Learn Kanji in 45 minutes - How to Read and Write Japanese

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  • čas přidán 25. 07. 2024
  • This is THE PLACE to jumpstart your Japanese kanji knowledge with the radicals that build 1500+ characters in under 45 minutes! Download Your Free Kanji ebook goo.gl/Z0zFmv to learn Kanji with more Example Sentences and Phrases ↓ Check how below ↓
    Step 1: Go to goo.gl/Z0zFmv
    Step 2: Sign up for a Free Lifetime Account - No money, No credit card required
    Step 3: Download Your PDF book and master Kanji meanings, readings, stroke order and words for each radical.
    Your Free ebook includes:
    - 50 Most Common Radicals
    - 63 Chapters & 538 Pages in Total
    - 150+ Example Sentences and Phrases
    - Native Japanese Audio Examples for Every Entry
    - Stroke Orders to Help You Write Each Radical
    - Vibrant Images to Help with Memorization
    - 3000+ Bonus Sample Vocab
    Learning kanji can either be the most frustrating work of your life, or it can be a fascinating and fun journey! The key to making kanji an enjoyable experience is to learn the meaning and origin of the kanji radicals that build all kanji characters.
    This video will introduce you to the most essential radicals that can be found in over 1,500 kanji characters! Just imagine how many doors in your learning process a mere 45 minutes can open for you!
    To learn more about the Japanese writing system:
    Learn all Hiragana here: goo.gl/cn6znv
    And don't forget to brush up on your katakana here: goo.gl/HtEguV
    Follow and write to us using hashtag #JapanesePod101
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Komentáře • 9K

  • @hotepanthony3910
    @hotepanthony3910 Před 4 lety +19824

    Learning Japanese be like:
    "This radical means dragon. And The kanji next to it means shoe. Together, they mean pancake."

    • @Mars8765
      @Mars8765 Před 4 lety +2484

      This radical means paper. This radical means person. Together, they mean grass.

    • @raventv9826
      @raventv9826 Před 4 lety +677

      Im learning chinese in university so for me kanji is pretty free meaning once you take the effort to leanr kanji u learn chinese aswell so it might be confusing but its worth it

    • @CSXFilmer
      @CSXFilmer Před 4 lety +1892

      If you’re strong enough you can use the shoe to squish the dragon into a pancake.

    • @mathiasensimon
      @mathiasensimon Před 4 lety +228

      Yes because yes

    • @CSXFilmer
      @CSXFilmer Před 4 lety +167

      frogisamars the person make paper using the grass

  • @YNNEB-hz3be
    @YNNEB-hz3be Před 5 lety +5065

    Hiragana=friend
    Katakana=ok one
    Kanji=the bully

    • @nikitasfantasies6658
      @nikitasfantasies6658 Před 4 lety +150

      Oh God this is too accurate

    • @jaegerbawmb687
      @jaegerbawmb687 Před 4 lety +26

      So true! xd

    • @stratis5360
      @stratis5360 Před 4 lety +16

      Haha totally accurate

    • @ghadiaoun5534
      @ghadiaoun5534 Před 4 lety +53

      @Orion D. Hunter i would have said the same given that katakana symbols are more geometrical and simpler that hiragana. But if you learn hiragana first you will feel that katakana is more diifficult ig and vice vers ca...

    • @Rudenbehr
      @Rudenbehr Před 4 lety +20

      Ghadi Aoun Question is... why tf would anyone learn katakana first 😂 makes no sense when you think about, but we all eventually learn it so meh

  • @tflyfoster3018
    @tflyfoster3018 Před rokem +63

    10:34 Recap of everything so far
    Kanji
    • Kanji is the incorporation of Chinese characters into Japanese writing
    • They are characters that represent an idea and contain meaning
    • Radicals are the building blocks of Kanji
    • Kanji can have multiple readings "On" and "Kun"
    • The "On" reading mimics the original sound made in Chinese
    • The "Kun" reading is a revised reading used to integrate the Japanese alphabet
    • The only way to determine which reading to use is mainly VIA the context
    • The "On" reading is usually used when multiple Kanji are grouped together in a compound word
    • The "Kun" reading is usually used when it's a standalone Kanji
    Radicals
    • Each Kanji character has at least one of them
    • Sometimes they can be a Kanji on its own
    • Several Radicals put together can be another Kanji
    • When placed together they can be in 4 different positions known as Left, Crown, Right, Foot
    Common Kanji Radicals & Characters
    • Person/Human 人 or 休
    • Called にんべん written with 2 strokes
    • This character is commonly found in the left position
    • Less commonly found in the Crown position
    "On" Readings are on the left and "Kun" on the right
    • Alone its readings are ニソ and ひと
    • Paired with Tree it's キユウ and やす meaning to rest 休
    • Paired with Trunk it's タイ and かやだ meaning body 体
    • Paired with Word it's シソ meaning Trust 信

  • @NissanSkylineVR30
    @NissanSkylineVR30 Před 2 lety +75

    For anyone learning Kanji right now or Chinese characters, its best to learn them through memory and making up a story. This video is really teaching you one thing, making a memory or a story behind each Kanji. When they claim Person and Tree is rest, its their way of memorizing the Kanji as rest. What I mean by that is, if that Kanji meant "to lean", you would have just remembered it as a person leaning on a tree. To Lean. Its all imaginative. That's the key take way here.

  • @petermendez9486
    @petermendez9486 Před 5 lety +4269

    "Human + Word"
    Me: "Oh I got it, it's language!"
    "It's trust!"
    Me: How the f-

    • @muhammadmuizzsuddin7702
      @muhammadmuizzsuddin7702 Před 5 lety +117

      I've just deceived too :D

    • @TheVergile
      @TheVergile Před 5 lety +191

      Heartmouth + Fivemouth = Language.
      Of course. Obviously.

    • @PRINCESS444
      @PRINCESS444 Před 5 lety +22

      I litterly thought the same thing

    • @dhanursharma1752
      @dhanursharma1752 Před 5 lety +93

      It's the representation of a "person giving his word" ie. Trust, is what I believe

    • @alfred1925
      @alfred1925 Před 5 lety +23

      You need to make up your own mnemonics using the radicals

  • @nevie6008
    @nevie6008 Před 4 lety +8153

    Whoever made this language has good imagination, not gonna lie..

    • @funatic9912
      @funatic9912 Před 4 lety +421

      Ive never seen a child that looks like 24:02

    • @khajitt
      @khajitt Před 4 lety +324

      It's because everything is simplified. You need to look at the characters way before traditional Chinese. Ancient Chinese that is

    • @funatic9912
      @funatic9912 Před 4 lety +95

      @pxstel_boba• That would look like a child if the child's knees could bend backwards

    • @miso_9373
      @miso_9373 Před 4 lety +46

      @pxstel_boba• and you close your eyes to the point you can just see, then start to tear up. Then you see a child...

