety

      @@BillyBob-qk6vy all three!

    • @wildfire7268
      @wildfire7268 Před 3 lety +2

      Japan needs a text revolution, too. The Japanese language lags behind the keyboard input of the Internet age. It should be transformed into 24 alphabets, not thousands, like Hangeul in Korean.

  • @emilyskanjichanneljapan5136

    Langfocus❤️ This is really well done

  • @girthquake5231
    @girthquake5231 Před 6 lety +33

    Thanks for all the effort you put into your incredible videos. My favorite channel on CZcams easily.

  • @vesteel
    @vesteel Před 6 lety +1218

    I never thought being a weeb was hard

    • @wilklikesmilk5371
      @wilklikesmilk5371 Před 6 lety +8

      You think this is hard 😂 it is pretty hard at first but if you can't understand what he's saying then please don't learn Japanese

    • @subscribes6434
      @subscribes6434 Před 6 lety +22

      Horny Aleks thats like saying only learning the english alphabet is necessary and that grammar, spelling etc isn't necessary. Thats how stupid you sound.

    • @cocoapuff_x
      @cocoapuff_x Před 6 lety +11

      Horny Aleks
      Actually you have to learn Katakana too!

    • @deltoroperdedor3166
      @deltoroperdedor3166 Před 6 lety +1

      subscribes I doubt they can even be called human. Even mamal is a bit of an upgrade

    • @RevJR
      @RevJR Před 6 lety +2

      Litten - You say that, but you missed quite a bit of punctuation.
      Just saying...

  • @younessalibane7504
    @younessalibane7504 Před 4 lety +2

    Thank you Paul for this video.

  • @CCumva
    @CCumva Před 4 lety +13

    Actually, I enjoy reading Kanji a lot.
    It's like graphic novels found the way to draw some of the context instead of writing, which enriched the reading with style, mood, nuances and unsaid details, the same with kanji.
    They're not read as pictures in comic books, ofc, but they carry much more than just pronounciation and a single meaning.
    SRS makes this part of Japanese a breath.
    Grammar and listening is much more challenging though.

  • @moiquiregardevideo
    @moiquiregardevideo Před 5 lety +90

    I started to learn Japanese, then switched to Chinese to concentrate more on the etymology of kanji. I took a class of Japanese at University, a year where i had to catchup with math calculus.
    I was the only student answering exam questions with kanji.

    • @Gabriel-l
      @Gabriel-l Před 3 lety +12

      ok that's actually impressive. Bet you gave the Japanese examiners a hard time marking your paper though haha.

    • @mattfield3371
      @mattfield3371 Před rokem

      From what I've heard people who were learning Japanese and Chinese at the same time they say it's actually harder because now you're learning and associating multiple sounds with many of the same characters on top of the ones you'd already need to know so it's really going to require more memorization abilities.

  • @Briller5
    @Briller5 Před 5 lety +17

    very well made video, excellent work, subbed

  • @dingwanren
    @dingwanren Před 3 lety +56

    As a mandarin speaker, I only learned basic Japanese grammar for about a month, then I found I was able to understand most Japanese text. Chinese youngsters, particularly born in 90s or after 2000, grew up with heaps of Japanese anime (Naruto, for example). I am an anime lover myself and become familiar with basic Japanese words' pronunciation.
    While understanding Kanji is easy for me, when I cannot directly make sense of a sentence, I read it out using hiragana pronunciation, which allows me to understand it from the view of spoken Japanese. This is super useful for those Chinese speakers who understand Kanji instantly but cannot perceive the grammatical structure (inflections) at the first glance.
    Although Kanji helps Chinese speakers to start learning Japanese easily, it quickly increases the difficulty as some Kanji characters are very different from their original Chinese characters and have different meanings as well. I didn't choose Korean as my third language just because Korea totally abandoned Chinese characters which make Korean characters extremely weird (new) to me. I wonder if Japanese speakers have the same feelings regarding learning Chinese and Korean.

    • @sugar_tanaka
      @sugar_tanaka Před 2 lety +3

      I’m Japanese speaker.
      I studied Chinese a little, but pronunciation is almost different.
      So I think it is hard for Japanese to study Chinese.
      I think grammar of Chinese likes it of English, So I think studying Chinese is easy for English speaker (exception of letters)

    • @zhou_kaw
      @zhou_kaw Před 2 lety +2

      @Mahima Bhat 韩国人放弃了汉字(Chinese character)是非常错误的决定
      韩国的古代史与现代韩国人断裂了
      如果没有废除汉字,中日韩可以互通书信,尤其是中国和韩国

    • @Pipipig948
      @Pipipig948 Před 2 lety

      @Mahima Bhat Then your memory is incredible!

