Starting (kind of) advice?

I have learned all of hiragana and katakana. I know how to use most of the particles and some grammar and I know a small amount of vocab but I still feel like I’m at the start. What’s your advice on how you broke into the next level?

9 comments
  1. Maybe you can check “Japanese like a breeze (JLLAB)” Anki deck, it’s really nice and has examples of vocabulary, grammar etc.
    You can listen to podcasts like Nigongo Con Teppei for Beginners probably too :>>

  2. probably either go to graded readers, or do some textbook and then do graded readers, depending on how much you know about grammar

    after that do actual books 🙂

  3. Start reading whatever the fuck you want to read. I wouldn’t recommend going too hard, but find something that is around your level.

  4. I started 5 months ago and here was my path:

    – Genki I (you can find PDFs online)
    – Anki vocab deck and load a deck for Genki I
    – WaniKani for Kanji help

    I do Anki (20 words/day) and WaniKani daily as much as allowed and average about 1.5 chapters a week. Took some breaks in the middle too whenever I’d get burnt out.

    I’m just about done with Genki I and will move onto Genki II after. I’m at about level 8 on WaniKani (I started way after I started Genki). When I get a good chunk of the way through Genki II I’ll start focusing on immersion practice by just watching loads of slice of life anime and Japanese reality tv using the Language Reactor plugin for Chrome which puts up both English and Japanese subtitles at the same time.

    I’m hoping by the end of all that I’ll be an advanced N4 or weak N3 and start being conversational.

    Hope that helps!

  5. Learn more words and learn more grammar. In other words, if you got a textbook or some other structured resource, keep pushing on. This doesn’t have to be rocket science.

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