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01-21-2008, 11:34 PM
Probably katakana...
But you'll definately need all of them. Kanji is definately the hardest, so you should start learning those first, continue learning that as you learn katakana, keep learning kanji, and learn hiragana. That's probably the most affective way to learn it. I actually learned hiragan first, then katakana, and kanji(which I am WAYY behind in) まるかいとみつわはいちばんですよ!! Irony rules the world. http://www.msplinks.com/MDFodHRwOi8v...order="0" alt= Proud to be a Japanophile--that is, if you know what the word REALLY means. Fellow Japanophiles: RetroGamer77 MMM Kireikoori Akoni Amnell |
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01-21-2008, 11:34 PM
They're all used together. You literally have to know all the systems to read a newspaper.
Fortunately, you can get by knowing about... 800 Kanji. You don't HAVE to know all 2,000 XD . Best to start with Katakana, though, if you're going on vacation; you'd survive just knowing Katakana because they write all their loanwords with that, and us westerners can usually recognize those loanwords for what they mean. If you want to learn the language, start with Hiragana. (ed) And I say this because Hiragana is their grammar marker. Every kanji is proceeded by a hiragana to show either the conjugation of the verb or the role of the given word in the sentence (subject, object, locative, etc). Also, if you're trying to learn the language, start Kanji concurrently with Hiragana. It'll save you a lot of time. If you make people think they're thinking, they'll love you; but if you actually make them think, they'll hate you. ~Don Marquis Quote:
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01-21-2008, 11:40 PM
I thought it took like 2000 to read a newpaper and there were like 6000 total.....
まるかいとみつわはいちばんですよ!! Irony rules the world. http://www.msplinks.com/MDFodHRwOi8v...order="0" alt= Proud to be a Japanophile--that is, if you know what the word REALLY means. Fellow Japanophiles: RetroGamer77 MMM Kireikoori Akoni Amnell |
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