Japanese 101

The real heart of CAA; discuss specific series, issues, and things related to anime here.

Postby TrigunX89 » Sun Dec 12, 2004 11:53 am

Sugoi! Arigatou gozaimasu! XD
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Postby indyrocker » Sun Dec 12, 2004 12:22 pm

a good site for japanes lessons that are free is http://www.japanese-online.com check them out!
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Postby Chichiri » Sun Dec 12, 2004 3:29 pm

KOBUSHInoTENSHU wrote:do You Kno How Desperate I Want To Learn Japanese????????!!!!!!!!!!! My Dad Is Taking A Long Time To Put Me In A Class!


Classes? Personally, I'd just wait till you're in college to start learning. Classes have a strict regiment and is a great environment to learn. If you can't wait, pick up a book and start self-studying.

As far as online courses like yes-japan goes.. meh. You don't have the interraction of a classroom to help reinforce ideas learned in a chapter, so it's easy to forget things if you are not using them to interract with people. Also, it's easier to learn things wrong, unless you keep asking someone, "is this right?"

Also, with an online class, you have to really push yourself to do it often and keep on a regiment, where as a class you have to go or you'll fail. I looked at yes-japan, and i didn't find it all that good except for the videos with keiko and george (which were interesting and pretty fun to watch. they did have some good stuff to pick up on). Yes-Japan isn't bad, but you could easily just pick up a book and do the same thing.

As far as using anime for references and learning new materials, it's good sometimes. It's good if you look up afterwards the exact romanization of it, the exact meaning, and the politeness level. Because just learning the words, isn't always good enough. You need to know the reason behind them.

I'll cite one of my stupidities by using anime. One word I learned from anime is the word "byouki", which means sick or sickness. One day my teacher seemed a little sick so I asked her if she was sick (in Japanese). She told me that just "byouki" was a little rude, and i should use "gobyouki" if i'm talking about other people's sicknesses.

Just some food for thought.
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Postby TrigunX89 » Mon Dec 13, 2004 1:16 am

Cool! I've actually been to japanese-online before, and I learned a little bit of stuff. I got up to the hiragana/katakana lessons, and then I kinda got stuck trying to memorize them.

Next year I should be going to college, and I plan on taking classes.
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Postby Mr. SmartyPants » Mon Dec 13, 2004 4:36 am

ohaioh
ikedakimasu
hai!
nani?
yudusai!
Boh-Koom
Yahsook (probably because it the same in korean)
oh-deh-wah...
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Postby Chichiri » Mon Dec 13, 2004 8:00 am

TrigunX89 wrote:Cool! I've actually been to japanese-online before, and I learned a little bit of stuff. I got up to the hiragana/katakana lessons, and then I kinda got stuck trying to memorize them.

Next year I should be going to college, and I plan on taking classes.


Good for you man :) . I wish you the best. Does the school you plan on going to have a Japanese major there? Which college is it might I ask?

ohaioh
ikedakimasu
hai!
nani?
yudusai!
Boh-Koom
Yahsook (probably because it the same in korean)
oh-deh-wah...


ohayou... itte kimasu/itadakimasu... yudasai? Do you mean Kudasai? or yurusanai (not forgive)... oh-deh-wah? Denwa? or De wa (similar/same as Jyaa)
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Postby Mr. SmartyPants » Tue Dec 14, 2004 8:01 pm

Chichiri wrote:Good for you man :) . I wish you the best. Does the school you plan on going to have a Japanese major there? Which college is it might I ask?



ohayou... itte kimasu/itadakimasu... yudasai? Do you mean Kudasai? or yurusanai (not forgive)... oh-deh-wah? Denwa? or De wa (similar/same as Jyaa)


yudusai

you know, it means "shut up" or "be quiet"

ohaioh (ohayou) ya know, good morning. Ohaioh gojaimasu!