    • @isabellaomega5389
      @isabellaomega5389 Před 4 lety +46

      Kanji originated from china but sure

  • @rayhuakai5415
    @rayhuakai5415 Před rokem +23

    I am Japanese. When I was in elementary school, we had homework to write Kanji characters every day.
    When typing on the keyboard, you may not know which kanji is the correct one to use.
    But nowadays, if you use voice recognition, it will automatically display the correct kanji.
    The trick is to speak in sentences.
    This sentence was also entered using Japanese speech recognition, and was translated using DeepL.
    私は日本人です。私が小学生の頃は、毎日漢字を書く宿題がありました。
    キーボードで入力するときは、どの漢字を使うのが正解かわからないかもしれません。
    でも、今は音声認識を使えば、自動で正しい漢字で表示されます。
    こつは、文章で話すことです。
    この文章も日本語の音声認識で入力しました。DeepLを使用して、翻訳を行いました。

  • @adr2534
    @adr2534 Před 2 lety +24

    Me happily coming to learn kanji after finishing hiragana and katakana.... also me regretting the day i promised myself to learn Japanese 🥺 it will take me 1000 lives to learn Kanji! hats off to the people of Japan😭

    • @G3heNa
      @G3heNa Před 17 dny

      Lol same condition as you

    • @Lulu_and_mochi
      @Lulu_and_mochi Před 5 dny

      As japenese girl who is in middle school. I STRUGGLE with some kanji. Reading is easy but writing is litteraly so hard. It s because of kanji i dont have an full mark in japenese😭

  • @Daniel-zh1si
    @Daniel-zh1si Před 4 lety +5658

    Learning Japanese writing is like school:
    Romaji: Your best friend.
    Hiragana: Your crush.
    Katakana: The foreign student.
    Kanji: A fkn dragon with giant cannons attacking the school.

  • @Wyrmixx
    @Wyrmixx Před 5 lety +5587

    *finally understands all hiragana and katakana and has the courage to learn more*
    Kanji:
    *I'm about to end this man's whole career*

  • @yasikins6646
    @yasikins6646 Před 2 lety +49

    Finally an explanation for reading kanji! I always wondered how it worked. It always baffled me how Japanese people could read a kanji they’ve never or hardly seen and understand it’s meaning. The radical system makes so much sense! Yay no longer in the dark! Excited to learn Kanji now that I know how it works! 😄

    • @r0yce
      @r0yce Před 2 lety +7

      You still as optimistic as this?? 😂

    • @Quach7
      @Quach7 Před 2 lety +4

      Glyphs are all around us, long before computer icons,
      Stop sign.
      Traffic signs.
      McDonalds
      Burger King
      Taco Bell (it's a bell)
      Pizza Hut
      Roy Rogers
      Big Boy
      Buffalo Wild Wings
      Chili's
      Wendy's (that's the picture of Wendy, the founder's daughter)
      etc . . .

    • @L0u8823
      @L0u8823 Před rokem

      @@r0yceseriously haha

    • @thecamillarose9806
      @thecamillarose9806 Před 11 měsíci +1

      ​@@r0yceyeah I know you've given up but we all haven't I find kanji super fun to learn like I'm untangling a puzzle

    • @leni4179
      @leni4179 Před 3 měsíci

      ​@@Quach7bro, think about the emoji, these are literally pictograph and we use all the time

  • @undine8750
    @undine8750 Před 2 lety +80

    It doesn't take as long as they suggest. In Japan they learn them all throughout primary and secondary school, but a motivated self-learner usually exceeds the capacity for learning that's required in school by a large margin. It is very possible to crank them all out in 2-4 months if you have enough caffeine.

    • @Quach7
      @Quach7 Před 2 lety +25

      They are in the environment of their language. We call that immersion, like a fish is immersed in water. It is wet all the time.

    • @cryptic2121
      @cryptic2121 Před rokem +7

      Learning 2000 most used kanji in 2 months means to fully memorise 30+ kanji per day. I don’t think I see anyone to do it 😅
      4 months is possible maybe! Good luck

  • @6soup6time69
    @6soup6time69 Před 4 lety +2477

    me: * has mastered hiragana and katakana *
    kanji: you really thought you did something there

  • @neko_aple
    @neko_aple Před 4 lety +1356

    12:53 don't fool me. Human legs combined with eyes can only mean one thing: Mike from Monster Inc.

  • @edenbergmanarpiis7848
    @edenbergmanarpiis7848 Před 2 lety +24

    Kanji is hard for me to grasp and I'm kinda thinking of giving up sometimes. But I've come this far. I've already learned hiragana and katakana, and I have already bought reference books and study materials. And I still have my passion in learning this language. To anyone who's feeling the same, let's not give up and try and try until we succeed. It might take long before we master some phrases, characters, or words, but atleast we tried, and we're still trying. Ganbatte! ❤️
    And thanks for Japanesepod101 for the free and fun lessons! Their videos are so helpful and enjoyable that it helps me maintain my will to study. Arigatou gozaimasu! 🙇🏻‍♀️

  • @NissanSkylineVR30
    @NissanSkylineVR30 Před rokem +50

    For all new Kanji learners, if you are planning to learn Kanji through using stories, memorize your own stories. The issue that a lot of people don't tell you, like in this video or in books like RTK (remembering the kanji), is that memorizing thousands of different stories for Kanji is also just as ineffective. People claim, "Oh. Memorizing Kanji by itself is difficult and will take a long time." But when you memorize the stories for these Kanjis, you also STILL have to memorize the Kanji. The only difference is that you are memorizing an extra step to MAYBE make it easier for yourself. I think the best situation is mix and match. Some stories for some Kanji you find difficult but the rest should be learnt through meaning and context. We don't teach English speakers to learn words like Run through pictures. IE: We don't tell people. "Okay. The R is like a 2 legs and they are moving and the UN are the curves of a track. Thus running!" Also - in English we memorize thousands and thousands of words created by 26 letters. That means 26 letters have thousands of combinations. Not once we were thought to use stories. A prime of example of why some of these stories don't really work if you listen to other people is: take the character 問 (to ask). The video basically said: the department of mouth is to question or to ask. Why isn't it to smile? To talk? To chew? To etc... This is basically basically its not REAL meaning; its what they decided to make the story as. Just remember, if you do stories, do your own or you'll be confused.

  • @user-cn4nt7td5j
    @user-cn4nt7td5j Před 3 lety +3979

    I'm Japanese.
    When you learn Kanji, I think the most important thing is imagination.
    (I'm sorry if I'm unnatural English because I use a translator!)
    ❌ Person+Tree=rest
    ✔︎ Imagine the scenery of a person stands still beside a large tree in the primitive age. Calm time flows and he/she become sleepy and lie down.
    =rest

    • @reyshakquit
      @reyshakquit Před 3 lety +350

      so pretty much you need to find a way to connect these two words so the third one comes out?

