Entry tags:
[Japanese] Daily Roundup
Hi everyone. Sorry for the spam as I get things organised!
Pinned Masterpost
Is now available here or whenever you click on my journal name. Remember that most things are locked, so if you - lovely stranger reading this - want to study along, ask me for access.
Schedule
Considering the hugeness of each lesson, I'll be making those on a biweekly basis now. I'll try for around 3 posts a week:
Week 1: 15 - 21 Jan
* Lesson 1
* Round Up: round up resources, edits, and comments
* Read-a-long/Q&A: stepping through readings, questions from the week
Week 2: 22 - 28 Jan
* Goals Checkin
* Read-a-long/Q&A
* Homework/Quiz/Half-month Feedback: submit any homework you want marked in this post, and pick up a quiz for yourself. Feedback in general.
Lesson Edits
The lessons have been updated to include clarification on the ー long vowel usage in katakana. I realise I have no resource links for those absolutely just starting out with kana - but please use any of the textbooks or Tae Kim (linked below) to get you started in hiragana and katakana if so. Anytime you feel something is lacking for you to succeed, post an ask!
Resources
Resources Post
Several people have generously uploaded materials of their own and shared them in the comments there. Any new ones can go into the publicly editable Community Uploads.
chagrined's comment also has more stuff: here (textbooks &c.).
Checkin
How are things going for people? I failed epically to meet my personal goals of reading rakugo and kanji, but flipped that around to writing lessons (much more challenging, I've found) and searching out N2+ articles. I'm also beginning to look at this handheld scanner as I look at stuff I only have in bound hard copy and to the future where I'd try to give feedback on work. If at any point y'all want to chip in... /laughs
swan_tower mentioned the phrase お疲れ様でした (お・つか・れ・さまでした), which is indeed a most useful expression! Read about it here and here and here. It's great for group activities and acknowledging effort. And sarcasm.
Questions, as always, can be put in any post.
For anyone who's struggling with grammar forms, I highly recommend Tae Kim as a place to go to to just look something up fast and then to get out. Don't overwhelm yourself! Drink water! Have fun!
Pinned Masterpost
Is now available here or whenever you click on my journal name. Remember that most things are locked, so if you - lovely stranger reading this - want to study along, ask me for access.
Schedule
Considering the hugeness of each lesson, I'll be making those on a biweekly basis now. I'll try for around 3 posts a week:
Week 1: 15 - 21 Jan
* Lesson 1
* Round Up: round up resources, edits, and comments
* Read-a-long/Q&A: stepping through readings, questions from the week
Week 2: 22 - 28 Jan
* Goals Checkin
* Read-a-long/Q&A
* Homework/Quiz/Half-month Feedback: submit any homework you want marked in this post, and pick up a quiz for yourself. Feedback in general.
Lesson Edits
The lessons have been updated to include clarification on the ー long vowel usage in katakana. I realise I have no resource links for those absolutely just starting out with kana - but please use any of the textbooks or Tae Kim (linked below) to get you started in hiragana and katakana if so. Anytime you feel something is lacking for you to succeed, post an ask!
Resources
Resources Post
Several people have generously uploaded materials of their own and shared them in the comments there. Any new ones can go into the publicly editable Community Uploads.
Checkin
How are things going for people? I failed epically to meet my personal goals of reading rakugo and kanji, but flipped that around to writing lessons (much more challenging, I've found) and searching out N2+ articles. I'm also beginning to look at this handheld scanner as I look at stuff I only have in bound hard copy and to the future where I'd try to give feedback on work. If at any point y'all want to chip in... /laughs
Questions, as always, can be put in any post.
For anyone who's struggling with grammar forms, I highly recommend Tae Kim as a place to go to to just look something up fast and then to get out. Don't overwhelm yourself! Drink water! Have fun!

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I have pretty much failed to study kanji from the kanji text because I'm flattened from book edits that are due at the end of the month. :/ I'm probably going to lower my goal to 10 kanji/week for now and see if I can ramp up after the edits are turned in. I have printed out this week's lesson but have not started it yet.
I have also desultorily investigated the very beginning lessons of Imabi, which is probably of no use to anyone but me since I think I'm the n00best person here, but for anyone who is comfortable with linguistics terminology, it has great explanations--e.g. phonetics/phonology, allophones, pitch accent, morae, the works.
Do you have a Paypal account? Email me~ (I'm at yoon at yoonhalee dot com) I'm willing to put in $50 toward the cost of the handheld scanner, will that help?
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Let me know if there's ever more words/random practice I can help you with!
While I'm here...
Fun Things To Practice Saying In Your Head Or Whatever About Errands
Vocabulary:
今 (いま) Now
スーパー Super(market)
行く (いく) To go
買い物 (かいもの) Shopping (noun; the act of)
~時 (じ) ~ o'clock
午後(ごご) PM [lit. noon-after] (see also 午前 (ご・ぜん) for AM)
~時間 (じ・かん)~ hour(s) [lit. the space of an hour]
かかる To take (as in time)
Polite Form:
I am going to the supermarket now.
いま、スーパーに いきます。
It is 1 in the afternoon now.
いまは ごご 1時(じ) です。
Shopping took 1 hour.
かいものは 1時間(じ・かん) かかりました。
Dictionary Form:
いま、 スーパーに いく。
いまは ごご 1じ だ。
かいものは 30分 かかった。
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And I studied A FEW new kanji and started reviewing writing old kanji on an app on my phone. And I managed to catch up with all my flashcards, which was a huge chore.
What I really need to do now is review grammar points from my textbook that I studied previously but have forgotten/gotten fuzzy on, probably doing writing practice for those would be good, and then come up with a concrete schedule/goal for sticking to my textbook going further.
That scanner seems pretty neat. I took some pics of a pronunciation guide in one of my dictionaries that is way more detailed than the one in my textbook & it's useful for some things that book leaves out, and thought about posting those but my pics are really crappy so I didn't bother haha.
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出かけたいから、トラグズで食料品を買いに歩いて行くつもりです。
And then transposing that to the past tense after we successfully went to Trag's for groceries.
I haven't done the formalized kanji and grammar stuff I meant to do, but I did write out sheets for hiragana and katakana, just as warmup review. I also didn't watch the entire zero episode of X, but that's because I decided not to simply watch it; instead I turned off the subtitles and made myself write out all of the dialogue and translate it as best as I could. This being much more labor- and time-intensive, I'm only partway through the ep.
Making a concerted if not highly structured effort with
I also, as advertised, read ももたろう (again asking lots of questions about "why is the sentence put together this way?"). She's got three other children's books, one from the same series, that I may try to scan and upload.
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"The Surprisingly Simple Logic Behind Japanese Sentence Structure"
"A Visual Guide to Japanese Word Order"
"The Difference Between the Particles 'wa' and 'ga'"
The second one in particular was massively helpful, as it gives you both images and acronyms to articulate the most natural-sounding order for different elements in a sentence -- that being the big topic of discussion between me and
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I've uploaded a few others in that children's book series to the folder so you guys don't have to scan what I already have.
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