itadakimasu, lol thats what i means

ohewah means... eh i forget
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Postby indyrocker » Tue Dec 14, 2004 8:13 pm

well today (dec. 14th) is Nan kyoku no Hior south pole day in japan!
Indyrocker aka the user fomaly known as Agentsmith700

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Adopted Banana-chan, heero yuy 95

There are no more heroes any more they all died in the night that the world fell into darknes; and good men are trampled down into the dirt never to be seen again. This is the story of this world of ours the story of the corupt and those that would try to save it from them but become corupt themselfs from their own selfish greed and want for what they do not have.
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Postby shooraijin » Tue Dec 14, 2004 10:23 pm

> yudusai!

That's "urusai" (which literally means 'annoying') and is a somewhat rude way to tell someone to shut their yap. By the way, there's no "du" in Japanese (except in katakana, but that's mostly for foreign words and sounds, so that doesn't count).
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Postby Mr. SmartyPants » Wed Dec 15, 2004 4:36 pm

gah, i thought it was ohdehwah, but i just realized it is kodewah, lol

i suppose i thought yurusai had a d, is because of pronounciation, it sounds like it has a d.
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Postby Azier the Swordsman » Wed Dec 15, 2004 6:36 pm

Mr. SmartyPants wrote:gah, i thought it was ohdehwah, but i just realized it is kodewah, lol


Actually, it's 'kore wa'.
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Postby Mr. SmartyPants » Wed Dec 15, 2004 7:08 pm

Azier the Swordsman wrote:Actually, it's 'kore wa'.


YOU KNOW WHAT! FORGET IT

*signs up for Japanese classes*

okay not really :lol:

yeah, im misspelling eveyrthing aren't I?
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Postby shooraijin » Wed Dec 15, 2004 7:50 pm

> i suppose i thought yurusai had a d, is because of pronounciation, it sounds like it has a d.

Urusai (not yurusai).

The reason why is ... it sounds like the English /d/ in words like /ladder/ which is actually not a /d/ at all, but an apical flap against the alveolar ridge at the top of the mouth. That's the sound that Japanese speakers make for /r/ (and probably why you spelled it "kodewah" instead of kore wa).
"you're a doctor.... and 27 years.... so...doctor + 27 years = HATORI SOHMA" - RoyalWing, when I was 27
"Al hail the forum editting Shooby! His vibes are law!" - Osaka-chan

I could still be champ, but I'd feel bad taking it away from one of the younger guys. - George Foreman
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Postby Mr. SmartyPants » Thu Dec 16, 2004 4:40 am

shooraijin wrote:> i suppose i thought yurusai had a d, is because of pronounciation, it sounds like it has a d.

Urusai (not yurusai).

The reason why is ... it sounds like the English /d/ in words like /ladder/ which is actually not a /d/ at all, but an apical flap against the alveolar ridge at the top of the mouth. That's the sound that Japanese speakers make for /r/ (and probably why you spelled it "kodewah" instead of kore wa).


yupyup ^_^
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Postby Chichiri » Thu Dec 16, 2004 7:19 am

Mr. SmartyPants wrote:ohaioh (ohayou) ya know, good morning. Ohaioh gojaimasu!


Yes, just sign up for classes.

yare yare... it's ohayou gozaimasu. not ohaioh. not gojaimasu =P

"ha" can often sound like "hai" in some cases. Ohayou is a good example of that.

The reason why is ... it sounds like the English /d/ in words like /ladder/ which is actually not a /d/ at all, but an apical flap against the alveolar ridge at the top of the mouth. That's the sound that Japanese speakers make for /r/ (and probably why you spelled it "kodewah" instead of kore wa).