    • @zeidelayyan5387
      @zeidelayyan5387 Před 3 lety +119

      Arigatou!

    • @randomlurker8981
      @randomlurker8981 Před 3 lety +39

      Jp are like if you took bill gates or zuck and clone them to have an entire country/ civilization... I can see zuck creating japanese to not be understood by foreigners

    • @mmael_
      @mmael_ Před 3 lety +20

      有難う!!!

    • @eternallucifer7709
      @eternallucifer7709 Před 3 lety +126

      can you explain how mouth plus legs is equal brother?

  • @lapin9417
    @lapin9417 Před 4 lety +3487

    I’d like to wish every person trying to learn kanji including myself the best of luck, I sincerely mean that..

    • @sultanalsuwaidi2588
      @sultanalsuwaidi2588 Před 3 lety +12

      Wholesome Nagito so what progress are u making?

    • @lapin9417
      @lapin9417 Před 3 lety +14

      sultan Alsuwaidi sorry for the late reply!! I was a bit busy. Uhm, I’m not sure I’m getting the hang of kanji.. what about you? How are you doing with your progress?

    • @user-vh8ep4qr6b
      @user-vh8ep4qr6b Před 3 lety +4

      *Should I learn Kanji first, I'm confused.*

    • @gukkiegukkie
      @gukkiegukkie Před 3 lety +50

      @@user-vh8ep4qr6b No 1st you can learn hiragana nd then katakana after that you can go with kanji

    • @tria0801
      @tria0801 Před 3 lety +25

      がんばります👍

  • @Nagitos.Boytoy
    @Nagitos.Boytoy Před 2 lety +8

    It’s two am, I’ve been writing very detailed notes on a lot of your videos. It might take some time but your videos have really encouraged me to keep learning

  • @williamowings6857
    @williamowings6857 Před rokem +3

    A friend sent me the official text books for grade schoolers in Japan.
    So I'm a 50yo Texan that reads and writes on a 4th grade level if we assume C- still counts.
    B- 3rd grade...A+/- 2nd grade.
    🤷‍♂️ Fine by me. Don't let children's songs and books discourage you from using them to learn.
    It is how we ALL started out.
    Being born into a multilingual home did help. Especially with Japanese since the vowels are identical to Spanish. You'd be surprised how many Japanese people learn Spanish.
    But everybody starts at the beginning like a little kid.
    Other people enjoy it when you make an effort to speak to them in their native language and it makes for some really funny stories later when you get the hang of it and know what went wrong.😆

  • @eatsleepdie1682
    @eatsleepdie1682 Před 3 lety +4255

    46 symbols (Hiragana) = learn in 1 hour
    46 symbols (Katakana) = learn in 1 hour
    over 2k symbols (Kanji) = learn in 45 minutes

    • @babijjones6432
      @babijjones6432 Před 3 lety +258

      they don't try to teach us all 2000 words tho...... so ofc it's only 43 minutes

    • @youneverwalkalone3584
      @youneverwalkalone3584 Před 3 lety +125

      @@babijjones6432 I'd rather they tell us all off it🥲 I won't survive in Japan next year if I only mastered Hiragana and Katakana😢

    • @mavi2643
      @mavi2643 Před 2 lety +67

      @@youneverwalkalone3584 are you going permanently? If not then it's not much of a deal, as long as you know directions and the basics in talking you'll be good

    • @youneverwalkalone3584
      @youneverwalkalone3584 Před 2 lety +43

      @@mavi2643 Im just going for school. But thank you for the info:)

    • @ProPlayer279
      @ProPlayer279 Před 2 lety +11

      @@youneverwalkalone3584 when/where are you going exactly

  • @Yomikade
    @Yomikade Před 3 lety +4294

    Me: so 見 is see, because of legs + eye, so 兄 would probably means talk, because legs + mouth, right?
    Kanji: O L D E R B R O T H E R

    • @moe-kirimura
      @moe-kirimura Před 3 lety +336

      And talk is "喋". 口 mouth, 世 world, 木 tree.....

    • @polaroidghost
      @polaroidghost Před 3 lety +292

      The only good reason I could think of to justify this is that maybe in the past it was the older brother's role to support the family and feed them idk lol

    • @fumfig3262
      @fumfig3262 Před 3 lety +178

      The ancient Chinese origin of 兄 depicts a man looking up and pointing his hand down as though he is giving an order, symbolizing the edlest brother's authority over those younger than him.

    • @milkywat6463
      @milkywat6463 Před 3 lety +7

      Ur profile picture is satou-chan

    • @njr-hp9qr
      @njr-hp9qr Před 3 lety +3

      @@polaroidghost pretty good honestly

  • @kimre342
    @kimre342 Před rokem +24

    I learned Chinese characters since my schooling in kindergarten. However, Kanji is still one of the most challenging parts of the Japanese language. The writing is easy. The meaning of the words is mostly identical or similar, although approximately 30% of the vocabulary is uniquely used in the Japanese language and unintelligible in Chinese. The pronunciation, however, is often different from those in any Sinitic language such that we need to memorize them one by one. To be able to read Kanji words, we still need to memorize the pronunciation of more than a thousand commonly used words. Only a very small portion of the Kanji words have similar pronunciation to some Sinitic languages, usually the regional languages in South China which share common origins with Kanji from Middle Chinese. The pronunciation of modern Mandarin Chinese is almost completely different.

    • @MrBaluboo
      @MrBaluboo Před 6 měsíci +1

      alright, any tips on how to make the memorizing part any easier? how do kindergarten kids approach this mammoth task? thanks for tips, any really😅

  • @harshitahahaha
    @harshitahahaha Před 4 měsíci +1

    this is literally the best kanji lesson ever on youtube. it covers exactly all that is needed to be known.. from the meaning, different uses, to strokes and pronunciation. it's so hard to learn otherwise. Thank you so much. This was really helpful and i've been able to remember kanjis without much effort now. please make more of these

  • @jamesramirez0408
    @jamesramirez0408 Před 4 lety +1754

    No one:
    Japanese:
    *ten plus mouth equals old*

    • @anthonyk.1408
      @anthonyk.1408 Před 4 lety +107

      You can imagine a story that justifies it, like a mouth which has only 10 teeth left in it is an old person's mouth.

    • @sergelucca635
      @sergelucca635 Před 4 lety +36

      @@anthonyk.1408 maybe. But the fact that it is so open for interpretation means it could mean anything too. I think if there is a way to identify what strokes to write for a particular something would be much more better than adding two different radicals that could mean anything due to its open interpretation.

