ANSWERS: 2
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Nan means what in japanese, and typically ka makes a sentence a question. ã®("No") means of, from, and is a particle in a sense. Nanoka is the 7th day of the month. so, I'd go with "Nan nanoka" as "what is the 7th day of the month?" however, I can't see where this came from or how it was written, and it must be addressed that when you move things around in a japanese sentence, it can change the whole thing. So nan na no ka can be different things than nan nanoka. Hooray for Nihongo!
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Well, firstly I'd get yourself a dictionary to support the following. (I personally have the "Random House Japanese-english english-japanese" dictionary and its wonderful.) Then start studying the kana/gana as you read childrens book/other literature with Furigana (japanese text with kana above the kanji so you can learn.) Web Resources: 1. www.omniglot.com (this has tons of amazing things, and almost every alphabet and syllabary imagineable. Printing out a copy of the hiragana and katakana is a good idea for a pocket reference. 1.http://www.gyford.com/japanese This site was invented to be a flash card site, you can go for hours learning and testing yourself this way. I did this for two days, and thus mastered it solely by this really. I took it one syllabary at a time, then both. After you finish these, you will be amazed at how much you can read ^^D, I'd go pick up some japanese childrens books. Or if you are a video game player, japanese games such as "pokemon" etc. are brilliant things to invest in. When you have a dictionary and can read, you are learning this language just like a japanese person would, and the same way you continue to learn english today :P. After that it is just thorough study every day.
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