I actually never had any problem distinguishing between r's and d's. I did however (itsu manabihajimeta..) always think it was "usai" instead of "urusai". If send fast enough, it always sounded like "usai" to me.
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Postby Mr. SmartyPants » Thu Dec 16, 2004 6:29 pm

the whole itadakimasu is weird. Because Naruto pronounces it Ikedakimasu! Either that or he says the first part incredibly fast. But everyone else says it normalls
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Postby Chichiri » Thu Dec 16, 2004 8:20 pm

Mr. SmartyPants wrote:the whole itadakimasu is weird. Because Naruto pronounces it Ikedakimasu! Either that or he says the first part incredibly fast. But everyone else says it normalls


Well.. i'm not at school anymore to check my videos to see what you are talking about, but I always heard itadakimasu. However, it could be that I just wasn't listening close enough.

It could be something he just says. Kinda like "Dattebayo". Doesn't really mean anything (from what I was told). It could also be a dialect. Dialect = students worst nightmare. You could be completely fluent in standard Japanese, hear some dialect (like Kansai-ben or Nagoya-area-ben is pretty weird) and completely throw you off and not understand what is being said. I hate dialects.

Either way, i'm on a very slow 56k so I don't feel like googling it to check it.
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Postby TrigunX89 » Fri Dec 17, 2004 9:24 pm

Chichiri wrote:Good for you man :) . I wish you the best. Does the school you plan on going to have a Japanese major there? Which college is it might I ask?


Meh, it's just a little community college is all. I don't think you will have ever heard of it. Thanks for the encouragement!

Uhh... This is an odd question. It's a racial question. I'm just wondering how many of the people here who speak or want to learn Japanese are Japanese. The reason I ask is because I'm white, and I'm probably going to look/sound like an idiot. Since I was like 9 or 10, I've wanted to go to Japan, learn the language, etc. It's kinda wierd. I'm just wondering if I'm the only one. I really don't care about what races people are, but there's a lot of people who do. I dunno, I guess I'm worrying too much about what people will think of me. :hits_self
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Postby Chichiri » Mon Dec 20, 2004 8:12 pm

a community college has Japanese? Are you serious? That's a bit weird, but that's good for you I guess eh?

I'm white (German background). I was told that it is somewhat un-normal. My one friend who goes to Washington University and is in the 400 Japanese class level (meaning: he's practically fluent) said he has only 2 white boys in his class and everyone else is Asian ethnicity and that's how it usually was.

My class is completely white though. In our first semester, we did have a Korean guy, but he was just auditing (watching) the class, not really taking it.

I was told there was a Japanese girl in one of the lower classes this semester. Our teacher was pretty mad because she, obviously, had an unfair advantage. I think she ended up dropping it.
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Postby indyrocker » Mon Dec 20, 2004 9:09 pm

If i have to take a foren lang. for my gen eds ill take japanese cuz i know that the comunity college (Red Rocks Community College) has it plus japanese just sounds alot cooler thanany thing els out there.
Indyrocker aka the user fomaly known as Agentsmith700

my remixes --> http://www.purevolume.com/irishangel
my Xanga--> http://www.xanga.com/indyrocker
A member of the Society of Hatted Members

adopted by Rachel
Adopted Banana-chan, heero yuy 95

There are no more heroes any more they all died in the night that the world fell into darknes; and good men are trampled down into the dirt never to be seen again. This is the story of this world of ours the story of the corupt and those that would try to save it from them but become corupt themselfs from their own selfish greed and want for what they do not have.
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Postby Chichiri » Tue Dec 21, 2004 7:36 pm

yes, but at the same time, it will add a lot of time to the overall studying time (at least if the school's program is any good).

Also most schools, maybe not community colleges, go 5 days a week. it's definitely not something to sign up just because it sounds cool.