    • @literallyabsolutelyanythin9692
      @literallyabsolutelyanythin9692 Před 4 lety +46

      EVERY SINGLE COMMENT IS MAKING ME LMFAO

    • @arnold3768
      @arnold3768 Před 4 lety +9

      That's probably more like what chinese think... XD

    • @superj1e2z6
      @superj1e2z6 Před 4 lety +13

      Ten + mouth
      The mouth in which jokes come from
      Ten jokes gets old
      Hence the meaning is old

  • @solidfox2
    @solidfox2 Před 5 lety +498

    Me 3 minutes into the video: *internal screaming*
    Me 15 minutes into the video: *external screaming*

    • @zissler1
      @zissler1 Před 4 lety +4

      I wonder how your work feels about that

    • @theiriscen
      @theiriscen Před 4 lety

      🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

  • @lizard_girl_
    @lizard_girl_ Před 2 lety +9

    i’ve been recently trying to learn japanese fluently, and i’m doing pretty well with hiragana and katakana, but kanji had always scared me... until now. this video was super helpful and a great introduction to kanji! thank you very much!! 😅

  • @richardpena7153
    @richardpena7153 Před 2 lety +6

    This was so helpful. I just started learning Japanese, and am just getting a grasp on Hiragana and Katakana. Kanji had me completely confused. This helped me tremendously, because now I have a basis to learn Kanji.

  • @denizkendirci
    @denizkendirci Před 5 lety +810

    what i learnt from this lesson:
    one cannot simply guess the meaning of a kanji just by trying to make a connection between the meanings of its radicals.

    • @smokeymanalotoo
      @smokeymanalotoo Před 5 lety +53

      true. memorization the kanji as an individual word is the only way

    • @user-wt5if6rx8m
      @user-wt5if6rx8m Před 5 lety +33

      @@smokeymanalotoo i think it's much better to learn kanji through vocabulary and context, most people are not linguists, it certainly helps guessing new words if you know a bit about how japanese words are generally conceived but that's it, but i guess even that becomes intuitive the more our brains get used to discovering the patterns

    • @lNovalandl
      @lNovalandl Před 4 lety +24

      to be honest, even if the stories are far fetched they help, the person + tree meaning ti rest feels weird but everytime i see these now i instantly remember, "uh a person next to a tree?" and that feeling of weirdness reminds me of the meaning even tho the actual story behind it might not make sense,
      i know that ones a simple exemple but it still helps a lot to know radicals, also it's how most dictionaries are organized so it's useful for searching kanji when you can recognize part of it

    • @johnbaptist7082
      @johnbaptist7082 Před 4 lety +1

      @@lNovalandl In the old days people at the fields used to rest under trees at noon. Thatvwaybthey were protected by the sun.

    • @tldoesntlikebread
      @tldoesntlikebread Před 4 lety +25

      Sometimes if I can't understand the story between then radicals then I just make my own way to remember like for otouto (younger brother) which is 弟 my mindset was "this kanji has horns because younger brothers must be little devils" and that's how I remember it.

  • @bobsagget7483
    @bobsagget7483 Před 6 lety +4755

    so to learn kanji you have to remember what it means, how to write it, and how it is pronounced...simple enough I shall be fluent in Japanese by 2074

    • @nirajshrestha6806
      @nirajshrestha6806 Před 6 lety +73

      FiveADay Kanji 1 only means fucking one.. 1 is beginning point as it is used for counting like いち .. It is not used as single in any sentences .. So? 1st is pronounced First which is soooo simple to understand because of common "st".. Tell me in the same way in japanese

    • @irsh_official
      @irsh_official Před 5 lety +84

      U can be fluent in just 6 months

    • @TheVergile
      @TheVergile Před 5 lety +260

      Good thing every kanji has only two ways to read it and 5 possible meanings

    • @meow7476
      @meow7476 Před 5 lety +9

      藁藁.. 同じです

    • @meow7476
      @meow7476 Před 5 lety +29

      漢字は本当にむずかしい

  • @timothyavery1104
    @timothyavery1104 Před 2 lety +2

    In the movement radical, I noticed how much it looked like a treadmill which can also relate to movement which helps me, so ありがと

  • @doomsdary
    @doomsdary Před rokem +4

    It’s 6 am I haven’t slept yet and now I’m learning Japanese apparently

  • @gp1131
    @gp1131 Před 3 lety +1142

    We learn kanji in elementary school for 6 years with a sponge brain, still sometimes we search the characters that we don't know or forget how to write or read. There is even a quiz show that guesses how to read kanji.
    I want to say to all you guys who study japanese just keep it up, but I think it's best to learn step by step while having fun.
    I want to talk to you guys in Japanese someday!
    Greetings from Japan!!

    • @immersivevr3605
      @immersivevr3605 Před 3 lety +40

      you just cheered me up ! , I am absolute beginner so one question
      is this approach good - first learning Hiragana and Katakana , Second - all radicals , Last - Kanji (first 2000 or so)

    • @beshooketh9333
      @beshooketh9333 Před 3 lety +32

      ありがとうございます!

    • @gp1131
      @gp1131 Před 2 lety +14

      @@immersivevr3605 I'm not even a japanese teacher, but there seems to be no problem!
      Keeping the focus on writing kanji and you can handle it😉

    • @jwatson908
      @jwatson908 Před 2 lety +7

      (I'm learning Japanese and know hiragana, plus katakana, but I'm unaware of how to get my English keyboard to type either. So, I'll have to type Japanese in English lettering. I'm sorry.)
      Arigato gozaimasu!
      Hatsumode, Jada to mashimasu. Yoroshiku onigaishimasu!
      (This may be spelled incorrectly, if it is, I'm sorry.)

    • @emflamb6244
      @emflamb6244 Před 2 lety +8

      And now i see why asians are smart....

  • @GatoEpico
    @GatoEpico Před 4 lety +638

    there are japanese people of 40years+ living there that still dont know all the kanjis.
    Me trying to learn this quickly

    • @PmpknHead
      @PmpknHead Před 4 lety +22

      Mostly cause there is like 50000 of them when you only need less than 5000

    • @eshaalemad9570
      @eshaalemad9570 Před 4 lety

      指アΣカ .... oh...

    • @JoseSantos-el8nj
      @JoseSantos-el8nj Před 4 lety +12

      Don't think that way, focus on learning the 2136 (I don't know the exact number) that are mostly used in newspapers and the daily life in japan. I won't learn for any means all the kanji out there lol

    • @apex6625
      @apex6625 Před 4 lety +3

      @@JoseSantos-el8nj Google says on Average you only need to learn around 2k to be considered fluent

    • @shyanide
      @shyanide Před 3 lety +11

      @@apex6625 "only"

  • @cx3558
    @cx3558 Před 11 měsíci +3

    This was incredibly useful. Thank you so so much! Can't wait to see if there's more to this Kanji series. 🤩

  • @Sakura_Kun367
    @Sakura_Kun367 Před rokem +5

    I am not going to lie at all i absolutely learnt a lot from this one single video! Thank You so so much i really appreciate how you made this video and explanations too! ❤

  • @richardcolwell6813
    @richardcolwell6813 Před 5 lety +2628

    “Take a look at these kanji characters. Can you guess what they mean?”
    Nope. Not at all. Not even a little bit.

