• 43 Posts
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Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: June 12th, 2023

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  • Started playing the new Pokemon game in Japanese. I think this series is really good for language - it asks what language you want up-front regardless of game region or system settings, kids are the main audience, it’s full of concepts I’ve been exposed to all my life, most dialogue is taken at your own pace, there’s furigana most places. There is a story I want to follow, and plenty of text to read, but most of it’s not that important so I don’t mind if some goes over my head.

    This particular game, the battles aren’t turn-based, and a few cutscenes are real time text instead of push to continue (and weirdly even in those no voice-over.) I also think you’re locked in after you pick language? And if so, not sure why. Still, a good low-stakes game to immerse with.

    It’s been a little dialogue heavy at the start, should be less exposition once I get into it. For now I’m looking up a lot, but I think I’ll lose patience for that pretty quick.

    I can usually get the gist of what they say, which is exciting. I’m at the point where most of each sentence is intelligible, but the most important couple of words will be new to me. Between the context and the Kanji used, not too hard to hazard a guess at the new ones. Those i+1ish sentences are exactly what you want for learning.










  • Switched my main Anki deck and JPDB cards from just the word on the front, to instead show a sentence as the cue. I think it’s a big improvement.

    At first I thought having the sentence would give away what word it is… but I’ve slowly realized that’s the point. Understanding words in context is the reason to learn words in the first place. And having the sentence up front, with no furigana, helps give reading practice on other words.




  • I know the feel. I’ve tried to build up a deck of words that cover each common reading of characters, and only a couple hundred charcters in it’s already taken a lot of time. Usually I’m just using other people’s decks, much respect to the people that build the high quality ones.

    In one sense it’s probably not a very productive use of time, but I think it can be a great motivator. No resource (deck, video, app, class, etc) is going to make things easy or instant, but if you find or build one that gets you fired up to learn, that counts for a lot.



  • I’m maybe not disciplined enough about it, I kinda play it by ear.

    I do try to at least do reviews every day. I’ve been doing my Kanji reviews (in Kohii, but still flashcards) first thing in the morning, and other Anki cards throughout the day in pockets of spare time.

    At first I was doing way more new cards a day, but once I built up a backlog I’ve simmered down a lot. I mostly do new cards if I finish all my reviews. Sometimes I’m in an Anki mood and do a bunch.

    If I get too many unreviewed cards building up, I don’t sweat it too much. Just review what I can - when I forget cards, the spaced-repetition-system will work it out.







  • Trying to balance so many lines of study is commendable. One language is plenty, trying three is going to be really hard. If you need rotate focus more, it’s understandable and probably for the best.

    Always try to prioritize sleep. It’s like a superpower for whatever else you try to do. I wish I was better at taking my own advice there… :( The extra hour or two at the end of the day just always seems so promising and I fall for the trap.