Maokun: Ninjas or Pirates? (Vikings are not a valid answer, sorry)
EricTheFred: Vikings are always a valid answer.
Shao Feng-Li (post: 1255736) wrote:Perhaps a Rosetta Stone language course?
Azier the Swordsman (post: 1255782) wrote:Rosetta Stone and Pimsleur are ridiculously overpriced, and I honestly didn't find either of them to be as good as some of the other language products I tried. Better than average, but not best. (Sorry, Bob.)
Try YesJapan.com
It's only about $20 a month, and for that you get five courses with over 60+ lessons, teacher support, member forums, chatroom, several hundred different videos covering a wide range of Japanese language/culture topics, downloadable Japanese music from every genre in the book, optional live classes through Skype, games, store, study tools, and probably a handful of other stuff I am forgetting.
YesJapan gets my vote for the best out of all the avaliable Japanese courses on the market. And believe me, I've tried EVERYTHING.
Bobtheduck (post: 1255802) wrote:Well, I am test-running YesJapan at your suggestion, but I wonder... How far did you get in Pimsleur? Did you only try a few lessons and stop? Did you zoom through lessons, doing more than one at a time, or did you do one a day? I think it's expensive, yes, but you can probably find all 3 volumes on ebay for under 200 bucks in total (zenbu de nihyaku doru desu, you just have to look at the right times) and share the cost with friends, and once you've gone through the whole thing, it all starts making sense.
I think Pimsleur gives you the most results for the least effort. In order to do YesJapan or those horrible "total immersion" things (though, I admit I have an older one that jumped straight from "ringo=apple" to full minute long sentences without the disc they added in between later on), I have to take time out of my day to go to the site and do all their exercises, which I will probably do once I'm done with Pimsleur anyhow, but with Pimsleur, I put a lesson on my shuffle and listen to it while I walk or clean. I really like the Pimsleur method of incremental repetition, and I like not being tied to anything such as time. I can do it WHILE I do other things. I guess that's just my ADD talking. One mindless activity, one thinking activity, that's the way to go when you have ADD... It's why people click pens and stroke their chin while they think.
Maokun: Ninjas or Pirates? (Vikings are not a valid answer, sorry)
EricTheFred: Vikings are always a valid answer.
minakichan (post: 1255694) wrote:<s>Learn Chinese first.</s>
Learning grammar early first could be helpful ._.
Azier the Swordsman (post: 1255934) wrote:A note about this: I highly advise against learning Chinese first. I've taken a little bit and the grammar and structure is so widely different and there is the problem of dialect making it as formidable as Japanese. There really isn't any practical reason to learn Chinese first.
Maokun: Ninjas or Pirates? (Vikings are not a valid answer, sorry)
EricTheFred: Vikings are always a valid answer.
Kaori (post: 1255805) wrote:- You've probably heard this before, but the best way to practice is to do so as often and regularly as possible, preferably with a class or tutor or someone who can keep you accountable: even if you're highly motivated, it can be difficult to make yourself study regularly.
-Practice with a native speaker if at all possible.
Syaoran (post: 1255950) wrote:Find a friend that speeks Japanese fluently. ^-^
Bobtheduck (post: 1255956) wrote:By the way, she may be a bit brash and offensive (and not very, um, Japanese) but I LOVE Applemilk... I'd seen her before, on youtube, and I'm excited to see what else she'll be bringing to YesJapan.
Eddosan (post: 1255988) wrote:Applemilk teaches on YesJapan?
Lol wut?
Azier the Swordsman (post: 1255957) wrote:George has talked about going beyond Course 5 before, but has never gotten around to it. He also has rarely updated the site lately, but he has a very busy career in addition to YesJapan.
Bobtheduck (post: 1256052) wrote:Teaches? No... She has "cultural perspectives" kind of videos, I suppose, highlighting differences between the US and Japan.
Hmm... That's disappointing... What is his OTHER career? I'd think being a language and culture teacher would be enough.
Azier the Swordsman (post: 1256075) wrote:He is a professional interpreter. He interprets for big corporations, mostly. His level of Japanese is pretty advanced compared to the norm. I believe he mentioned before he pulls in up to $20,000+ per job.
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