  • @user-cv2vo5wn9m
    @user-cv2vo5wn9m Před 4 lety +568

    me : a chinese
    kanji : hi
    me : I DO NOT FEAR YOU.

  • @elizabethflitcroft7520
    @elizabethflitcroft7520 Před rokem +1

    I love this video!! I would love more videos like this this was super helpful as I'm in the beginning stages of learning Japanese

  • @curtpiazza1688
    @curtpiazza1688 Před 2 lety +3

    Love the lesson and the clear presentation!

  • @RioMunch
    @RioMunch Před 4 lety +2293

    Me:alright I learned hiragana and katakana time for kanji
    Kanji: の
    I haven’t checked back in a while and holy- was it that funny?!

    • @RioMunch
      @RioMunch Před 4 lety +64

      • L i l i a n n e • I meant for ppl to pronounce it in English 😂

    • @justeeny9368
      @justeeny9368 Před 4 lety +97

      @@momminia3093 ばかです

    • @Nsix4
      @Nsix4 Před 4 lety +79

      I don't know how I feel, understanding everything in this thread. I lost my crap when I read "Kanji: の" lol

    • @Poppy-ek6lc
      @Poppy-ek6lc Před 4 lety +9

      hahahahaha same tho

    • @az.muteki
      @az.muteki Před 4 lety +9

      No

  • @DangAlfa
    @DangAlfa Před 3 lety +570

    Congratulations on learning hiragana and katakana, It must've been tough and you did a great job. Now prepare for everlasting pain.

  • @barisbasar3909
    @barisbasar3909 Před rokem +1

    Risa is such a legend. Thanks for all of your content

  • @AnywhereButHome_PinoyAko

    Imagination of all sorts played a big part (if not all) in the creation of each Chinese character. Just like how the constellations were given names.
    Thank you for this tutorial!

  • @bluebotlivingston6016
    @bluebotlivingston6016 Před 7 lety +721

    I'm not scared, I've already learned the whole Pokédex.
    My body is ready

    • @Sweet_Scorpia
      @Sweet_Scorpia Před 7 lety +47

      Jonathan Meddis - yeah if i remember the names of all those 800'dang pokemon characters, then i should be able to remember at least 1,000 kanji right? XD

    • @Uelibertiga
      @Uelibertiga Před 6 lety +13

      Then just imagine you learned the whole pokedex and then you find out about the alola one where all the pokemon have different names. It´s just that easy

    • @hnng7335
      @hnng7335 Před 6 lety

      Uelibertiga That’s still a lot of learning o-o

    • @fgvcosmic6752
      @fgvcosmic6752 Před 6 lety +10

      800 pokemon vs 3000 very similair looking vague characters....

    • @cybershock-025
      @cybershock-025 Před 6 lety +7

      Jonathan Meddis its actually more than 53000 kanji... but you only need about 3000 to be able to read a newspaper ;)

  • @ghostpeppa1012
    @ghostpeppa1012 Před 4 lety +3025

    Me: "Learns hiragana and katakana in 1 week and proceeds to learn kanji with confidence."
    Video: "Person + tree = rest"
    Me: "This little maneuver is gonna cost us 51 years"

    • @alexnime3303
      @alexnime3303 Před 4 lety +75

      you could think of it as someone resting under the shade of a tree

    • @luxvir
      @luxvir Před 4 lety +76

      @@alexnime3303 they were probably talking about the way that you have to figure out every explanation before you can understand it (context obviously helps) but that kanji is just a basic example, did you see "melancholy" (OH MAH GAH)

    • @Ari-uo9kk
      @Ari-uo9kk Před 4 lety +5

      Same feels!!!!

    • @Sol-cx8dw
      @Sol-cx8dw Před 4 lety +10

      @Introverted J Maybe, if human speaks to you, they probably trust you (to some extent at least)

    • @user-li3pn8nx3u
      @user-li3pn8nx3u Před 4 lety +6

      Introverted J It means you take one person’s word by heart. But again, you can’t translate word for word for two entirely different cultures. Better remember it just as “信”.

  • @amirah3791
    @amirah3791 Před rokem

    this was super helpful! for future reference, it really helps to put how to write it before the other info, since some students copy and it helps writing practice to have correct form from the start!

  • @pr0nar3ff
    @pr0nar3ff Před 2 lety +1

    I love this channel. I can learn Japanese for free and they have some fun videos. Thank you so much!

  • @lunamyles2883
    @lunamyles2883 Před 4 lety +1322

    I didn’t know what I was getting myself into when I said I was gonna learn Japanese 😳

  • @fachriecaf
    @fachriecaf Před 3 lety +835

    The 4 way of kanji:
    1). As a stand alone.
    Simply as is with 1 kanji character with 1 meaning.
    I.e: 女(onna) = women
    2). Write it along hiragana but still 1 meaning.
    Here we use them together with hiragana scripts which usually used similarly as a conjunction.
    I.e: 女の子(onna no ko) = girl, consist of kanji 'women'(女, onna), hiragana の that mostly represented as 'ownership', and kanji child (子, ko)
    3). As a radicals and combine it with other radicals to create 1 kanji character.
    I.e: 好(kou) = fondness, consist of 2 kanji as radicals, woman(女) and child(子), but for this one isn't to be used as is, like the 2nd ways, its used in hiragana to give a 'meaning' in its words like 好き(suki, means like) or 好く(suku, means 'to like'). Not to be mistaken with 透く(suku, means 'be transparent') which spelled the same but uses different kanji hence different meaning. You can also uses more radicals, i.e. 姦(kan) = noisy, with 3 kanji characters of women(女) as radicals
    4). Combine it with other kanji but not as radical.
    I.e: 王女(oujo) = princess, consist of 2 kanji, king(王, ou) and women(女, onna). This time not as radical which to create 1 character, but as 2 character but with 1 meaning. And just like radicals, it can also uses more characters but still create one meaning

    • @dardanleci2721
      @dardanleci2721 Před 3 lety +34

      this comment is underrated. thanks for the insight 😊

    • @archise3191
      @archise3191 Před 3 lety +157

      3 women kanji = noisy
      The Chinese knows what's up

    • @mangolie21
      @mangolie21 Před 3 lety +6

      Thank, this was very useful!

    • @Sky4Jus
      @Sky4Jus Před 3 lety +3

      Yeah, while reading, I *surely* will have time to think about something like that

    • @eduardoledesma5568
      @eduardoledesma5568 Před 3 lety +9

      If (King+Woman) means Princess how do you write Queen?

