Introduction To My Japanese Coach
My Japanese Coach
My Japanese Coach will not only enable you to learn Japanese quickly – you can have fun doing it as well
3 Tips For Learning Japanese
Here’s 3 tips that will help you get your Japanese language learning off to a flying start. Use these in conjunction with My Japanese Coach and you will quickly make progress.
1. Look at spoken Japanese first
Plenty of people beginning to learn Japanese wish to know whether they ought to start learning hiragana, katakana, and kanji, the three sets of scripts that contain the Japanese written language, or whether or not they ought to focus on the Japanese spoken language.
You should definitely focus on the Japanese spoken language when getting started. There are 2 very good reasons for this. First of all, the natural sequence of language learning is to get a grasp of the spoken language before learning to read and write.
Take into consideration when you grew up you were without a doubt quite fluent in your mother tongue when you began learning to read and write.
Secondly, when you’ve got some elementary knowledge of the spoken language it will make it far easier to learn to read and write Japanese, or indeed any other language. Besides what is the point of learning the characters and the scripts when you have no idea what the words mean and no idea of the grammar used to form sentences?
You’ll make better progress learning Japanese if you initially focus on the spoken language.
2. Voice Your Japanese Out Loud When Practicing
You have got to practice your Japanese by actually speaking your Japanese out loud.
Do not just read textbooks or listen to tapes and repeat the Japanese you read or hear in your head. This is a huge mistake. You must speak the Japanese you learn out loud.
You have got to speak loudly and clearly, as you would if you were really talking to someone, so that you can learn to voice the correct pronunciation and really produce the language out loud.
3. Repetition Makes Perfect
Do not underestimate the need for repetition. Practice the new Japanese that you learn regularly until you have it memorized and can perform it effortlessly.
Perhaps it will demand that you repeat a Japanese dialogue, or sometimes small portions of dialogues, 20 or 30 times or even more until you get good at them, but that’s just fine. The most important point is that you should not expect to master the Japanese you learn after hearing it and practicing it once or twice. Regarding learning Japanese, or any other language, repetition will really help.
My Japanese Coach will help you with all the above aspects.
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