How to Learn Japanese with Anime



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  1. 6:44 is that a fucking monogatari reference 😭Thats so peak

  2. 3:00 he doesnt know about 家内

  3. Peppa Pig in japaneee is the best tbh 6:43

  4. I think its better learning kana with mnemonics, it took me 2 days to fully memorize all hiragana. Katakana took me 5 days so all in all 1 week is all you need for kana no more.

  5. Brilliant video for beginners.I've just subscribed.Thanks

  6. Japanese anime is full of contractions, casual reductions and colloquiallism that are absolutely not covered at all by qny grammar book that you may recomend. Even native japanese speakers are pretty much secretive and even selfish about the way they speak and just give the cold shoulder to any foreigner that may try to approach.

    And in this particular we, Mexican ones make the difference worldwide when it comes to show any other human being what she or he is interested in get

  7. here's another idea of using anime to learn Japanese: only listen to the audio (by turning off the screen, completely covering the screen, converting the video to audio format, etc). That way, you can't rely on the body language shown visually in the anime and you have to use your listening comprehension skills to understand what is going on.

  8. I've been watching anime for five years now, and I can speak a bit of Japanese fluently. Since I've only watched anime and learned from it, I can say that my method wasn't about learning the language itself by analyzing the words and understanding the meaning of every single letter, but rather understanding the words and sentences as a whole—how and in which situations they were used. By doing so, I use them in exactly the same way when a similar image comes to mind.

  9. Funny watching this video after I memorized Hanekawa's tongue twister

  10. Animelon is a great resource.

  11. So when you're watching anime, and you don't understand it, should you be stopping every time where you don't understand something? What should we do?

  12. I hope your still looking at comments from old video since the video was posted 3 years ago at the time of my watching. Thank you for your video becuase it was very encouraging and informative!!

  13. kanji is my biggest enemy🫣

  14. …beginers dont know everything, they just know what they know… 😅 I love this guys english

  15. アメリカで英語圏の生徒さんに日本語を十八年教えております。このトピックは常に生徒さんから問われるものですね。とても良いガイドラインだと思います。
    参考資料として生徒さんとシェアさせていただきますね。

  16. Just clicked this video because i saw takagi😂

  17. I only memorized "omae wa mou shindairu" 😂and "soudayo"

  18. You’re so funny 😂

  19. bro learn how to facial expressions.

  20. I saw Takagi San and it's goood

  21. Ok, i am aware of setups, and callback gags, so i should expect it soon
    ( 10:37 )
    *genuinely lets off a 「カカカ」
    10:55
    ('w')
    12:19
    こわいだす。

  22. Which website you use for anime with Japanese subtitles

  23. Mi cerebro esta volviendose loco, escucha un video en inglés sobre como aprender japonés con anime. (¡¿¿Dónde esta mi español??!)

  24. Nai means no in hindi 😊

  25. I’m going to try to learn from “Code Geass” it’s my fave childhood anime and main character has a “double life” as a student and rebellion against government so you get everyday school words, plus military that could come in handy for gaming I guess ? Best part anime is 54 episodes and a few movies 🍿 😁

  26. I don't know even 5% Japanese, it's difficult to learn Japanese with anime because if you don't know vocabulary, you can't understand a single word, it's more like a background music in that case.

  27. I can confirm I've picked up like at least 300 vocab from Japanese songs and anime alone with minimal studying. I don't know why but my brain just does it on its own. Of course more difficult assume is hard for me but I can understand somewhat. I tried studying but I got lazy and went back to watching anime and it actually works

  28. This is how I got into english. Teacher only gave me confidence, and fixed some forms, but I realized that how I might check myself, and then teach myself to do or write english right way… But I dare to say that I don't know English. It's only a plow if I need one, but It's good enough that it helps me out with learning some Japanese now…

    I feel that is bit stupid, but eh… Lost in translation is visible clearly when I spin some words through english and to my "mother's tongue" (first language).

