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If you want to find Japanese subtitles or Chinese-Japanese bilingual animations, you can go to the BT Alliance or eMule to search for "Japanese subtitles" and "Chinese-Japanese bilingual", etc.,There will be a lot of them (more on eMule),If you meet what you like, go down.。
Also, it is recommended to start with simple animations and take your time. For beginners, animations such as Doraa Moe, My Jocco Sister, and Strawberry Marshmallow are very suitable, and they are all simple and commonly used Japanese. From the perspective of learning Japanese, it is not recommended to watch anime with ancient Japanese, fantasy, and magic content, and there are not many such animations that are usually used for dialogue.
Take a look at more realistic animations like Conan, Symphony Lover, etc., which are very close to life As for the specific learning method. The easiest and most effective way is to dictate! Remember how we learned Chinese when we were children, the method is simple, the effect is obvious) First don't look at the picture, just listen, figure out what the content is about, and then dictate, just hear the key words written out, don't worry about not understanding or can't write, it may be the first time to write only 1 word, but it doesn't matter as long as you insist Remember to persist It won't take long for you to find that you can write more and more words, and the memory is getting deeper and deeper, plus usually imitate the tone and tone of the animation protagonist's speech, Your Japanese level will gradually improve (this is not a Japanese test-taking ability, but a real improvement in Japanese thinking and ability).
In short, learning a language is important to persevere! No amount of methods and plans will not work if you don't stick to it, I believe you will get stronger and stronger! ~
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I learned Japanese by watching anime.,Of course, first of all, your Japanese ability has to be at a considerable level.,If it's a beginner.,Maybe watching anime just to have a locale.。 It mainly imitates the tone, intonation, and speed of speech of Japanese people. There are also some everyday phrases to remember.
You can play it in the Thunderbolt resource.,My anime is all there.。 Such as Saint Seiya, Detective Conan, Death Note, etc. Any anime has everyday language.
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Greedy Continent What you want to find is in Japanese.
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Buy Miyazaki's cartoons.,Generally, even if it's compressed***, there are Japanese subtitles.,And it's interesting.,Japanese is also full of purity.。
I also like to read shonen manga like the Hokage, but the language in them is average"Not very clean", many of which are not recommended to learn.
It is more appropriate to have a kana foundation.
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Go buy a Japanese disc with Japanese and you may read subtitles when you first start reading.
Watch it a few more times and don't read the subtitles if you know what to say.
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Watching anime to learn Japanese is great for practicing listening, but there are anime where most of them speak simplified Chinese. Anime can be used as a way to increase your interest and motivation in learning Japanese;
It is better to go to a specialized school for professional study.
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If you don't have a foundation, you can only find a feeling, you can learn some simple sentences, and Japanese dramas are closer to life.
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The Japanese in the anime is very exaggerated.,It's recommended to watch Japanese dramas to get closer to reality.。
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No need to learn. Listen more and remember it Spoken only.
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I also learned Japanese by watching anime. Let's talk about my own experience.
First of all, the dubbing of Japanese anime is generally a more orthodox pronunciation, except for a few needs to add dialects (such as the Kansai dialect used by Hattori in Conan), so watching anime can first correct pronunciation habits and tones. At this point, it would be more helpful to look at Conan, where pronunciation is standard and mostly follows grammatical rules. At first, I always had a shadow of English in my Japanese pronunciation, and then I started watching anime, and gradually it became more and more Japanese.
Secondly, anime is more colloquial, so it may dilute the grammar to a certain extent. But dilution does not mean that there is no grammar or that it violates grammar. Since language is used to communicate, it makes sense as long as it can be understood by the other party.
What's more, if you don't understand the current Japanese buzzwords or expressions in daily communication, you can't just use the old grammar to communicate. Japanese anime is updated from time to time, like Conan and One Piece, all of which have been ** for more than 10 years, and the terms used in them reflect Japan's popular terms and culture to a certain extent. If it's a spoof like Gintama, it's simply a catchphrase.
Another point is that anime is also very effective for practicing listening. To learn a language, you have to integrate it well. It is important to watch a lot of anime and have more Japanese things ringing in your ears, so that you can immerse yourself in them.
When you listen to it for a long time, you will naturally think about sentences with Japanese thinking, instead of converting them into Chinese and then forming Japanese as before. Most of the translations don't have a Japanese flavor.
What's more, anime is mostly fun and easy to accept. Learning through fun is an effective means of learning. Compared to boring textbooks, anime is much more alive.
Of course, it's not that watching anime is everything. There are also drawbacks to this approach, such as being too colloquial, which can easily cause grammatical confusion. Therefore, it is best to treat them separately, using textbooks and orthodox textbooks to learn correct grammar, and using anime to learn Japanese language sense and experience Japanese culture.
Once you encounter a word or grammar that you don't know in the anime, you should actively inquire and solve your doubts, so that you can make substantial progress.
Of course, everyone's study habits are different, and the experience and results may be different. Personally, I'm more in favor of watching more anime. I hope it will help the landlord
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Pros: The ultimate purpose of learning Japanese is to communicate, Japanese anime is an original anime, through which I have greatly improved my speaking ability, as well as learned about Japanese slang, anime dubbing, and pure Tokyo sound, which is also a good listening training.
Cons: Speaking is somewhat detached from grammar, as the joke goes: an English teacher who goes to England and can't speak English.
Grammar is a constraint to some extent, and I remember our teacher said that sometimes the Japanese cannot understand the Japanese spoken by the Chinese, because the Japanese do not necessarily know all the grammar. But this cannot completely abandon grammar, and the examination is still needed.
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I'm passing by, don't scold me.
Speaking of which, it is worthy of being a 220-point old person.
It's good, it's powerful.
Wow, then you should definitely check out Final Fantasy 7: Advent Sons. It's three-dimensional and super good-looking.
Study trips can broaden students' horizons and consolidate the texture of knowledge. Most of what students learn is book knowledge, even if they acquire knowledge and skills through experiments, they are still in the laboratory conditions with the background of the school, mainly indirect experience and rational knowledge, and the down-to-earth perceptual knowledge is always lacking, which is still the case in the information age.
You install an optimization master inside that can test your series of scores.
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