I don't need to study kanji much anymore but I found when I was an still intermediate student the best thing for me was to read manga in Japanese. The great thing about this was that the majority of manga has furigana above all of the kanji. So basically you just read the manga with a computer based dictionary nearby and type in any kanji or words you don't know. Your kanji and vocabulary sky rockets and you also get to enjoy great manga. If you're at about that level I highly recommend it :)
I have a friend that did the same thing: manga and Japanese video games. Though, they were more like supplements to his studies. But it worked VERY well for him, and when I have the time I think I will follow in your guys' footsteps! Thanks for the tip!
Hello! thank you fro this video... how would you say "Kanji cards" in japanese..? I would like to look them for... Thanks a lot!
vikpa 2 years ago
Whoa, late reply! Sorry! Ummm...I guess you could just say kanji no kaado!
broans 2 years ago
I don't need to study kanji much anymore but I found when I was an still intermediate student the best thing for me was to read manga in Japanese. The great thing about this was that the majority of manga has furigana above all of the kanji. So basically you just read the manga with a computer based dictionary nearby and type in any kanji or words you don't know. Your kanji and vocabulary sky rockets and you also get to enjoy great manga. If you're at about that level I highly recommend it :)
maxla88 3 years ago
I have a friend that did the same thing: manga and Japanese video games. Though, they were more like supplements to his studies. But it worked VERY well for him, and when I have the time I think I will follow in your guys' footsteps! Thanks for the tip!
broans 3 years ago