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>> No.225628 [View]
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225628

>>214834
>>225142
Check DJT's guide. TLDR is:
1. Grind Kana (Hiragana/Katakana) and the combination kana until you have them down decently.
2.1. Work through a simple grammar guide with excercises. Tae Kim being one of many that works. It's mostly about teaching you to get a feel for the natural structure of sentences.
2.2 At the same time start to try and read/listen to something real simple. Examples include Yotsubato with the reading packs, NHK News Web Easy, simple VNs, old non-PC games, shows with japanese subtitles.
If that doesn't get you motivated and you don't mind it being a real slog then do it by only listening to your oshi and looking up every single word and line until it clicks.
2.3 You may want to start off one of the premade Anki decks to learn some early kanji but drop it after you've worked through a couple hundred. You want to mine your own decks from contexts you've actually read/listened to for actual learning. Some people might enjoy learning words on their own but a shitton of idiots end up being rep-retards who just grind kanji without any context and learn nothing. (which is why this >>225142 is pretty bad advice imo)

Basically your goals are getting the basic building stones for understanding stuff:
* kana
* sentence structure grammar
* early kanji
* mine your own Anki decks
Then consume media to your hearts content and learn as you go.

>> No.97122 [View]
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97122

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