How's your progress? Did you do your review for today?
not video games
Hold your horses, I'm still learning German.
Fuck articles.
I'll start today I promise.
>>343937878
I'm perfecting my anime and pick up a few sentences here and there
Basically Nipponese at this point
...i keep telling myself ill start up tae kims grammar again tomorrow...
I know all of hiragana, very few katakana, particles, and some grammar rules
its been like 2 months since i fell off...
just gotta force myself one day soon to go back on
>inb4 learn chinese
nah senpai i aint dealing with the worst asians
vidya
>>343937878
yeah right like im going to fall for this shit
japan doesnt even exist
>Core 2100 Kanji on review every day
>625 on my core 2k/6k vocab
I... I'm gonna do it sempai.
>>343938290
German may have articles, but Japanese has particles. For instance:
The particles に (ni) and で (de) are both used to indicate a place where something is happening, but are each used in different contexts.
For instance, 「シアトルに住んでいます」 ("I live in Seattle") uses "ni" but 「シアトルで昼ごはんを食べました」 ("I ate lunch in Seattle") would use "de." The way Pimsleur has explained it is that "de" is for more active things.
At first, it seemed that certain verbs always resulted in either "ni" or "de". For instance, "arimasu," meaning "to exist" for non-living things, seemed to always use "ni." But now I'm starting to see things where arimasu uses "de."
Nagoya ni kuruma ga arimasu (there is a car in Nagoya)
Nagoya de kaigi ga arimasu (there is a meeting in Nagoya)
I have no idea why the second one uses "de"