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Learn Japanese in 4 Hours – ALL the Japanese Basics You Need

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Step 3: Start learning Japanese the fast, fun and easy way!

With this video compilation you'll be able to get started with the Japanese language and have conversations after only 4 hours!

You've decided to start learning Japanese, so let's build up your vocabulary! In this video, you'll learn some of the most important words and phrases in the Japanese language. If you want to start learning Japanese, this video is made for you. Our host expresses herself in simple Japanese, with subtitles. This video will challenge your listening comprehension skills and help you progress in your Japanese study.

Let us help you through this 4-hour Japanese basics compilation! This is the fastest, easiest way to pick up basic Japanese!

Click here to get started with the Japanese language:

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Lessons in the video:
Introduction to Japanese
0:00 1: Why Learn Japanese?
6:25 2: Japanese Pronunciation
11:52 3: Japanese Grammar
17:55 4: Japanese Writing
22:51 5: Basic Phrases

The Ultimate Japanese Pronunciation Guide
29:49 1: Two Keys to Mastering Japanese Pronunciation
33:53 2: Top Five Japanese Pronunciation Mistakes to Avoid
39:26 3: Pronunciation of the Five Japanese Vowels

Listening Comprehension
Level 1: Absolute Beginner
43:31 Absolute Beginner 1 – Listening Comprehension
49:23 Absolute Beginner 2 – Listening Comprehension
56:23 Absolute Beginner 3 – Listening Comprehension
1:03:03 Absolute Beginner 4 – Listening Comprehension

Level 2: Beginner
1:09:19 Beginner 1 – Listening Comprehension
1:18:53 Beginner 2 – Listening Comprehension
1:27:01 Beginner 3 – Listening Comprehension
1:36:16 Beginner 4 – Listening Comprehension

Level 3: Intermediate
1:44:26 Intermediate 1 – Listening Comprehension
1:58:18 Intermediate 2 – Listening Comprehension
2:11:14 Intermediate 3 – Listening Comprehension
2:22:53 Intermediate 4 – Listening Comprehension

Level 4: Advanced:
2:35:44 Advanced 1 – Listening Comprehension
2:52:26 Advanced 2 – Listening Comprehension
3:08:19 Advanced 3 – Listening Comprehension
3:24:11 Advanced 4 – Listening Comprehension

3:39:45 Top 25 Adjectives

3:44:07 Top 10 Phrases You Always Want to Hear

3:48:02 Top 25 Nouns

3:54:08 20 Travel Phrases You Should Know

3:59:08 The 25 Most Common Phrases Used in Japan

4:05:09 Top 25 Verbs

#Japanese #LearnJapanese #Japan #JapaneseLanguage #JapanesePod101

https://www.educational.guru

64 comments

  1. Michael Summerell

    As someone who has lived in Japan and studied Japanese to limited extent, I found speaking in and listening to Japanese is significantly easier than reading and writing in Japanese. Hiragana and Katakana take a little time to get used to, but it is Kanji that really frustrated things for me. To help tune your hearing, try watching Japanese films, TV and sports, especially if it has subtitles – but focus on what you hear. It helps tune your ear to the sentence structure, and you might even spot some differences between what was said and the subtitle translations…

    1. ♡Strawberry mocha♡

      Relatable for learnings English at least I can’t fully speak Japanese yet but I’m actually dyslexic so reading and writing are always harder for me I’ve always excelled at speaking and vocabulary reading and writing not so much?

  2. rekha david

    If your video, also, makes us to listen to a song, for example, “Arigotou-Keiko” then, one can learn to pronounce the word “Arigotou” in fun and joyous manner. Let the teacher sing words in the video for us to follow her.

  3. LoLoLumi

    I can speak French and English and when u say wasabi you say the the wa in French because sometimes in English wa is different but I think knowing French and English would help me more with Spanish. Also just saying French is my first language but I speak English better and I don’t have a French accent lol

    1. Senko Pan

      i speak spanish and the way of speaking japanese is very similar to spanish, i think its just the way you relax your tongue and let the air out of your throat, idk i think its kinda interesting how similar latin-rooted languages way of pronunciation is to japanese.

  4. mr. playa

    Tips to learn Japanese more efficiently:

    – Please do NOT attempt to learn more than one language at once. If in doubt, learn the one that you’re most interested in.
    – Repeat every letter/word/sentence out loud to get a closer pronunciation (tip from Duolingo).
    – Use headphones to get used to the language sounds quicker (tip from Duolingo).
    – Avoid trying to learn everything at one sitting to prevent yourself from forgetting words.
    – Try to memorize kana/kanji stroke order for more efficient writing.
    – If you feel unmotivated and/or tired, take a break and proceed your learning after a while and remember: you can do it! I highly believe that you *will* succeed!
    – Watch Japanese cartoons and comics and practice singing in Japanese. They will help you to increase your vocabulary.
    – Try not to skip the difficult parts of learning. They may be essential.
    – Get yourself a partner conversation from the beginning.
    – Use your Japanese knowledge in daily occasions (Example: whenever you’re going upstairs, count every step in Japanese).
    – After finishing your studying session, write out everything you have learned so far, physically (pencil and paper) or virtually (note pad app on phone/computer) (tip from Duolingo).
    – Keep watching this video as many times as possible for days or weeks. It is not possible to learn everything in a few moments.
    *Now, I wish you, the reader, a very happy learning, do not give up and give it your all! がんばってください!* ?✌️

