Which is better, Japanese Language Proficiency Test Level 1 or N1 level?

Updated on educate 2024-06-07
10 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-11

    It's the same thing. This is often referred to as n1.

    Japanese Language Proficiency Test:

    In 1984, the JLPT (Japanese Language Proficiency Test) was established in 1984 by the Japan International Exchange (JLPT) and the Japan Association for International Education (JLPT) to adapt to the increasing number of people learning Japanese in countries around the world, and in the same year it began to be implemented in relevant countries and regions, and was welcomed by Japanese language learners. Starting in 2009, the JLPT will be held twice a year. In 2010, the Japanese Language Proficiency Test (JLPT) was completely revised, and the original four levels were adjusted to five levels, and N1 is one of the levels of the revised Japanese Language Proficiency Test (JLPT), which is the level with the highest level requirements.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-10

    I was in a hurry to be fashionable, and I took the N1 level in July this year. The certificate has just arrived.

    Originally, I went to the exam with high expectations, because the Japanese propaganda said that there had been a lot of changes. Such as the new question type, the scoring standard, and so on. But when I actually went to the exam, I found that there was no essential change.

    It is still a multiple-choice question, and there is plenty of time for the exam. In listening, he asks you to answer the question, which is actually to reduce the difficulty. There are no major changes in vocabulary (I mean difficulty).

    Reading has come to a completion, and my strength is to reduce the difficulty. I can't remember anything else. When I got the certificate, I only found that the only difference from the old certificate was that there was an extra n.

    All in all, nothing surprised me. Everyone treats it according to the old level and does some training for the new question type, so that they are mentally prepared not to make thunderous mistakes.

    I want to talk more about the 353223405 and explain the meaning.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-09

    Japanese Language Proficiency Test Level 1 is equivalent to N2, and N1 is a new version of the Japanese Language Proficiency Test.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-08

    Now there is no level 1, and since 2010, the level 1 has been changed to N1, which has become more difficult

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-07

    To qualify, two requirements must be met:1. The total score must reach 100 points.

    2. The score of each part should reach 19 points (including 19 points).

    The Japanese Language Proficiency Test (JLPT) has been administered since 1984 by the Japan International Exchange Association (JAI**) and the Japan Association of International Education (currently the Japan Educational Exchanges and Services). In 2011, about 610,000 people took the test, making it the largest Japanese language test in the world.

    Exam time. Every year on the first Sunday of July and December.

    2011 JLPT Date: July 3 December 4th.

    JLPT 2012 Date: July 1 December 2nd.

    The 2013 JLPT will be held on July 7 and December 1.

    JLPT 2014 dates: July 6 and December 7.

    JLPT 2015 Dates: July 5 and December 6.

    JLPT 2016 dates: July 3 and December 4.

    JLPT 2017 dates: July 2 and December 3, 2017.

    JLPT 2018 dates: July 1st, December 2nd.

    JLPT 2019 Dates: July 7 and December 1, 2019.

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    That's definitely N1 hard.

    1. The Japanese Language Proficiency Test has five different levels from N5 to N1 according to the difficulty, the most difficult of which is N1 and the easiest is N5. Among them, the vocabulary and grammar requirements of the N1 and N2 exams are different; The choice of who to register for the exam is different; The length of the exam content also varies. Let's take a look at the differences one by one.

    The first is the different levels of difficulty, the N1 exam is more difficult and more demanding than the N2 exam, where the N2 exam requires a vocabulary of about 6,000 words while the N1 exam requires 12,000 vocabulary words. Most of the people who choose the N2 exam are employees of Japanese companies, while most of the people who choose the N1 exam are Japanese majors or international students, and the number of people who apply for the N1 exam is small.

    Finally, the content and time of the test are different, the N1 and N2 exams are composed of two major sections: written test and listening, of which the written test includes language knowledge and reading. Although the format is the same, the content and difficulty level are completely different, and the N1 exam takes a long time due to the fierce file.

    Japanese vocabulary, learn individual words and then understand how they are used in sentences. Learn Japanese grammar and practice a lot through a variety of workbooks. Read a lot of books, accumulate vocabulary gaps, learn new sentence patterns, accumulate good sentences, and practice grammar in practice.

  7. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    After passing the exam, you will be able to read Japanese newspapers and understand most of the conversational Japanese.

    This is already a pretty good level, you can already freely access all kinds of information native to the Japanese language, and you can communicate with Japanese people without barriers (note that this is daily communication, food, clothing, housing and transportation, and does not involve deeper topics, and deeper topics need to be prepared for the accumulation of knowledge in advance), and there is no problem with normal life in Japan.

    Japanese Level:

    N1: Candidates are required to study Japanese for about 900 hours, master advanced Japanese grammar, about 2,000 words of kanji, and about 10,000 vocabulary, and be able to meet the needs of social interaction, university study and basic research.

    N2: Candidates are required to study Japanese for about 600 hours, complete intermediate Japanese courses, master advanced grammar, about 1,000 Chinese characters, about 6,000 vocabulary, and have general listening, speaking, reading and writing skills.

    The N3 requirement is between N2 and N4.

    N4: Candidates are required to study Japanese for about 300 hours, complete elementary Japanese courses, master basic grammar, about 300 words of kanji, about 1500 vocabulary, and have the ability to speak and read and write simple texts.

    N5: Candidates are required to study Japanese for about 150 hours, complete the first half of the elementary Japanese course, master elementary grammar, about 100 Chinese characters, about 800 vocabulary, and be able to carry out simple conversations and read and write simple and short texts.

  8. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    The N1 Japanese language test lasts 170 minutes, including 110 minutes for reading and 60 minutes for listening.

    1. N1: Compared with the original Japanese Language Proficiency Test and Test Level 1, the difficult part has been deepened, but the passing mark is basically the same.

    2. N2: The level is basically the same as the original JLPT Level 2. 90 points passed.

    3. N3: A level between the former JLPT Level 2 and Level 3 (newly established).

    4. N4: The level is basically the same as the original JLPT Level 3.

    5. N5: It is basically the same as the original Japanese Language Proficiency Test Level 4.

  9. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    Japanese N1? What the landlord is talking about is a simple testimony or a pure spoken language?

    If it is the former, then China will get back a whole bunch of them. The latter is still quite rarely answered.

    Let's put it this way, there is a certificate that only means that you have studied Japanese, and as for the level, it depends on the ability to be proficient with foreigners (generally daily and work conversations), and if you can do it, then the level is quite good.

    Chinese people have been learning English since elementary school, and there are not many who can speak and express themselves fluently, right?

    There are no shortcuts to language, so try to memorize words every day! Speak more, even if it's self-talking, ahaha.

    By the way: having a certificate can only increase the chance of an interview, especially for foreign companies, which still need to test their oral skills. At least in the self-introduction section.

  10. Anonymous users2024-02-02

    Japanese elementary school student level.

    It is possible to move bricks at a construction site in Japan.

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