ANSWERS: 5
-
learn the Hiragana alphabet first then move onto Katakana and then Kanji.
-
i think hirigana, then katakana, then kanji. Im not sure about study guides, but i do reccomend a 'furigana' japanese dictionary. I would be lost without mine.
-
I actually recommend learning kanji second; you'll see them very often.
-
First learn the alphabet, all the hiragna, then the katakana. You won't need katakana much so focus on the hiragana. As for study guides, there aren't really any good solid ones out there. Just remember this. English- Subject verb object (I eat pizza) Japanese- Subject object verb (I pizza eat) Romaji- Watashiwa pizao tabemasu
-
Well that depends on if you just want to speak Japanese or become fluent in it? If you just want to speak it and not bother with reading or writing as many people do. Just buy a Japanese grammar and phrase book and learn it on an intermediate level (like children do in school) and move up to harder words and phrases as you go. If you want to become fluent... (Read speak and write) Learn the Katakana, Hiragana and then words and language then learn the Kanji, as they wont really serve you all that well until you can at least speak some simple phrases that are grammatically correct. It is a natural progression and you have to learn from a kindergarten level up.
Copyright 2023, Wired Ivy, LLC

by 