    • @user-qd1qy8gx1f
      @user-qd1qy8gx1f Před 2 lety +3

      In terms of grammar, Korean language is the easiest for Japanese people.

    • @samgyeopsal569
      @samgyeopsal569 Před rokem

      I prefer to to read Hanja Hangul texts (國漢文混用) because it’s easier to understand than pure Hangul.

  • @quinquiry
    @quinquiry Před 2 lety +1

    Very clear explanations ! good work Paul !

  • @hue3595
    @hue3595 Před 6 lety +19

    I've been learning Japanese by myself for about 5 months now and my way of learning might be a little unusual, but I don't really focus on learning the kanji on their own. Whenever I encounter a word I do not know, I'll first look it up and write it down, then I'll put it in Anki with the reading and meaning. It makes it a bit harder to read texts with a lot of kanji I don't know yet, but after I have seen a certain kanji in a few words it gets easier to guess the meaning an reading of new words since I know the context of the kanji.

    • @hue3595
      @hue3595 Před 6 lety +5

      Also, I don't think kanji are as hard as many make them seem, since English also has really weird rules for pronunciation.

    • @Hussainalmajed
      @Hussainalmajed Před 6 lety +1

      hugo van oosterhout It's true even English has its own weird rules , your username doesn't seem English, is it a Nordic name?.

    • @hue3595
      @hue3595 Před 6 lety

      it's Dutch, so close enough i guess (:

    • @minutekanji7082
      @minutekanji7082 Před 6 lety

      that is agood idea too :)
      Theory and grammar is always more tedious and hard but it's necessary to understand the rules. It's like having to read a board game's rules booklet before playing. Before starting, you need to know what to do with the pieces.

    • @BlackKnight_999
      @BlackKnight_999 Před 6 lety

      For a native Chinese language user like me.. the kanji in Japanese text dun make it harder to understand.. in fact it gives the general context of the sentence.

  • @michinolo
    @michinolo Před 6 lety +66

    I am a native Japanese speaker. Yes, Kanji is necessary for Japanese language. I would speak Japanese as good as I do now, even if Kanji is not a part of the language. However, it would make reading/studying a lot harder without it. There are lots of homonyms in Japanese. 日本語に漢字は必要です。漢字がなかったとしても同じように話す事はできると思いますが、日本語には同音語が多いので漢字がないと読書や勉強の効率がかなり下がると思います。(にほんごにかんじはひつようです。かんじがなかったとしてもおなじようにはなすことはできるとおもいますが、にほんごにはどうおんごがおおいのでかんじがないとどくしょやべんきょうのこうりつがかなりさがるとおもいます。)

    • @Hussainalmajed
      @Hussainalmajed Před 6 lety +1

      Michi4748 Can you explain more why Kanji is important to Japanese people, why not just use Kanji alone then?.

    • @brainstormin-pe3mz
      @brainstormin-pe3mz Před 6 lety +8

      漢文訓読体 is all in kanji.and all things is complex to explain,if you are interesed in it,you can search.
      the grammar and reading system of Japanese is different from Chinese.but Japanese and Korean both use classical chinese 文言文 in ancient times,most learners are nobels or rich guy of course,they can even talk just by writing 笔谈/筆談 and become government officials by passing exam of china.but not the ordinary people,so,they had to find a solution,the video already said it.

    • @dima6018
      @dima6018 Před 6 lety +5

      Horny Aleks Arabic isn't the only language spoken in the Middle East, there are Hebrew, Kurdish, Turkish, and Persian as well

    • @LoyalSol
      @LoyalSol Před 6 lety +6

      It might be harder to read if you strictly go to a pure kana system using the Kana as they current stand. However, if you were to get rid of the Kanji it would make sense that you could also make some adjustments to the Kana system to handle the homophone problem.
      You only need enough characters to give each word or at the very least enough of them a unique spelling. Similar to how in English you can have multiple characters with the same sound. For example bite and byte are pronounced the same, but in spelling use either the y or i.
      You would mostly have to focus on the words that have a lot of homophones (さす, こうしょう, etc.)
      It's more of a combinators/information theory problem. Though odds are it won't be happening.