  • @user-xz7eg8jl8m
    @user-xz7eg8jl8m Před 2 lety +9

    そうなんだよなー
    日本人でも漢字が難し過ぎて知らないものもたくさんあるし
    でもその分多彩な表現ができるから日本語は面白い言語だと思うよ

    • @monsterpoof1378
      @monsterpoof1378 Před rokem

      well i read it but i gave me no information, basicly i can just pronounce that but cant understand anything XD.... thats sad :(

  • @BrettOPediaTV
    @BrettOPediaTV Před rokem +1

    It seems like artists created this language, it’s so cool! I’m a visual learner, and I love this so much

  • @MasterQuestMaster
    @MasterQuestMaster Před 6 lety +3380

    The: "Can you guess the meaning of the word? It's the human radical plus the tree radical"
    Me: tree... person?
    They: "Of course it means 'to rest'! What about human and root?"
    Me: Well the person is now leaning closer to the ground (near the root of the tree) , so maybe sleep?
    The: "It's referring to the human body! Okay, then how about human and word?"
    Me: Oh, that's gotta be talking!
    They: "It means trust! Can you see how easily we can guess the meaning?"
    Me: Not really.

    • @rob.ale90
      @rob.ale90 Před 6 lety +93

      You should really be on 9gag:))

    • @user-qt9cb2wu1y
      @user-qt9cb2wu1y Před 6 lety +48

      MasterQuestMaster lol i agree

    • @sonny01red
      @sonny01red Před 6 lety +41

      I was thinking reading for the last one

    • @dudinwillriot4669
      @dudinwillriot4669 Před 6 lety +69

      You're totally right, it's hard cause the word meant essentially but it's confusing . Person+tree=rest
      Person+root=body
      On and kun thing is the bonus

    • @tinymusicalfan3187
      @tinymusicalfan3187 Před 6 lety +22

      MasterQuestMaster lmao I was thinking the same thing 😂😂😂

  • @isaiahscobel
    @isaiahscobel Před 4 lety +280

    Kanji are like ancient emojis if that makes it any easier
    A good tip is that there is no one certain reading (Example: Soda, Pop, Coke, Cola) and then u just use it as the 🥤Emoji

  • @anniemadden3005
    @anniemadden3005 Před 7 měsíci

    This was brilliant!!!! Straightforward, clear and sequential!!! Thank you!

  • @theburgercam
    @theburgercam Před 2 lety

    Keep the videos coming very helpful and I'm in love with Risa

  • @normans.58
    @normans.58 Před 4 lety +646

    "This radical means person, and this radical means tree. Can you guess what this Kanji means?"
    Me, with confidence: *Treeman*
    I know, I'm not very bright.

    • @daev3000
      @daev3000 Před 4 lety +63

      I don't think the problem here lies with you...

    • @earth527
      @earth527 Před 3 lety +14

      Treeman is a name of a Chinese CZcams channel.

    • @user-vh8ep4qr6b
      @user-vh8ep4qr6b Před 3 lety +5

      i thought that as well comrad

    • @maxipower16
      @maxipower16 Před 3 lety +1

      groot

    • @aebiia
      @aebiia Před 3 lety +2

      @@earth527 Im subscribed to it lol

  • @iishadowii7477
    @iishadowii7477 Před 5 lety +1574

    Me: Alright so "人" means person, I feel like I can learn Kanji
    *MELANCHOLY:*
    I'm about to end this mans whole career

    • @ando1135
      @ando1135 Před 5 lety +34

      hah i recognized that kanji as soon as i saw it because for some reason, years ago, i looked up the character for depression and it was that kanji...and it stuck with me, because of how unique it was. dont ask me to write it though lol, it has so many strokes.

    • @iceg6621
      @iceg6621 Před 4 lety

      iiShadowii
      intredasting

    • @MANOFGOD9000
      @MANOFGOD9000 Před 4 lety +4

      How did you type a kanji character? Been trying to find out how for a minute.

    • @ando1135
      @ando1135 Před 4 lety +8

      MANOFGOD9000 何?

    • @ando1135
      @ando1135 Před 4 lety +3

      MANOFGOD9000 if on computer you need to download a language pack. If on the phone, you can turn on the Japanese keyboard

  • @Mikael_Puusaari
    @Mikael_Puusaari Před 2 lety +6

    thank you for this
    One way to understand Kanji seems to be to deduct the concept of concepts put together rather than just knowing the words for them, at least at a first glance :)

  • @Ladyofthedreams_
    @Ladyofthedreams_ Před 2 lety +1

    I almost learn all the kanji from this vid it means a lot to me and it helped me too it is a good lesson and these two r the good teachers thnx for letting us know it carefully 😍😍😍it really helped and i am glad hope i learn japanese fastly!!😘😘

  • @SystemYTP
    @SystemYTP Před 4 lety +275

    “We highly recommend keeping ready a phone, in case learning the Kanji strokes gives you a stroke.”

  • @W4RH3AD
    @W4RH3AD Před 4 lety +135

    13:10
    "Just remember where your legs are on your body and you won't forget it!"
    "Where are your legs?"
    "On the bottom!"
    LMAO. That enthusiasm melted my heart and made me laugh out loud.

  • @L0u8823
    @L0u8823 Před rokem +1

    I learned Hiragana and just got done with Katakana from this channel, and now it’s teaching me Kanji. THANK YOU

  • @pretykhan926
    @pretykhan926 Před rokem +2

    It was really helpful ❤ and I'm looking forward to watching more kanji series videos. I love your channel a lot. You guys really helped me to learn Japanese in a very easy way. May Allah help you guys 😘

  • @daviderinetorres3222
    @daviderinetorres3222 Před 4 lety +608

    "Me finally learns katakana and hiragana"
    Kanji: "plays Giorno's theme"

  • @projectmayhem6898
    @projectmayhem6898 Před 6 lety +591

    You are tearing me apart, Risa!

  • @ankuryadav2514
    @ankuryadav2514 Před 14 dny

    Please make more videos like this one. Teach us more radicals and kanji. It was really very helpful

  • @JCM._effects
    @JCM._effects Před rokem +18

    0:32 how to know about kanji?
    0:46 what is kanji?
    2:21 how to learn kanji?
    3:13 radicals
    3:15 what are radicals?
    4:34 the person radical
    4:08 lesson recap
    4:45 first radical
    5:24 person radical meaning
    7:08common positions
    10:15 lesson review
    10:34 human legs radical
    13:04 common position

  • @xxjust_txx9835
    @xxjust_txx9835 Před 4 lety +253

    The moment you finish hiragana and katakana. Oh that wasn’t that bad!
    Kanji: *i guess you’ve wondered where I’ve been*

  • @risayamanaka3252
    @risayamanaka3252 Před 7 lety +1499

    now that I know how to write "human legs" I will write it on an empty box and ship it to Tokyo and freak people out.

    • @abdullakc
      @abdullakc Před 7 lety +55

      Risa Yamanaka lol

    • @TheElmorenous
      @TheElmorenous Před 7 lety +7

      Risa Yamanaka xD

    • @zlz95
      @zlz95 Před 7 lety +86

      It just like you write the English word "legs" on an empty box and no one will freak out but only confused

    • @abdullakc
      @abdullakc Před 7 lety +2

      TheElmorenous ur Japanese ?

