Oh, hey there! learning japanese by yourself? yes, it’s possible to do that – millions of people are doing it all over the world. it takes a bit of work but you can truly make japanese progress alone.. When you learn japanese, it’s obvious that you want to be immersed in japanese as much as possible. sometimes when you listen to japanesepod101’s audio lessons, you’ll find that they gossip too much about things you don’t really want to know.. New to japanese? new to the sub? read the wiki! to submit a translation request, visit here instead. welcome to /r/learnjapanese, the hub on reddit for learners of the japanese language.. rules 1. if you are new to learning japanese, read the starter's guide.check to see if your question has been addressed before posting by searching or reading the wiki..
Simply just doing 30 minutes of anki every day has caused me to learn more vocabulary in a month than i learned during an entire year of "learning passively while talking to japanese people". i wouldn't really recommend it. and passive learning seems to get more and more difficult as time goes on.. Japanese isn't that difficult to pick up, although of course it is difficult to get good - very good - fluent at (just like any language). you should persevere and learn to understand, speak, read and write japanese as far as possible, because otherwise it's a massive waste of a good opportunity, and of your time here; and because otherwise you'll become a tiresome cliche of that foreigner.. The other point is, the more japanese you learn and understand, and the more you attempt to acculturate and assimilate yourself into japanese society, the more you will be accepted into the system…. is way off in left field and incorrect thinking..