In our class, the people who joined because it sounded cool either: dropped it, did horribly, did not continue to the next level, or all of the above.
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Postby indyrocker » Tue Dec 21, 2004 9:22 pm

hahahaha now thats funny ive alredy started teaching myself how to speak the lang and i at the same time or use to help other students at my high school in the anime cub learn to speak it as well.
Indyrocker aka the user fomaly known as Agentsmith700

my remixes --> http://www.purevolume.com/irishangel
my Xanga--> http://www.xanga.com/indyrocker
A member of the Society of Hatted Members

adopted by Rachel
Adopted Banana-chan, heero yuy 95

There are no more heroes any more they all died in the night that the world fell into darknes; and good men are trampled down into the dirt never to be seen again. This is the story of this world of ours the story of the corupt and those that would try to save it from them but become corupt themselfs from their own selfish greed and want for what they do not have.
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Postby Chichiri » Wed Dec 22, 2004 8:29 am

at the anime club? I can imagine how that is.

"Kawaii" "Baka" "Aho". I don't think that's going to be really that productive. I watched anime for 3 years before I ever took a class and I still learned more my first week of classes than I did those whole 3 years. also, it's easy to mispronounce stuff since anime can easily mislead you.
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Postby John316 » Wed Dec 22, 2004 8:57 am

I'd agree with chichiri. You need a good year or two of solid daily Japanese classes at least before you can start picking stuff up on your own in anime.
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Postby indyrocker » Wed Dec 22, 2004 1:09 pm

ya i know all ive picked up from anime was eta or howwver it is spelled but it means ow hahaha go love hina episoad 1. i was getting my teaching matiral from japanece-online.com
Indyrocker aka the user fomaly known as Agentsmith700

my remixes --> http://www.purevolume.com/irishangel
my Xanga--> http://www.xanga.com/indyrocker
A member of the Society of Hatted Members

adopted by Rachel
Adopted Banana-chan, heero yuy 95

There are no more heroes any more they all died in the night that the world fell into darknes; and good men are trampled down into the dirt never to be seen again. This is the story of this world of ours the story of the corupt and those that would try to save it from them but become corupt themselfs from their own selfish greed and want for what they do not have.
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Postby Chichiri » Wed Dec 22, 2004 8:03 pm

Well, I can't help you with any Japanese related sites because I don't particularly think they are better than a textbook.

However, I can help you somewhat: http://www.english-to-go.com/ .
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Postby TrigunX89 » Wed Dec 22, 2004 9:44 pm

Thanks for the words if wisdom. Yup, my community college has it. I'm gonna give it a try, but it won't be for a little while. I learned a bit through japanese-online.com but I kinda struggled memorizing the Hiragana/Katakana characters... Anyone have any ideas for the 'best' way to learn them?
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Postby Azier the Swordsman » Thu Dec 23, 2004 5:36 am

http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/4889960724/qid%3D1103808908/sr%3D11-1/ref%3Dsr%5F11%5F1/104-4230674-6218367

This is how I learned the Kana. YesJapan.com's method is a bit easier though.
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Postby Chichiri » Thu Dec 23, 2004 2:15 pm

TrigunX89 wrote:Thanks for the words if wisdom. Yup, my community college has it. I'm gonna give it a try, but it won't be for a little while. I learned a bit through japanese-online.com but I kinda struggled memorizing the Hiragana/Katakana characters... Anyone have any ideas for the 'best' way to learn them?


you don't need any fancy book to teach kana. Our textbook just introduced them and had examples of words that use them. Even that is exceccisve.

All it takes for most people is writing them over and over again. Just find one, like "ke" and write it like 10 times. (ex: [char] = ke x 10). Then, put them down on flashcards and quiz yourself. Everytime you get one right, put it into one pile and the ones you get wrong go in a different pile. The ones you got wrong go over again. if you were REALLY clueless, re-write them again a couple of times to reinforce the idea. It's not really hard. I hate to see what kind of difficulty kanji will give you if kana turns out to be a problem.

Though, there are some people in my class who can't keep the kana straight after this time. They're idiots though, which I have a ton of in my class. I don't think you will have a problem with it.
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Postby John316 » Thu Dec 23, 2004 2:18 pm

And once you start reading stuff the kana will stick permanently.
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