    • @Hussainalmajed
      @Hussainalmajed Před 6 lety +1

      Horny Aleks Arabic is important only if the economy in Arab countries is doing well , nowadays Arabs are fighting each other and that is very unfortunate so educated Arabs tend to migrate to other countries so if the dire situation continues, there would be more importance to Hebrew or Farsi.

  • @delsinrowe6826
    @delsinrowe6826 Před 3 lety +1

    Pretty useful video! Thank you very much. Keep up the good work!

  • @geoffreyherrick298
    @geoffreyherrick298 Před 2 lety +7

    Kanji intimidated me for the longest time. Learning the meaning of the word the characters were derived from was a game changer for me. A good start is the book What's in a Chinese Character, by Tan Huay Peng. The illustrations also help reinforce the meanings.

  • @IntelVoid
    @IntelVoid Před 6 lety +96

    I think of Kunyomi and Onyomi like English and Latin/Greek. The 'native' English words are usually the most commonly used, while most technical language or newly coined words use Latin elements. Like 'dog' vs. 'canine'.
    So having 2 or 3 different pronunciations for one 'word' is not really so foreign to English speakers.

    • @user-pd6bd7ir4z
      @user-pd6bd7ir4z Před 6 lety +1

      thats basically it, yeah

    • @catief1031
      @catief1031 Před 6 lety +5

      Good point, never thought about it like that

    • @noggenfogger1324
      @noggenfogger1324 Před 6 lety +1

      IntelVoid
      Dont forget "hound"

    • @rahuldhargalkar
      @rahuldhargalkar Před 6 lety

      Thanks for sharing that perspective!

    • @Russocass
      @Russocass Před 5 lety +2

      It's not really like that, imagine Spanish didn't have a writing system so they had to use English to write Spanish. One example would be writing "traidor"(traitor), as "try door".
      So, onyomi is using other pronunciation system to create words in another language.

  • @odradek5571
    @odradek5571 Před 6 lety +8

    I am a native Korean. Nowadays, we Koreans do not use Chinese Characters in everday life, but we learn how to read and write Chinese Characters at school. I hardly speak and read Japanese, but I can understand roughly some Japanese writings although I cannot pronounce them, because I know the meanings of Kanji.

  • @dynamagon
    @dynamagon Před 3 lety +3

    This was extremely helpful considering you taught the whole system of kanji rather than just the radicals or ways to say them like most people, definitely will help to structure original sentences. Thanks!

  • @hallaf3140
    @hallaf3140 Před 3 lety

    That's so helpful thanks for your efforts, really!

  • @carmo122
    @carmo122 Před 6 lety +69

    I really hate when people go around saying "Japanese people are stupid! Why don't they simplify their language!" or "X language is a lot easier, therefore they are smarter!".
    All languages in the world went through an enormous process to change with time. If there were problems, like people not understanding the language, they would take measures to change said problems (like it happened in Japan, Korea and China a long time ago). Right now, Japan has a good literacy rate, so the language is doing well as it is.
    Also, the language is the "voice" of the culture that it represents. Without it, the entire country's culture would be completely different. The sheer effort that it would take to make people talk in a new manner is too big. It also risks ending up like China, where Simplified Chinese was created but people preferred the Traditional Chinese.
    Every single language in the world has flaws. From the world-wide spoken English to the obscure Yupik languages, languages can be easy or hard, but we shouldn't change them to our needs when so much hinges on them. Besides, isn't it the effort that makes learning them fun?

    • @carmo122
      @carmo122 Před 6 lety +3

      techno girl Yes, but people still prefer to write in Traditional Chinese than in Simplified Chinese. And there are so many variations (Shanghainese, Hakka, Cantonese, etc.) that it is hard to call Chinese a singular language.

    • @BlackKnight_999
      @BlackKnight_999 Před 6 lety +8

      I think as of now.. only Hong Kong and Taiwan are still using Traditional Chinese... Macau I am not so sure.. but probably same as Hong Kong. Singapore Chinese students also studies Chinese Language and writes them but we adopted Simplified Chinese a long long time ago.. all it takes is a generation of students growing up with it.