  5. ꧁ R4nd0mL0L--꧂

    I don’t want to learn Japanese just to watch anime without subtitles. I am planning on being a exchange student and do schooling at Japan. This video helps out a lot, and will definitely help me and other people learn Japanese. I was/am a person who originally only knew the word “konnichiwa”, or hello. But with the video, I get to learn more and more. Thank you. 😀

  6. Melomaniac

    Tamil and Japanese vowels and consonants almost similar ?
    Tamil is oldest language and also one of the ancient languages, now I beleive that almost all languages words and soundings came from Tamil ?? I like Japanese learning Japanese gives me an exuberant feeling ? a wholesome language ?? wanna visit Japan atleast once in a life ?

  7. PlagueRatEcho

    List of Lessons (might edit with notes or breaking lessons into parts if asked or if I want to)
    Introduction to Japanese
    0:08 Lesson 1: Why Learn Japanese?
    6:25 Lesson 2: Japanese Pronunciation
    11:52 Lesson 3: Japanese Grammar
    17:55 Lesson 4: Japanese Writing
    22:51 Lesson 5: Basic Bootcamp (basic phrases)

    Innovative Japanese: The Ultimate Japanese Pronunciation Guide
    29:49 Lesson 1: Two Keys to Mastering Japanese Pronunciation
    33:53 Lesson 2: Top Five Japanese Pronunciation Mistakes to Avoid
    39:26 Lesson 3: Pronunciation of the Five Japanese Vowels

    Listening Comprehension Japanese Quizzes (I don’t recommend this unless you can make out sentences)

    Level 1: Absolute Beginner
    43:31 Quiz 1
    49:23 Quiz 2
    56:23 Quiz 3
    1:03:03 Quiz 4

    Level 2: Beginner:
    1:09:19 Quiz 1
    1:18:53 Quiz 2
    1:27:01 Quiz 3
    1:36:16 Quiz 4

    Level 3: Intermediate:
    1:44:26 Quiz 1
    1:58:18 Quiz 2
    2:11:14 Quiz 3
    2:22:53 Quiz 4

    Level 4: Advanced:
    2:35:44 Quiz 1
    2:52:26 Quiz 2
    3:08:19 Quiz 3
    3:24:11 Quiz 4

    3:39:45 Top 25 Adjectives

    3:44:07 Top 10 Phrases You Always Want to Hear

    3:48:02 Top 25 Nouns

    3:54:08 20 Travel Phrases You Should Know

    3:59:08 The 25 Most Common Phrases Used in Japan

    4:05:09 Top 25 Verbs

  8. ItsJei03

    As a native Spanish speaker, I (personally) find it easier to say Japanese words because of the similarities in pronunciation between Spanish and Japanese, especially when it comes to letters like “r”.

  9. CHITUS?⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻

    Japanese is such an amazing language, it’s ancient like Chinese with so many fascinating Kanji but also modern thanks to hiragana and katakana. It’s simple but also complex and it just sounds lovely. Thanks for the great beginners guide!

  10. Chandler Stlouis

    ive wanted to learn a new language for the past year or two, and i kept seeing this video show up in my feed randomly. taking what ive learned in the first few minutes here with syllables is actually really interesting and has already helped me understand a lot more about the way japanese people talk. i used to always wonder why a lot of words i would say, when said by a japanese person, would almost sound like they were in fast forward, and it made it a lot more difficult to understand people on occasion. having learned just this first bit with syllables has already taught me a lot more than i expected it would, and it has very little to do with the topic of this video which is kind of cool to me.

    honestly its difficult for me to really set my mind on something that takes a long time, but with just this introduction to the language, it has already interested me enough to seriously want to learn more so i can someday speak the language and understand it.

  11. Enter Name

    – Lesson 01: 0:00
    – Lesson 02: 6:28
    – Lesson 03: 11:55
    – Lesson 04: 17:57
    – Lesson 05: 22:53

    Pronunciation Guide
    – Lesson 01: 29:59
    – Lesson 02: 30:00
    – Lesson 03: 39:32

    Listening Comprhesion U1
    – Lesson 01: 43:31

    Listening Comprhesion U2
    – Lesson 01: 49:27

    Listening Comprhesion U3
    – Lesson 01: 56:22

    Listening Comprhesion U4
    – Lesson 01: 1:03:02

    Top 25 Adjectives
    – 3:39:45

    Top 10 Phrases you always want to hear
    – 3:44:17

    Top 25 Nouns
    – 3:48:06

    20 Travel phrases you should know
    – 3:54:13

  12. ITSNICKMELLO

    My reason to learn the language is to be able to have a more personal connection with Japan and it’s people when speaking to them rather than have a translator. I am deep in the technology and video game world and feel that speaking Japanese as well as English are two of the most important languages to know how to speak in these industries.

  13. 増税おじさんだゾ♡

    I’m a Japanese sophomore in high school, but I can easily listen to it even if I play the video at twice the speed. All Japanese students learn English in earnest from junior high school, but I felt like I understood the feelings of native English speakers.

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