Nihongo no blog desu
Monday, October 14, 2019
Monday, September 30, 2019
I decided to study Japanese because I was stationed in Tokyo for three years but never had the chance to learn the writing system. I don't like not knowing things, and not knowing how to read Japanese after three years of living there is rather frustrating. My stubbornness won out and i decided to study Japanese as my language here at Columbia University.
I'm excited to be able to read and write Japanese so I can speak with my friends back in Japan in their native tongue. Learning will also help me next time I take a trip to Japan, which I am hoping to do soon. I miss curry so much.
Coming in I had a decent grasp of common phrases from my time in Tokyo, but they were just space-fillers to be polite, keep me alive, and find my way around. Now that I'm learning more phrases and words, I can already tell I have a much better understanding of the language. The hardest thing for me so far is easily the characters for hiragana, soon katakana, and later kanji. I already know katakana and kanji are going to be difficult for me because I don't learn as fast as I used to, but I refuse to give up! I've developed a reasonably decent initial grasp on hiragana now, so repetition will be the key to mastery with that, and katakana and kanji will follow after.
I'm excited to be able to read and write Japanese so I can speak with my friends back in Japan in their native tongue. Learning will also help me next time I take a trip to Japan, which I am hoping to do soon. I miss curry so much.
Coming in I had a decent grasp of common phrases from my time in Tokyo, but they were just space-fillers to be polite, keep me alive, and find my way around. Now that I'm learning more phrases and words, I can already tell I have a much better understanding of the language. The hardest thing for me so far is easily the characters for hiragana, soon katakana, and later kanji. I already know katakana and kanji are going to be difficult for me because I don't learn as fast as I used to, but I refuse to give up! I've developed a reasonably decent initial grasp on hiragana now, so repetition will be the key to mastery with that, and katakana and kanji will follow after.
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