    • @carmo122
      @carmo122 Před 6 lety +5

      willyeo Oh, I didn't know that! But you're right. Languages can be simplified and, most of the time, people will prefer that, like with the introduction of the Jōyō Kanji in Japanese. But to go around insulting other people's languages because of personal standards is really stupid in my opinion.

    • @hirokokueh3541
      @hirokokueh3541 Před 6 lety +4

      Simplified and Traditional Chinese are used in several different languages, even their grammar are different.
      Traditional : Mandarin, Cantonese, Taiwanese Hokkien, classical Chinese, other ancient dialects
      Simplified : Mandarin, Chinese Hokkien and other modern dialects
      both of them used in Mandarin, but Mandarin in China(sim), Honkong and Taiwan(tra) are different.

    • @user-xe1de9if2o
      @user-xe1de9if2o Před 6 lety +2

      There aren't many people in mainland China who prefer Traditional Chinese any more. The gov pushes hard. Many websites, like Baidu, even automatically convert to Simplified Chinese, including Japanese Kanji. It makes it hard for me to find correctly written lyrics for Japanese songs....

  • @Ballacha
    @Ballacha Před 6 lety +431

    as a native speaker and user (as in writing) of Wu & Mandarin Chinese, i find the multiple pronunciation of the same Kanji in Japanese most troublesome. also, to me it's immensely confusing and often takes me quite a while to find out if a Chinese character i'm about to write actually belongs in the Japanese Kanji vocabulary. this is funny because i heard when native speakers of English learn other Germanic/Romance languages (or other languages similar to English), they don't have the same problem I'm having right now.

    • @Ramk0core
      @Ramk0core Před 6 lety +43

      Sounds like a different kind of "false friends". That's the closest thing I can think of that resembles that problem you have.
      Just in case, "False friends" are words that sound similar or even the same (And because of our alphabets, are also normally written similarly or the same) in different languages, but which have totally different meanings.

    • @essennagerry
      @essennagerry Před 6 lety +36

      As a native of a Slavic language, I actually do have that kind of a problem when I speak German - I often wonder if the word I'm about to use is a real German word or if I'm germanizing an Enlish word. :D

    • @essennagerry
      @essennagerry Před 6 lety +16

      German and English do have a lot of false freinds - words that, unknown to me how, evolved to be same or very similar, but mean different things. There are also German words that are modern, which people assume are English words - but aren't - such as Handy and Mobbing.

    • @JoelFeila
      @JoelFeila Před 6 lety +1

      its not just European languages. the word "mtoto" is from Swahili but anybody that speaks English would be able to sound it out.

    • @Ballacha
      @Ballacha Před 6 lety +22

      Darko Milošević both my name and profile pic are a reference of a silly cartoon. pay them no mind. im currently living in Australia btw. if i go back to China for a visit, i'll just use vpn for youtube and stuff like everyone else.

  • @AustinSiler1
    @AustinSiler1 Před rokem +2

    Please do more!!!!! I love your Japanese videos

  • @ulissesferreira849
    @ulissesferreira849 Před 2 lety +1

    Great content! I’m Brazilian student, actually learn n4 kanji group. thanks for the hints and soon started english improvement.

  • @Patrick-oc1vq
    @Patrick-oc1vq Před 6 lety +52

    Even though kanji is a challenge for learners of Japanese or Chinese, I have to admit that it indeed is an ingenious writing system. With which you can skim a one-page-long text in 5 seconds and understand its core topic/meaning.

    • @user-hj1dc2wp7v
      @user-hj1dc2wp7v Před 5 lety +4

      I used to think the same, but I read a research about reading speeds in many different languages and there wasn't any correlation between information density and reading speed. The "bottleneck" so to say seems to be in the semantic processing part of the brain.
      It's a good system to save ink and paper anyways.

    • @user-hj1dc2wp7v
      @user-hj1dc2wp7v Před 5 lety

      The same goes for spoken languages. Chinese and Japanese can be spoken just about fast, despite Japanese words being way longer than their Chinese equivalents. Japanese speakers say more syllabes per minute, to reach the same density of words.

    • @pelgervampireduck
      @pelgervampireduck Před 5 lety +4

      it's obfuscated, too complicated, twisted, not efficient, it's horrible.
      I wish I could learn japanese, I love the culture, one day I want to travel to japan as a tourist, but the language is almost impossible to read or write.

