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02-24-2009, 12:08 AM
Depends on the person and also depends whether you know how to speak Korean or have a Kanji backgorund or not. If you say no to both of the above characteristics, you will probably be able to express 50% what you want to say using short sentences but no where near fluent even if you stay in Japan for 1 year.
If you can speak Korean, you can probably construct more complicated sentences and also speak much more fluently in just 1 year. If you have a Kanji background, you will have a boat load of vocabulary but grammar wise you will still struggle. |
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02-24-2009, 03:38 AM
Quote:
And I must say, I am in love with your signature. Did you shopp it? I've been trying to get that look/emotion/feel in this one sig I've been working on for some time now, but I can't quite grasp it. Yours is stunning. 猿も木から落ちる
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02-24-2009, 03:54 AM
I think coming back to three is probably a good idea. You will definitely come back with a massive vocabulary and will understand stuff your classmates won't.
The problem is you are comparing a course to real life. You will have holes in the course, grammar you won't understand...or will understand but can't do on your own. |
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02-27-2009, 10:51 PM
It depends on your age and how much you devote to isolating yourself from your native language.
You can live in Japan and speak almost exclusively English (with a little "supermarket" Japanese) and not starve. But you won't have a lot of fun. If you stay away from your English-speaking classmates and only speak Japanese, you'll learn it fast. I know someone from Thailand who went to Japanese as a high-school student speaking it very little, and he was in my fifth-semester Japanese course at a university in Tokyo within 6 months. Join clubs, watch TV, maybe date a Japanese person, study hard, go outside, and you'll learn Japanese quickly. You won't be a native, but you'll speak it well. Especially if you're under 20 years old. |
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