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8/2/2025, 12:48:59 PM
>>213397286
>>213397865
I'm somewhere around N3. The most difficult parts of Japanese are
-Grammar. Especially particles and understanding the nuance. Like は vs が, how が is usually used as a subject market but can also be a question in the middle of the sentence like ですが, not to be confused with the か particle also used for questions.
-Kanji. You need to know over 2000 to be fluent. Learning the multiple readings for each is a pain, especially since they are sometimes irregular, and many kanji look similar.
-A seemingly infinite amount of kanji compound words, where you need to know both the reading and the meaning. Sometimes the meaning of the word isn't obvious from the meaning of the kanji, like how 面白い (face + white) can mean either funny or interesting. Then some verbs can have multiple meanings with verb compounds. Like how 上がり込む (to rise + to be crowded) means "to enter)
>>213397865
I'm somewhere around N3. The most difficult parts of Japanese are
-Grammar. Especially particles and understanding the nuance. Like は vs が, how が is usually used as a subject market but can also be a question in the middle of the sentence like ですが, not to be confused with the か particle also used for questions.
-Kanji. You need to know over 2000 to be fluent. Learning the multiple readings for each is a pain, especially since they are sometimes irregular, and many kanji look similar.
-A seemingly infinite amount of kanji compound words, where you need to know both the reading and the meaning. Sometimes the meaning of the word isn't obvious from the meaning of the kanji, like how 面白い (face + white) can mean either funny or interesting. Then some verbs can have multiple meanings with verb compounds. Like how 上がり込む (to rise + to be crowded) means "to enter)
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