    • @the_number_one
      @the_number_one Před 5 lety +3

      @@pelgervampireduck Haha.. who are you kidding except yourself? Learn just 6 kanji per day. Take five minutes for each. Comes to 30 a day. 6*350 = 2100 ja nai ka. Within a year, you can finish and have 15 days to revise! 2100/15 = 140 a day practicing will take 11.5 hours a day for the remaining 15 days. You can do it for sure.
      Using SRS, spaced repetitive system, it will be even easier. You can do the same every day without repeating to revise the easy kanji

    • @the_number_one
      @the_number_one Před 5 lety

      @@user-hj1dc2wp7v she is talking about the core topic!! Not the message! It helps in large notice boards where huge crowds gathered to look for interesting announcements, not a town hall meeting like in the west

  • @lloydmeadors
    @lloydmeadors Před 6 lety +42

    My Japanese wife says
    Kanji are necessary, and without kanji Japanese would be different, so she doesn't know.
    As a non native speaker, but constantly learning myself, I love puzzles, so I treat the kanji as a puzzle to be solved so it's fun for me

    • @Blaqjaqshellaq
      @Blaqjaqshellaq Před 6 lety +5

      I have a feeling that Japanese without kanji would be like black & white without color!

    • @nm9864
      @nm9864 Před 6 lety +3

      But then what's the point of having such complicated language ... if you like puzzles then just solve solve maths na ... English is much simpler and efficient therefore more practical ... if even Japanese native speakers can't figure out all of the kanji, why not just adopt a language that is more practical

  • @laveniathursch3526
    @laveniathursch3526 Před 3 lety +2

    Great video! I think I've been fascinated by the Kanji for a long time and they were actually my point of entry to learning Japanese. The story they tell (dragons on the move 😂) or that I invent to remember them is really part of the thrill to me. And yes sometimes they give me the meaning right away which is great when my hiragana and katakana are still shaky. And above all things praise the smart keyboard 🙌

  • @bjb0808
    @bjb0808 Před 4 lety +2

    Excellent video. I've lived in Japan 37 years and learned things!

  • @geoffk777
    @geoffk777 Před 5 lety +40

    You left out a very important detail--namely that kanji don't usually stand alone. Most of the time, kanjis are read as two character "words". And even knowing the individual kanji wouldn't allow you to guess either the meaning or sound of the word. For example:
    社会 "Shakai" means "culture" whereas, the same two characters, reversed:
    会社 "Kaisha" means "Corporation".
    The reading of the character depends on the two character word. For example, 人 (hito/jin/nin, "person") can be 外人(Gaijin, Foreigner), 恋人 (koibito, lover), 人々 (hitobito, people), 犯人 (hannin, criminal), etc.
    So it's not enough to study individual kanjis. You have to study all of the common words that they appear in and learn the readings and meanings for each word.
    And names are especially bad. My daughter's name is Erica, but the first character of her name 衣 is most often read as "i" (not "E"). Her last name starts with 久 which is often "ku", but she reads it as "hisa". My nephew is named Motohiro, spelled as 心広. Even Japanese often need to have names written in kana to pronounce them properly.

    • @VenomBurger
      @VenomBurger Před 4 lety +2

      I mean he touched on the fact that things are read differently when not on their own 破片・はへん and 片道・かたみち and touched up on using Kanji for verbs like 生きる; but yeah he didn't explicitly mention them.

    • @MatsubaAgeha
      @MatsubaAgeha Před 4 lety

      社会 "Shakai" is "society", not "culture".

    • @geoffk777
      @geoffk777 Před 4 lety

      @@MatsubaAgeha That's true. I don't know why I wrote that wrong.
      Moshiwake gozaimasen

    • @angelmendez-rivera351
      @angelmendez-rivera351 Před 3 lety +1

      geoffk777 That is why, although I do acknowledge the merits of kanji in increasing the semantic readability of sentences, I think this simply does not sufficiently compensate for the number of difficulties and even impractical scenarios they can cause. There were plenty of things the video didn't really mention about kanji either.

    • @ThePhreakass
      @ThePhreakass Před 3 lety

      I am curious. How are Kanji assigned to people when naming them? I always thought they ignore readings that exist and just take Kanji that they thought were cool

  • @Hussainalmajed
    @Hussainalmajed Před 6 lety +14

    Probs to Japanese people who know both the Chinese writing system and their Kanji,they cannot be blamed for lack of English speakers in their country because that alone takes tens of years to master.

