The New Year is a great time to break disgusting habits and set impossible resolutions…at least, it’s a great time to try to do those things. Most people come out from the rubble a couple of weeks later still smoking, drinking, or using Japanese words in English sentences, but everyone at least gets a little bit closer to their goal. By setting goals and attempting them, you are gaining valuable experience, even when you fail miserably. It’s a wonderful thing to set yourself goals, and New Years is a great excuse to set lofty ones.
With the coming of the New Year, I thought I’d help you set some goals and break some habits. While these aren’t my personal resolutions, I think they could be very useful for you. For simplicity’s sake, I’ll be breaking this article up into two categories: habits to break and resolutions.
Habits To Break:
1. That “Amerika-jeen” Accent
The Problem: For some reason, it’s tough for a lot of people to get that Japanese accent down. I don’t know why it’s so tough; Almost all sounds made in the Japanese language can be mimicked fairly easily in the English language as well. The reason people have accents that resemble a Wisconsin meat packer family is because they never take the time to learn it correctly the first time. In other words, they learn the accent poorly, and it becomes a bad habit.
The Solution: It’s time to go back to your hiragana sheet and relearn your kana. Go through each hiragana/katakana one by one and make sure you are saying them all correctly. Try to soften your voice. A lot of people like to throw weird stresses onto everything they say. Pretend you are Martha Stuart (on a not evil day) and say each letter pleasantly, so as to avoid unneeded stresses in the words. Also, when you are practicing your Japanese, make sure you have something to listen to as well. Get a text book that comes with an audio CD. Listen to the same sentences over and over until you can mimic it properly. Don’t just float over things when you’ve only “kinda” gotten them down. You’re only hurting yourself.
2. Using random (but super Kawaii) Japanese words in English sentences:
The Problem: You know what I’m talking about. “That’s super kawaii, mate!” “That movie was sugoi, huh?” “Stop being so baka, Koichi.” You might think that you are being clever by practicing Japanese in your everyday life, but you’re only digging yourself a deeper hole.
The Solution: Stop being lazy! If you are going to use one word in a sentence, at least finish it out. Instead of saying “that’s super kawaii,” go ahead and say そりゃチョーかわいいね instead. If you are going to learn another language you have to go the whole nine yards, otherwise you won’t get anywhere, and people will look at you all silly like.
3. Writing Kanji with improper strkoe odrer:
The Problem: Writing your kanji in improper stroke order is sloppy and bad. Do you ever wonder why your kanji looks so ugly? Part of the problem might be your stroke order. It’s really amazing how much of a difference it makes to follow the rules even if you think “it doesn’t feel right.” Handwriting as well as how you write is very important in Japanese culture. Have you ever seen a Japanese person write in English? Have you ever noticed how nice and neat it usually is? That’s because neat and proper handwriting has been drilled into them. You should match that expectation and write your kanji correctly, at the very least.
The Solution: I know it’s more work to learn stroke order, but once you get a couple hundred kanji under your belt, there won’t be a single kanji you can’t write correctly, even if you haven’t seen it before. Just make sure you’re careful when starting to learn kanji (and hiragana / katakana, for that matter!) to do everything correctly. Your handwriting and your writing speed will be much better for it (though most likely in the long run).
Resolutions:
1. Stop watching anime, Start watching drama:
Most people think that drama is the stuff of soppy middle-aged housewives. I’m here to tell you that’s wrong. Javier the pool boy will never bother you in the land of Japanese drama. Sure, you can find love stories, but you can also find awesome shows about dirty truckers and yakuza princesses who want to be teachers. People who learn Japanese from anime don’t learn correct, real-life Japanese. People who learn Japanese from drama learn Japanese at least semi-correctly. Also, a lot of drama has separate subtitle files, which means if you’re using VLC (or something similar), you can turn the subtitles on and off. This is a good technique because then you can watch a scene with the subtitles on, go back, and watch it again with them off. Watching just with subtitles won’t get you too far. Oh, and drama is just as addicting as anime, if not more. You should try it out.
2. Start a Blog
Keeping yourself accountable is really important if you want a shot at your goals. The hard part about keeping yourself accountable is that you’re your own judge, and that means you’ll be easy on yourself. One way to keep yourself accountable is to start a blog. The hard part is getting people to come visit you so they can criticize you for not doing what you said you were going to do. Still, there is something powerful in stating to the online public (even if they don’t exist) that you are going to do “this,” “that,” and “thata.” There are some great tools for blogging quickly and easily, if you don’t want to take the whole hosting and domain purchasing route. Some good ones are Wordpress and Blogspot.
3. Article-a-Day:
If you are pretty far along in your Japanese studies, why not try to read on a daily basis? One thing that I do (during school times) is read an article from the Asahi Shinbun / Yomiuri Shinbun every day (or something close to that). The nasty part of this whole idea is translating everything. Luckily, if you are using a computer, you can just copy and paste everything into Jim Breen’s Japanese Translator, print out your article, and take notes as needed. After that, you can just go through sentence by sentence until you memorize everything. By doing this, you’ll be able to practice speaking, reading, and kanji all at the same time!
