Sakura Exercises http://www.arts.mona....../home.html
This site is intended for use by beginning level students of Japanese at Berwick Campus of Monash University in Australia. However, it is also available for general use.
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Recommended Books http://www.physics.u......_main.html
I have been studying Japanese for five years now, and have developed opinions about many different books. For those of you are interested, these are books that I either find to be interesting or useful, or (on some occasions) not.
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Real World Japanese http://www.ajalt.org/rwj/
This site was created to provide precisely those students with an array of realistic conversational situations and separated by level of Japanese mastery. It is our fervent hope that these lessons provide valuable assistance in your pursuit of Japanese fluency.
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Quiz Lessons http://www.quia.com/......anese.html
Class Page for GCSE Japanese Class
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Quick and Dirty Guide http://www.csse.mona......guide.html
Many students of Japanese just want to communicate. Sure, they want to say things correctly as often as possible, but ......
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Quick & Dirty Japanese http://www.csse.mona......adgtj.html
The Quick and Dirty Guide to Japanese is a canonical classic of the Internet community. Posted years ago on the sci.lang.japan newsgroup, this guide appears in a multitude of pages written by folks such as myself, devoted to the learning of the Japanese language.
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Phrase Base http://www.phrasebas......anese.html
Information and discussions about the Japanese Language. help with phrases and translations.
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Phone Japanese http://www.nafai.org......ng_tel.php
The following list of expressions are meant to be used when answering telephone calls. If the person calling actually wants to talk to you, just go ahead and
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Personal Pronouns http://www.jref.com/......ouns.shtml
Contrarily to European languages, Japanese has many different pronouns for each person (I, you, he/she, we...). "I" and "you" have an especially...
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Particles, Family, and Plurals http://www.as.ua.edu......ammar3.htm
Most Japanese parents address their young children using an abbreviated form of the first name plus -kun for boys or -chan for girls. Using the name suffix -san (Mr/s.) would be weird! First names that are three or four hiragana characters long are usually abbreviated to two characters plus the name suffix:
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NZAJLT Language http://www.japanese.......essays.cfm
Fukunaga Kayo, Miyoke Momoko and Hesaka Junko (affectionately known as the "Yamaguchi Girls")Yamaguchi Girls are student teachers from Yamaguchi Prefectural University who spent a year working at...
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Numerals and Counting http://sa_yoshi.at.i......meral.html
Numbers, Numerals, Counting, and Counters
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Noni - In spite of http://learnjapanese......php?id=169
in spite of, verb, i & na adj short form + noni, noun + na noni, for example....
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Naru http://www014.upp.so....../02feb.htm
verb + tai (want to do)/verb + yasui (easy to do)/verb + nikui (hard to do)/nai-form verb are included in the pattern of the above #1: i-adjective + naru.
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Monthly Grammar Lesson http://www014.upp.so....../index.htm
We are Japanese teachers. We have been teaching Japanese for more than ten years. We always try to teach students Japanese so that they can acquire a good command of it . We are prepared to teach from
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MIT Characteristics of Japanese http://web.mit.edu/j......guage.html
The Japanese language is spoken by the approximately 120 million inhabitants of Japan, and by the Japanese living in .....
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Making Sense of Japanese Grammar http://www.amazon.co......e&n=283155
Organized for easy access and readability, Making Sense of Japanese Grammar consists of short units, each focused on explaining a distinct problem and illustrated with a wealth of examples. To further enhance their usefulness, the units are cross-referenced and contain brief comprehension exercises to test and apply newly acquired knowledge. A glossary and keys to the exercises are at the back of the book.
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Learning Japanese Blog http://www.ideogramme.ca/japan/
A wonderfully clever blog about learning Japanese. As grammar is learned the author explains why it was confusing and how it was resolved. Much better than the standard textbook style method.
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Learn Japanese Language http://www.learn-jap......akana.com/
Learn to speak, read, and write Japanese language - Kanji, Hiragana, and Katakana Symbols
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Koto vs No http://www014.upp.so......99july.htm
Used to nominalize the previous clause. Only in this usage "koto"can be replaced with "no"
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