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Can anybody point me in the direction of solid Japanese learning materials? Is there a 'Wheelock's Latin' on the Japanese language? I would like to develop over the years comfortable reading comprehension of Japanese and can't seem to find something that condenses all things in one 'hiragana;katakana;common kanji;vocabulary etc.'
tae kim is good. Im studying Japanese currently.
1) learn hiragana and katana
2) read tae kim + do core 2k/6k anki deck daily
3) add reading basic manga/visual novels with the help of a dictionary/translator, and keeping a basic diary to your routine
4) find a penpal/conversation partner when you get good enough
current path im on tbqhf
>>9111179
>katana
I meant katakana, obviously. Please do not laugh at me.
There should be a daily Japanese thread, or whatever they call it, on /jp/. Use the catalog.
>>9111159
An anon left some useful info on learning Japanese. I'll post it here. I cut it in four parts.
>>9111228
This is already terrible advice.
>>9111232
>>9111237
>>9111184
learning katana would be awesome
>>9111435
ah, the katana
truly the worlds most superiorest sword
in history
Go to a fucking general. There's one on /int/ (probably more your speed) and there's one on /jp/
also remember
できない。
>>9111179
this desu
1. for learning hirigana+katakana use tofogu's ultimate guide, and get that shit done in a few hours
2. tae kim doesn't provide a method for reinforcing grammar points learnt so i use it with genki 1 and 2 since they have review sections that make you use the language (if you do them) .theres also an anki deck for genki 1 and 2 vocab.
3. reading shit will be a pain unless you know enough grammar/vocab
theres also nihongonomori, watch the vids on n5-n4 playlist. it provides bare-bones grammar, i would suggest using it as a supplement to stuff previously mentioned