    • @jo_darel
      @jo_darel Před 7 lety

      Risa Yamanaka marry me

  • @eduardomonteiro6863
    @eduardomonteiro6863 Před 2 lety

    Great lesson! ありがとう❤️

  • @abhisheksharma9589
    @abhisheksharma9589 Před 2 lety

    ありがとうございます。Need more videos like this

  • @dimithetree
    @dimithetree Před 3 lety +765

    I started learning Japanese almost a year ago... and really, the farther you come, the easier it gets. You start noticing patterns in Kanji, which makes it easier to remember them.
    My tip for new learners would be: write the characters down, and multiple times. I only started doing that recently - it really helps!

    • @gapedandamazed6988
      @gapedandamazed6988 Před 3 lety +3

      Amazing advice! It's great to see someone successful in Japanese and spewing out some advice. I'm sure that everyone would very much appreciate some reading advice as well please 🤎

    • @cloecourcelles
      @cloecourcelles Před 2 lety +5

      nice pfp

    • @soywho9837
      @soywho9837 Před 2 lety +8

      thats what i had to do for hiragana, and im starting to read and write it and remember them much better

    • @naviimandiv8407
      @naviimandiv8407 Před 2 lety

      Further

    • @purplepandas6987
      @purplepandas6987 Před 2 lety +1

      Thank you it really helped ^_^

  • @tenletters5889
    @tenletters5889 Před 4 lety +576

    31:58 日 is a pictogram? Did some Chinese dude think that the sun was actually a glowing Ikea shelf?

  • @sassystitch
    @sassystitch Před 12 dny

    As a very visual learner, I'm absolutely loving learning these radicals, visual storytelling at its finest! Much easier to understand then I was expecting haha

  • @nguyentranthaonguyen2038

    This is what I'm looking for. Thank you ❤

  • @g3b_rad755
    @g3b_rad755 Před 6 lety +865

    "Learning kanji is gonna be ezzz"
    *Sees the kanji character for melancholy*
    (Õ_Ó)

    • @sloth4235
      @sloth4235 Před 6 lety +22

      G3 Bo_man i looked it up and holy sh*t that's a lot. artwork tho for sure

    • @soulextracter
      @soulextracter Před 6 lety +25

      That's when melancholy ensues! x'D

    • @fvn55yearsago57
      @fvn55yearsago57 Před 6 lety +2

      G3 Bo_man
      I mastered the word for melancholy, it's actually really easy if you just know and identify the radicals.

    • @idekenterprises9734
      @idekenterprises9734 Před 6 lety +11

      憂鬱

    • @olli35pgxpg5naf9
      @olli35pgxpg5naf9 Před 5 lety +2

      It's easier than it looks

  • @bankai416
    @bankai416 Před 3 lety +468

    Learning hiragana is like being able to read a text out loud but not understanding the meaning of it, while practicing Kanji is like being able to understand a written text but not being able to read it out loud most of the time xD

    • @lgaz4614
      @lgaz4614 Před 3 lety +10

      AHAHA!! EXACTLY

    • @scarlyt1017
      @scarlyt1017 Před 3 lety +6

      You worded it exactly the way I wanted to say 😂👏

    • @gapedandamazed6988
      @gapedandamazed6988 Před 3 lety +15

      That IS the case. But if you look at it from this angle it will help you out. So it's like you know English letters and maybe can spell Spanish words. You don't know them but you know the letters. At that point you need to learn what the word is. That's pretty much hiragana and katakana when you read them don't you agree?

    • @Pelipear
      @Pelipear Před 2 lety +1

      Makes sense

    • @Kiev-en-3-jours
      @Kiev-en-3-jours Před rokem +1

      I swear to the Gods, this man speaks the truth. Peace and prosperity to him and glory to Ukrainian fighters.

  • @curtcrowley6659
    @curtcrowley6659 Před 2 lety

    THANK for the tuts and guides.

  • @bobth3026
    @bobth3026 Před 2 lety +1

    That is absolutely helpful thank you

  • @shslhopester7349
    @shslhopester7349 Před 5 lety +300

    "where are your legs?"
    me: *[sweats nervously]* uhhhhhhhhhhh

    • @IkKorp
      @IkKorp Před 5 lety +14

      i DoNt fEel sO GoOd

    • @dragonotakukip
      @dragonotakukip Před 5 lety +22

      That one Vietnam veteran who stepped on a landmine....
      *flashbacks in progress*

    • @shslhopester7349
      @shslhopester7349 Před 5 lety

      @@dragonotakukip h-

    • @emjayfloyd7550
      @emjayfloyd7550 Před 5 lety +15

      *pewdiepie sweating in the background*

  • @TheProverbialHater
    @TheProverbialHater Před 6 lety +2125

    Hiragana mastered 3 days
    _"Anime Here I come!"_
    Katakana Mastered 1 week
    _"Oh, Anime you're so gonna get rekt..."_
    Kanji...
    _"Belay my last... I'm gonna be here for a while."_

    • @ness3787
      @ness3787 Před 5 lety +13

      Ok can you read this 大和さん

    • @ness3787
      @ness3787 Před 5 lety +17

      But I’m still 12 I learn japanese and mandarin 日本語 と マンダリン

    • @emmyemmyemmyemmyemmyemmyemmy
      @emmyemmyemmyemmyemmyemmyemmy Před 5 lety +92

      Czenrtos Lagszero It doesn’t matter if you learned them in 2 hours. You can forget them easily if you don’t spend time to learn a couple characters at a time, Which I’m sure is why it took him 3 days for Hiragana.

    • @emmyemmyemmyemmyemmyemmyemmy
      @emmyemmyemmyemmyemmyemmyemmy Před 5 lety +14

      Czenrtos Lagszero That's great then, It shows that you have a good memory and are extremely dedicated.

    • @jg2283
      @jg2283 Před 5 lety +39

      Lol i know that feel bro. I learned hiragana in only a day or 2 while katakana took me about 8 or 9 days. But fucking kanji?? LOL

  • @nehareren8008
    @nehareren8008 Před 6 měsíci

    Probably the best explanations, thank you 🙏🙏🙏😊

  • @SenseiMaharaj
    @SenseiMaharaj Před 2 lety

    Japanesepod101 is really a great tool for aspirants!! 😊 We are all fortunate to have it on CZcams....

  • @maximeoutteryck1968
    @maximeoutteryck1968 Před 4 lety +172

    I will tell my brother he's a mouth on legs, I'm sure he will appreciate it.

  • @MANOFGOD9000
    @MANOFGOD9000 Před 4 lety +176

    Here's something that may help others learn Kanji:
    "You must unlearn what you have learned" -Yoda

    • @alestane2
      @alestane2 Před 4 lety +4

      Only problem is when you do between each lesson.