    I thought about it, and it would require 10 times more effort than losing my weight to learn Japanese. Then I measured how I learned English, and it was basically by accident… Well that's how I feel about it.
    I possibly learnt English by watching anime, and I'm sure of it.🤦‍♂

    Sure I recognize forms in japanese, but they don't mean anything to me yet. That's how things got rolling with English. Context could be read from the surroundings and you could try to imagine what it was, and after going through what ever there came, you could come to some sort of conclusion… Oh I'm just rambling. I just barely remember how it was to get into english myself… Runescape probably got my brain boiling to make up the connections for real, as I tried to come up with things to say, and understand. Even if about simple dumb stuff.
    I'm sure everyone then and there were the same, as the game was quite popular in europe.

    "I scream, you scream, we scream for icecream!"

  29. Woman and a house, years of history to develop that one I see. Would love to see how that develops in the near future years XD

  30. Never understood why most countries don't write exactly what sounds they hear. Like : 1 sound = 1 letter .

  31. I only watch anime in English since I’m completely blind so I can’t read the subtitles. Anime can be very hard for me to watch when it’s not audio described but I guess I’m pretty good at picking up pitch changes and the way things are said and how they sound like accents, and things like that, maybe having a musical background helps since I do a lot of singing just for fun. I know two languages English, and Spanish. I grew up with both since I’m Hispanic, and from what I can tell Japanese is a bit like Spanish, like the way we both say The t sound. It sounds so different in English and same thing as r in Spanish. We roll the r and in Japanese it definitely sounds like y’all do that as well if that’s even an r I’m not sure what the writing is that y’all have since I never seen it before, which writing is a whole Nother thing for me since I would have to learn braille in Japanese, I know braille in English, which it involves lots of memorizing. I mean I struggle with English anyway reading and spelling it’s not my strong suit grammar isn’t either. when it comes to braille at least in English, there are short form words or contractions that we use so we don’t have to spell out the word so, for example, the word the we don’t spell it out there is a combination that we do and that is the word it’s pretty complicated. well braille is not complicated for me since I’ve been learning since I was in pre-K.
    Also, I feel like listening to Japanese music can help too. Maybe because I can pick up what people are feeling just by their voices and I pay attention to that more when they’re talking or singing you could tell what emotions people are feeling and you don’t even need to understand the language .

  32. Theres a book in japanese that im reading and watching this video made me feel better about barely understanding it

  33. 2:30 ok i give up 😅😅

  34. I love this I was looking to do this recently. Thank you, you showed some things that I needed to work out to make it work. I wish there was more romaji though.

  35. Oh, right! The Monogatari-Series has those cuts in-between which are gone so fast that I doubt that even the intended Japanese audience can read it without having to pause the video. The style of that series is so weird that I wouldn't recommend it for a beginner. If there's one upside, it's that it honestly doesn't matter which sub-series you start with. Most of them cover the same story multiple times from different angles.

    I don't think that the Monogatari-series is very good to begin with, but that's another topic.

  36. Honestly, negative forms are probably some of the first things beginners notice in anime. "nai" is just one example, but there's also "arimasen". Those two negatives are easily noticeable. I've actually never used Japanese subtitles, but maybe I'll try that in the future. I can already watch anime without subtitles pretty decently, regarding the dialogue anyway.

  37. Cardcaptor Sakura is on Netflix in the US right now. It's pretty easy to listen to and has Japanese subs.

  38. I want to watch Azuki Chan but I can't find it anywhere with Japanese subs. It's either English subs or none.

  39. Naka no narabete nakanaide tabemasen

  40. I never watched any anime in english or Italian(im italian), but i always used English substitles.. i have to try only japanese substitles with a couple of anime I watched a few times. ありがとう

  41. Anyone know the name of the anime at 7:21?

  42. How to find japanese Subtitles for anime??? Anyone?? Don't have any netflix acc. Need a website

  43. I've actually taken this approach with Japanese versions of Video Games like Mario Party 4 or Super Paper Mario

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