Postby Tycho » Tue Oct 07, 2003 10:06 am
Let me speak as one who is in his 2nd year of college Japanese.
Japanese as a language isn't that difficult. Its a "Lego" language as my prof puts it. Once you learn how to construct the pieces of a sentence its quite easy.
Ex:
I am going to the library
In Romanji: Watashi wa, toshokan ni ikimasu.
(watashi wa) = as for me
(toshokan) = library
(ni) = particle indicates direction
(ikimasu) = polite form of iku - to go
I could just say "toshokan ni ikimasu", pretty much the same thing. Or just "ikimasu". All are valid sentences, just adding more description.
Now Kanji, ie Chinese characters, thats where it gets tricky as there are about 2000+ common characters. And each character can have multiple readings and meaning.
So, to wrap this up.
1) Get a good book - I would suggest "Japanese for Busy People Vol 1". There are two versions, one for romanji (roman spelling of japanese words) and another in kana (native script). I suggest getting the kana version so you can actually read Japanese, not speak it. If you do get the kana version, you will need another book teaching you how to read kana. Not a tricky as kanji but requires some work
2) Get a dictionary and learn vocab. My current flaw is I lack vocab.
3) Practice.....
"There are obviously many things which we do not understand, and may never be able to."
[Leela, Ship Operations AI, UESC Marathon]
"Its time to metaphorically make a deal with the devil. And when I say devil, I mean Robot Devil. And when I say metaphorically, I mean "Get your coat""
[Bender, Futurama]