background preloader

Le japonais en douceur, audio gratuit & textes des leçons

Le japonais en douceur, audio gratuit & textes des leçons

http://www.nhk.or.jp/lesson/french/

Related:  JaponaisLangues

Kanji Study @ www.manythings.org/japanese See the <a href="../menuj.html">Quick Menu</a> to find other pages on this site.<P> Kanji Reference & Vocabulary Lists Fast-loading, uncluttered pages with Kanji, their readings, quizzes, and high-frequency example words, along with direct links to the same kanji on other websites. Kanji Roughly in the Order That Japanese Learn Them Logiciel Tagaini Jisho Tagaini Jisho is a free, open-source Japanese dictionary and kanji lookup tool that is available for Windows, MacOS X and Linux and aims at becoming your Japanese study assistant. It allows you to quickly search for entries and mark those that you wish to study, along with tags and personal notes. It also let you train entries you are studying and follows your progression in remembering them. Finally, it makes it easy to review entries you did not remember by listing them on screen or printing them on a small booklet. Tagaini Jisho also features complete stroke order animations for more than 6000 kanji. Features

How to Learn the Kanji Quickly and Easily Be warned: this post on how to learn the kanji easily and remember them is very long. It’s long, because I’m going to give you a detailed, step-by-step breakdown of how you can and should learn the kanji in 97 days. This post is actually an excerpt from my Hacking Japanese Supercourse, a practical, detailed guidebook for mastering the Japanese language. JMdict/EDICT Project Copyright (C) 2014 The Electronic Dictionary Research and Development Group. Contents INTRODUCTION CURRENT VERSION & DOWNLOAD PROJECT FORUM DATABASE and UPDATING FORMAT PROJECT HISTORY COPYRIGHT LEXICOGRAPHICAL DETAILS OTHER LANGUAGES CONTRIBUTIONS RELATED PROJECTS ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS PUBLICATIONS The JMdict/EDICT project has as its goal the production of a freely available Japanese/English Dictionary in machine-readable form. The project began in 1991 with the expansion of the "EDICT" simple Japanese-English dictionary file. (See below under History)

How I self-learn Japanese - Thomas Filaire - Medium and my best resources for that. About The purpose of this article is threefold. Fairy Tales and Short Stories with Easy Japanese Material Information All programs can be played on each lesson page. Furthermore, if you would like to utilize your mobile devices or hear them off-line, you can download them via the following URL. Additionally, we have labeled the audio files as follows: “slow speed” as “A”, “slow speed with pauses” as ”B”, “natural speed” as “C” and “natural speed with pauses” as “D”. For example, if you would like to hear lesson 2-1 at a slow speed with pauses, please use No.

Related: