Friday, December 2, 2016

6 Ways to Improve Your Japanese Learning Ability using Quizlet


Since the introduction to Quizlet , I’ve come up with 6 ways to improve your Japanese learning ability.
1. If you are a total newbie on learning hiragana and katakana , start creating your own set of hiraganas first. Probably the first 10 sounds namely, あ、い、う、え、お and か、き、く、け、こ. As you become familiar, you should proceed to the next 10 hiragana sounds and so on until you complete all hiragana sounds. You might want to consider learning and recognizing the katakana as well. Play the site’s interactive games to have fun and thus allowing you to remember the sounds better.
2. For those who are familiar with all hiragana and katakana sounds already,start making your own first set of Japanese vocabularies , simple and commonly use ones such as car, house, kitchen, living room…etc. And then follow by memorizing verbs and adjectives.
3. If you want to learn more new words, you might need to refer to the Japanese dictionary. Or create your own list in English first and then start looking out for the meaning in the dictionary. As your Japanese vocabulary broadens, start creating more difficult sets of Japanese words. You may even want to start memorizing kanji too.
4. While increasing your verb and adjective knowledge, you should also improve on learning how to change from one form to another form . Example like たべる becomes たべます…etc.
5. Another idea is to create common expressions that most Japanese people use. For example, “onegashimasu”, お願いします, “oki no doku desu ne” お気の毒ですね..etc. So what does お気の毒ですね means? Well, its for you all to find out in the coming posts that I’m preparing. Stay tune for it. :)
6. For intermediate and advance learners, you should continue to broaden your list of Japanese vocabulary knowledge by using point no. 3 :)
Together with the help of this blog, I’m sure everyone’s Japanese learning ability will increase by a huge margin. With practice, there will be perfection.

I must say that Quizlet is really useful, I’m even using it too to broaden my Japanese vocabulary. ;)

No comments:

Post a Comment