I don’t know about Anki, it’s been a long time since I used it.
But if you access Memrise via browser you can search through their user made courses and they have some romaji decks!
Alternatively Duolingo now has a romaji reading option.
🙂 Don’t worry about it being a “bad idea”, I started with romaji because learning to read was far too overwhelming of an idea for me, and now, ironically, reading kanji is my highest skill.
Take your time.
The time it would take you to find rōmaji flashcards would be better spent just learning kana. It’s not that complex.
I don’t think there is one. But all the high quality decks (Core, Tango, etc) have a field which shows the word in hiragana. So you really only need to learn < 50 easy characters to use those decks. Or, if you *really* wanted to, you could also export one of those decks to Excel, run a few dozen text replacement commands to convert all the hiragana to romaji yourself, and then import it again. I doubt this would take longer than 15 minutes, compared to the months you will spend with that deck.
I really found [https://8020japanese.com/japanese-sentence-structure/](https://8020japanese.com/japanese-sentence-structure/) a great place to start to be able to understand the sentence structure. I’m…
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Why do you want it then
I don’t know about Anki, it’s been a long time since I used it.
But if you access Memrise via browser you can search through their user made courses and they have some romaji decks!
Alternatively Duolingo now has a romaji reading option.
🙂 Don’t worry about it being a “bad idea”, I started with romaji because learning to read was far too overwhelming of an idea for me, and now, ironically, reading kanji is my highest skill.
Take your time.
The time it would take you to find rōmaji flashcards would be better spent just learning kana. It’s not that complex.
I don’t think there is one. But all the high quality decks (Core, Tango, etc) have a field which shows the word in hiragana. So you really only need to learn < 50 easy characters to use those decks. Or, if you *really* wanted to, you could also export one of those decks to Excel, run a few dozen text replacement commands to convert all the hiragana to romaji yourself, and then import it again. I doubt this would take longer than 15 minutes, compared to the months you will spend with that deck.