I actually did see that there were some on there but they said I had to sign up. Is fc2 like Nico Nico Douga?
I actually did see that there were some on there but they said I had to sign up. Is fc2 like Nico Nico Douga?
I actually did see that there were some on there but they said I had to sign up. Is fc2 like Nico Nico Douga?
Should take about a week to remember them for good if you write them down everyday.what is the best way to burn hiragana and katakana in my long term memory? Is there an app that's good for daily use, or something else?
Are there some templates I could print to do that?Should take about a week to remember them for good if you write them down everyday.
Honestly, grammar in regular news is still somewhat basic, so you might as well try reading them.I have been trying to read some NHK Easy articles here and there; it's definitely good practice as it is, especially to learn some common vocab, but I was wondering if there was anything like a "NHK Intermediate", as in, a news website that has grammar a bit more advanced but not at the level of regular NHK.
Really? I guess once I get more comfortable with common vocab I'll switch to regular NHK or similar. Thanks!Honestly, grammar in regular news is still somewhat basic, so you might as well try reading them.
So when ordering food or asking for a photo, I should add おねがいします right?
Yeah, or ください. お願いします is a polite form of ねがう, which can be translate 'to pray' but in this form just means to want/hope for something to fulfilled/done.
Always been taught to learn like this since my first year of college :Ah, so instead of remembering disembodied vocab you remember new words as part of a whole sentence?
Looks like it might have been the joyo kanji sorted into dictionary order based on onyomi? I don't know of anywhere that has something like that off the top of my head and remaking it would be a pain in the ass.I've been looking at that list and it seems out of order from my last 25 kanji. In hindsight, in my list, I should have included the actual kanji blacked out alongside the vocab in hiragana. I'll make a screenshot of part of my list. Starting to realize that I wasn't too smart about this.
https://imgur.com/a/umVAy3Z
Looks like it might have been the joyo kanji sorted into dictionary order based on onyomi? I don't know of anywhere that has something like that off the top of my head and remaking it would be a pain in the ass.
Maybe see if you can get an old, cached version of the webpage you were using with the Wayback Machine? https://archive.org/web/
You've been studying. That's not going to disappear instantly, so if you're going to change how you go about this, you won't truly be starting from scratch.
That said, I think the two issues are comfort and completeness. If what you're doing is working for you, there's no reason to change it just because the order is different. But I'm wondering about the completeness part. You're also studying the kanji themselves, right? And do you have example sentences - I'm adding them late myself so I'm still working on that.
けど[接助・終助]
[接助]接続助詞「けれども」に同じ。「悪いけどやめるよ」
[終助]終助詞「けれども」に同じ。「わたしですけど」
https://kotobank.jp/word/けど-490815
[接助]接続助詞「けれども」に同じ。「悪いけどやめるよ」
[終助]終助詞「けれども」に同じ。「わたしですけど」
https://dictionary.goo.ne.jp/jn/68591/meaning/m0u/
The only tidbit I managed to find is a small mention in A Dictionary of Basic Japanese Grammar with が grammar section. が is mentioned as a soft but and it can also be used to bring new topics. けれども is listed in the notes as being similar to が without getting too deeply into it. Is that how けど is used in the example above?
Yes, that's right. けど and が (and けれども when speaking formally) can be used to introduce topics or "set a scene" about which you want to elaborate.
It's mostly something used when speaking. You'll hear it all the time when people talk on TV, the radio etc... That's how I learned it.I do find it weird to get used to its second usage but that will get better with time I hope.
I love when I stumble upon rude sentences like this: 耳障りな音がすると思ったらお前の声だったよ。
It's from Jalup. Most are your average neutral or positive sentences, then they surprise me with stuff like this.