    • @Mike-vi6lu
      @Mike-vi6lu Před 6 lety +2

      only a few years for native speakers

    • @Hussainalmajed
      @Hussainalmajed Před 6 lety +1

      Zweivogel Mithrandir They're very lucky, for foreigners it's torturing.

  • @rds7516
    @rds7516 Před 4 lety +35

    10:56
    That means.. verbose? Oh the irony.

  • @supermario469
    @supermario469 Před rokem

    This is the best explanation of Kanji I have ever seen. As a new learner this video just cleared so much of the fog.

  • @soheylmoheb7273
    @soheylmoheb7273 Před 5 lety +3

    your videos about Japanese were amazing because I'd heard that there are multiple ways of writing Japanese but no one had actually taken the time to explain it in a way that it'd make sense. So great appreciations to you. ;-D

  • @usoppsama9431
    @usoppsama9431 Před 6 lety +112

    Please talk about languages of India, I love your videos so much

    • @zerozzable
      @zerozzable Před 6 lety +2

      +Usopp Sama Stop asking a mleccha to create and give narratives about Bharat. Haven't you learned yet from history and life-experience that they will only deliver their own biased version? Pathetic slavish mentality!

    • @briandeschene8424
      @briandeschene8424 Před 4 lety +3

      Usopp Sama
      I recommend ignoring negative people like “A Bcde” who replied below. Such narrow minded, apparently bitter people can’t understand the joy that learning brings which you seem to. As a positive response to your request, please enjoy:
      czcams.com/video/MpPJ4Rr-5SQ/video.html
      czcams.com/video/vxSd7p1i_TA/video.html
      czcams.com/video/SqK7XXvfiXs/video.html

  • @futurevision2317
    @futurevision2317 Před rokem +1

    Excellent video. This is the first time that I learned details of the writing Kanji in Japanese.

  • @AllisterSanchez
    @AllisterSanchez Před 9 měsíci +2

    @Langfocus,
    I went through a 6-months basic Japanese course in a Japanese university which was enough to give a motivated person like me to progress on my own with kanji. I learned most of the joyo kanji (about 2000 kanji) after a month of going to the library to study every day. It helped that my wife was pregnant and I needed to fill up all paperworks in Japanese -- you learn something when you really need it. :)
    That said, I agree that I prefer to use kanji as it makes reading (and understanding Japanese text) A LOT faster, like when they are flashed quickly on TV. In comparison, it takes me more time to parse a sentence using alphabet letters or other phonetic symbols like the Korean hangeul.

  • @doma3894
    @doma3894 Před 6 lety +51

    Ya it’s hard!! But I’m giving my best to deal with it. Thank you for sharing your knowledge 👏🏻ありがとうございました‼︎

    • @itsban
      @itsban Před 6 lety +3

      ドーマセルパ 私も(^_^)/

  • @Nobody-me7wu
    @Nobody-me7wu Před 5 lety +11

    Chinese is my mother tongue, and I also speak Japanese. This video is very informative and accurate, thank you , Paul.

  • @mimikyi7686
    @mimikyi7686 Před 3 lety +1

    this video helps me my confusion of searching kanji pronunciation & trying several ways to remember Kanji

  • @adrianunderwood5573
    @adrianunderwood5573 Před 4 lety +2

    Im currently working on learning radicals and kanji. Although its very difficult for me at the moment I really enjoy writing them out, it helps me keep myself motivated. Just wish I could remember them a bit quicker.

  • @verdecillo9940
    @verdecillo9940 Před 6 lety +15

    私は六ヶ月間日本語を勉強しました。初めから漢字学ぶの事を始めました。とても難しいですよ、でも読む力に役立つです。今まで漢字を四百暗記した。I have studied Japanese for six months. I started learning kanji from the beginning. They're really difficult, but so useful when reading. So far, I have memorized about 400. (Most important is simply making study a consistent habit- even if you learn just 1 every day (easily doable), then after a year, you would know almost 400. If you learn 2 or 3 every day (feasible), then after a year, you would know almost 1000!)

    • @user-de5jc5gt9l
      @user-de5jc5gt9l Před 5 lety

      Verdecillo six months!You are brilliant!

    • @salmon9130
      @salmon9130 Před 5 lety

      Kanji is a tool for fast record and compressed message. Just take a glimpse of your comment. I can get information like this: I, six months, Japanese, learn. First, learn Kanji, event, start. Difficult, read, useful. Now, Kanji, 400, memory. Then I almost get the main idea.
      PS: You are smart!

