We need more information in order to help you… is that going to be their first language? Or just a foreign language that you find cool and want them to be able to speak? Does your 0 year old child know kana? Can they even understand the concept of a syllabogram at all? How much exposure are they going to get? Do you expect them to speak Japanese after watching shows in Japanese for one or two years, all the while spending most of their day practicing English due to their environment?
I feel more confused now than when I first saw the title of your post. This is the perhaps the most bizarre post I’ve seen in this subreddit yet, beating even that post about a dude who passed the JLPT by immersing with nukige.
Check out [Tadoku’s graded readers](https://tadoku.org/japanese/free-books/), OP. They’re short stories/books that scale by level from the simplest possible up to some fairly complex that help establish grammar patterns and introduce new vocabulary that can help with tougher to grasp concepts
Not sure why people in this sub have such a hard time answering questions and helping each other out
Just play Anpanman and the a i u e o song in the background
6 comments
We need more information in order to help you… is that going to be their first language? Or just a foreign language that you find cool and want them to be able to speak? Does your 0 year old child know kana? Can they even understand the concept of a syllabogram at all? How much exposure are they going to get? Do you expect them to speak Japanese after watching shows in Japanese for one or two years, all the while spending most of their day practicing English due to their environment?
I feel more confused now than when I first saw the title of your post. This is the perhaps the most bizarre post I’ve seen in this subreddit yet, beating even that post about a dude who passed the JLPT by immersing with nukige.
If you intend on using them for your own studies, generally not considered a good idea. [Past post](https://www.reddit.com/r/LearnJapanese/comments/87jrhu/children_books_to_help_learn_japanese/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=ios_app&utm_name=iossmf&utm_content=1&utm_term=15) discussing this.
Check out [Tadoku’s graded readers](https://tadoku.org/japanese/free-books/), OP. They’re short stories/books that scale by level from the simplest possible up to some fairly complex that help establish grammar patterns and introduce new vocabulary that can help with tougher to grasp concepts
Not sure why people in this sub have such a hard time answering questions and helping each other out
Just play Anpanman and the a i u e o song in the background
Anki core2k deck and start reading manga
大地を踏み締めて君は目覚めて行く天使の頬へ見て連れ出して