4. Kanji-a-Day:
I bet you didn’t see this one coming. If you are more in the beginning stages of learning Japanese, learning vocabulary is a great idea. This can get monotonous and boring, but if you have a blog, at least you can write about it every day. If you write about it, then you are more likely to remember it too. A savvy combination.
5. Go to Japan (by the end of the year):
Since it’s the beginning of the year right now, why not set a goal to go to Japan a year from now? Having something to work towards will make you work harder. Not only will it improve your Japanese, but it will also reward you for all your hard work. Visiting Japan in winter is pretty nice; at least, it is the least rainy time of year, which means you’ll be able to walk around without worry of getting too wet. Heck, maybe you’ll be able to see the snow monkeys.
Everyone, good luck with your studies in 2008! If you have a chance, tell us about your resolutions (Japanese related or not Japanese related)












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あ。い。う。え。お。
か。き。く。け。こ。
さ。し。す。せ。そ。
た。ち。つ。て。と。
な。に。ぬ。ね。の。
マーサー・ストゥーワートみたいですよねww
I usually do my daily doses of Kanji with Tadashii Kanji Kakitori-kun on my DS. Though now that I see it, maybe I SHOULD incorporate a little bit of Jim Breen with that as well.
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Can i just get one thing straight to, i watch alot of japanese movies..but what exactly are "dramas" is that referreing to like japanese series? with episodes? like soap operas but japanese?
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I personally download them at: http://www.d-addicts.com/forum/torrents.php (with english subs)
for more info and help about which ones are good, try reading the j-dorama article! ;)
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thank you very much for clearing that up ^^ They worth watching? i usually watch some movies from www.crunchyroll.com...shit quality but its better then nothing, and i normally just skip over the dramas because i look and see (like you said) 11 or so episodes and im always like boo forget it lol. But it seems there quite popular, im gonna check some out ^^ thanks
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wow...that article is pretty inspiring, makes you really want to work hard
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anyway, here's a good example how not to speak: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D3won-7W3Js . specially ichi and roku are so funny.
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GET RID OF ROMAJI
It's just a short cut that cheats you in the end. It took me quite a while to read Hiragana and Katakana at a normal speed because of romaji....
Other then that, most of the stuff you listed I've been doing for a while and have suggested to others. I'll point this blog out to them, then maybe they'll listen to you because they don't listen to me.
Happy New Year
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Uwaa, but going to Japan is so expensive...or at least the plane tickets are, from there, I don't know how I would survive, maybe you should do an article on some suggestions...or if you have, sorry, but I haven't encountered it yet.
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I want to agree with the whole romaji thing, I also think that we end up associating those sounds with english too much, when it's not like that. But the only reason why I'm not all against it is because it gets difficult with the computer, the whole having to change it to japanese letters then back to english...but this is only for the computer, so it shouldn't be that big of a deal.
@kevinnwhat
Usually if they are good, you don't have to skip, a good place to check them out would also be www.mysoju.net, they have korean, japanese and taiwanese ones. Depending on which ones you watch, you might find that the more popular ones seem to be more teenager-ish, not like The O.C. or anything. Thankfully Japanese dramas are usually have 8-12 eps, which is actually not a lot. Okay, done trying to shove this down your throat ^_^
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If you use the shortcut (for Windows alt + shift), switching languages isn't too inconvenient. It's a little trickier (more keys) on a Mac, but Koichi knows how to do it :3
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On a side note, yeah, I might start taking the romanji out of my articles... unless people who are still learning hiragana/katakana/kanji promise to look at the actual Japanese translation as well?
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As for anime... ;_; Well don't undermine the power of anime. :3 It has a great learning curve too... AS LONG AS YOU WATCH IT RAW (unsubbed). I tend to watch most animes that I like raw and try my best not to depend on subbed ones. You just have to be mindful of what anime to watch so that you know proper language. Don't watch Gintama because that series is batshit rude (but hell funny! XDD). You can watch shoujo stories or seinen animes. :3 That could do the trick. Just saying that if dramas aren't your drift, raw animes are the way to go. Skip Naruto and Bleach for chrissakes. Watch something you know little about so that you can learn more. :3
Same for raw manga. Buy more japanese mangas and they'll help you with kanji! Buy technical seinen/josei ones so that you'll learn more 2級 words. Recommendables? もやしもん and 神の雫.
Just some other recommendables
NHK A DAY - watch NHK a day and try to understand what they are saying. There are lots of nice shows about food and farming, so keep watch of those and you'll learn a lot.
Open a MIXI blog - If you know someone with a mixi, ask them to help you open an account in mixi. If you join the Japanese learning communities, you'll have the opportunity to talk to more japanese people and also ask them to aide you in your study of the language. :3
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Hmm maybe start learning the language again.
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