  • @weishengchen2984
    @weishengchen2984 Před 6 lety +15

    I'm a Chinese native speaker learning Japanese and the main trouble is the phenology. I often mispronounce words by the Chinese way.

    • @languagepepe2855
      @languagepepe2855 Před 6 lety +2

      乾杯!干杯!

    • @JonahSMoonRiver
      @JonahSMoonRiver Před 6 lety +3

      I’m learning Chinese along with Japanese, and sometimes I do mix the pronunciation up. The simplified script is easier to distinguish though

    • @ronaldoseven4865
      @ronaldoseven4865 Před 6 lety +1

      Most importantly, if you say the Japanese words with the tones that could possibility make your pronunciation more Mandarin Chinese than Japanese. I have study French but somehow sound German without having the French pronunciation.

    • @kyoumalee2675
      @kyoumalee2675 Před 6 lety +1

      Clarke Road Trojans that's how a person learning a new language.What you need is to practice all the time.I have a tough relationship with English. Despite pronoucation issues, English spelling is in a mess.Hard to remember.

  • @connorgibes709
    @connorgibes709 Před 2 lety +3

    I've been studying Japanese for 3 years without making any real progress on kanji. In all that time, you're the first person to say "phonetic component" to me, and now I have a decent strategy to learn kanji.
    ありがとうございます!

  • @Noelciaaa
    @Noelciaaa Před 5 lety +10

    As a learner... Kanji is surely challenging but it actually makes learning Japanese more engaging. Because I'm not learning it for work or college or any other practical goal, I don't get worried about getting bad results bc I encounter something hard to remember. I treat my learning process as playing a game. The parts that are in hiragana or katana feel to me like a smooth glide through a part of a level, where I encounter easy to defeat enemies and can just enjoy the atmosphere of the environment. The kanji are like boss fights, or just harder enemies or complex puzzles. Without them, the game's pacing would feel dull and overcoming them feels incredibly satisfying and they have interesting designs too! :). Also once you "defeat" the kanji, they actually become your allies! Esp if they're the ones that form other kanji - since you already know the meaning of this component "defeating" the other one that contains it is easier! So I think that if someone takes it easy and doesn't force themselves to remember each and every kanji they encounter at once, just let it take time and sink in overtime as you see them used repetitively, the learning process won't feel difficult at all :). Also I've heard the stroke order is smth almost nobody cares about these days unless you're into calligraphy. It's not really visible if you write with a pen, as long as you can write it to look correctly, it's fine :).

  • @cassiuscyparissus5567
    @cassiuscyparissus5567 Před 6 lety +388

    English actually uses Kanji as well. look at these words: through, though, trough, tough, thought, thorough.

    • @MultiVigarista
      @MultiVigarista Před 6 lety +18

      🤣😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

    • @kyoumalee2675
      @kyoumalee2675 Před 5 lety +26

      I guess he was talking about irregular spellings of English. When the spelling is not regular, it is not that good with an alphabet.

    • @streetsmartdrumming9567
      @streetsmartdrumming9567 Před 5 lety +2

      😅😅😅😂😂😂

    • @Dou_Y
      @Dou_Y Před 5 lety +3

      you are genius boiiii~~~

    • @PainfulFateX
      @PainfulFateX Před 5 lety +21

      I hate these words so much, they are unbelievable hard to pronounce....

  • @michaelperrigo
    @michaelperrigo Před 2 lety

    THIS WAS SO HELPFUL, YOU SAVED THE DAY!

  • @siamakalaei1148
    @siamakalaei1148 Před 2 lety

    Thank you so much for your explanation. Best wishes and also have a nice Dddday!

  • @osasunaitor
    @osasunaitor Před 6 lety +56

    Dragons on the move!!! Hahaha I seriously burst out laughing loudly when I watched that part. I never imagined that any language on Earth would have a single symbol to describe that "concept" XD

    • @pauladriaanse
      @pauladriaanse Před 6 lety +1

      It isn't really one single symbol is it? ;D

    • @jwuhome
      @jwuhome Před 4 lety

      So is the absurd numbering between 11 to 20 in English which is more complicated than they really need.

    • @martintuma9974
      @martintuma9974 Před 4 lety

      @@jwuhome Names for numbers 10^9 and higher are much more absurd.