    • @Username-qu1jt
      @Username-qu1jt Před 4 lety +1

      Unlearn what you have learned, you must

    • @Ikunad-Akab_Yu
      @Ikunad-Akab_Yu Před 4 lety

      The problem is when you unlearn what you learned earlier and you didn't learn anything 私わ馬鹿です。😭

  • @mohannadrababah757
    @mohannadrababah757 Před 2 lety

    that was a great beginning for me in kanji >> thank you so much 💙💙💙

  • @rajeshkumarsingh2900
    @rajeshkumarsingh2900 Před rokem

    Excellent way of teaching, very useful for new leaner, thanks a lot.

  • @deaddead698
    @deaddead698 Před 6 lety +1978

    The reason I remember 十 as Juu is because Jesus was a Jew

  • @kohiholic4825
    @kohiholic4825 Před 4 lety +89

    I bawled my eyes out when i saw a kanji composed of 29 strokes

    • @munirareduan7925
      @munirareduan7925 Před 3 lety +2

      Damn

    • @user-xn4rc6ds6d
      @user-xn4rc6ds6d Před 3 lety +1

      Bruh there's even more than that. It was 80+ strokes i guess?

    • @BlindFuryPR
      @BlindFuryPR Před 3 lety +5

      @@user-xn4rc6ds6d The kanji with the highest number of strokes is the "taito" kanji which symbolises a dragon in flight. It has 84 strokes.

    • @christoria
      @christoria Před 3 lety +1

      @@user-xn4rc6ds6d YOUR NAME

    • @damienvanwert7998
      @damienvanwert7998 Před 3 lety +1

      I had a stroke

  • @spacegaming1284
    @spacegaming1284 Před 10 měsíci

    I’m thai and my english skill is B2 but my Japanese skill is just beginner. This video make me know more kanji and make me practice 2 languages at same time! ありがとうございます。😊

  • @nirmanibhashi2757
    @nirmanibhashi2757 Před rokem +1

    I am stuck in the kanji.your kanji video help to me come out.thank sooo much.

  • @laikeia1318
    @laikeia1318 Před 3 lety +484

    Mouth+ legs= older brother
    Bro what

    • @user-ds7ji7mh4z
      @user-ds7ji7mh4z Před 3 lety +93

      My older brother has a foot fetish... BOOM!

    • @catkitten0
      @catkitten0 Před 3 lety +24

      I laughed way too hard on these comments 🤣, I havent started this vid yet and I'm scared.

    • @qaswara9755
      @qaswara9755 Před 3 lety +18

      They didn't even explain that one, so either it's so obvious that I'm dumb for not getting it or they themselves have no idea how that can mean older brother

    • @stephensharma5275
      @stephensharma5275 Před 3 lety +4

      The fool that i was guessing it could mean mouth legs

    • @qaswara9755
      @qaswara9755 Před 3 lety +10

      @@stephensharma5275 Still more logical than older brother

  • @mahja
    @mahja Před 3 lety +547

    One advice from Native Japanese:
    Do not think about radicals, do not try to "analyze" kanjis with radicals.
    DO NOT THINK. MEMORIZE.

    • @kanecanedy623
      @kanecanedy623 Před 3 lety +78

      I can see why you’re telling to memorize instead. I mean a person radical and a word radical becomes trust? How dafu- and person radical and tree radical becomes to rest? Bruv.
      But at the same time it seems like this is also a way to get an idea of what the kanji means

    • @carmcam1
      @carmcam1 Před 3 lety +44

      just like how in english we read, tough, though, through, differently without thinking much about it. There are kanji i could easily read if it is part of a word with hiragana, but i need to think longer if i see them as a single kanji.

    • @mahja
      @mahja Před 3 lety +63

      @@kanecanedy623 To non-native Japanese, for learning Kanji analyzing radicals might work good sometimes, but it's not always perfect because as some people say there are many exceptions. So trying to memorize a character as the whole, one part may increase your Kanji stocks faster. Japanese people learn Kanjis by just MEMORIZING them from 1st grade 6 years old. And we have never analyzed their structures.

    • @mahja
      @mahja Před 3 lety +54

      @@carmcam1 In Japan we have a proverb "If you want to make a short cut, you just go the ordinary way" In this case I believe the ordinary way is memorizing haha.

    • @kanecanedy623
      @kanecanedy623 Před 3 lety +5

      @@mahja is there any other benefits analyzing radicals apart from what i said?

  • @dathyr1
    @dathyr1 Před rokem +3

    Being a beginner in Japanese language and starting to learn Hiragana at this time, my first observation of Kanji and the radicals from this video are not very obvious to me far as the end meaning of the complete Kanji Character. I feel I would still have to memorize each Kanji Character.
    Lets be real now!!
    I would have to have a very very imaginative mind to come up with the final meaning of the Kanji Character from its individual Radicals. Most I wouldn't even come close to guessing in a hundred years from the individual Radicals. Even the Radicals are not obvious what they are supposed to represent without you telling us.
    It is great to know the origin of Kanji and the basics of them. I still need to learn Hiragana and Katakana first before I tackle learning Kanji. I bet there are many many people still trying to learn Kanji if there are more than 1500 of them.

  • @akshaykaushal3325
    @akshaykaushal3325 Před 2 lety

    Extremely helpful video ❤️❤️ thanks a lot. I want to learn more kanji please make a second videoabout kanji

  • @Kurayamiblack
    @Kurayamiblack Před 3 lety +132

    This really feels alot like going to an art museum and learning how to read abstract paintings and decyphering what the painter was thinking at the time

    • @quach8quach907
      @quach8quach907 Před 2 lety +6

      Exactly.

    • @Quach7
      @Quach7 Před 2 lety +5

      That is so correct. The glyphs started out as 1 to 1 drawing representations. Then the drawings become abstracted. Perfect explanation.

  • @D6C
    @D6C Před 2 lety +517

    I am Japanese. (I'm using translation.)
    Kanji practice is still easier when you learn the radicals.
    When I was little, I was not good at kanji either, but once I learned the radicals and their meanings, it became easier to study them. Please try your best, even if it's just little by little! Japanese is fun.
    P.S. Japanese anime and manga are also great.

    • @tranquilious
      @tranquilious Před 2 lety +17

      はい!日本語は楽しいです!ありがとう。

    • @D6C
      @D6C Před 2 lety +10

      @@tranquilious そう言ってもらえて嬉しいです!こちらこそありがとう。

    • @kikosawa
      @kikosawa Před rokem +3

      アニメと漫画が一番大切ものですよ

    • @emsub1199
      @emsub1199 Před rokem +3

      ありがとう, アニメやマンガは有用. 本!

    • @angiefermin6586
      @angiefermin6586 Před rokem +5

      @@D6C I'm trying to test what i just learned from the video with your comments and I'm failing 😢

  • @marshallrad8871
    @marshallrad8871 Před 4 měsíci

    This was super helpful, thank you