#n3jlpt
Resources - Book 4 - Kanji in Context for studying the N3 JLPT test
As we mentioned in the last post. Kanji is an important element in your study for the N3 JLPT. To study Kanji we have to understand the many layers that are associated with them. Unfortunately there is no one book that has all the layers associated with kanji yet written, we hope there is soon. So in the meantime, we have to collect a range of resources, each which have their unique benefits to the self study student of Japanese who is sitting alone in a room all over the world, wondering how to pass the N3 JLPT test .
Well help is at hand. Kanji in Context is also a kanji reference. It is different to a dictionary in that it clearly lays out the kanji you need to know in a systematic order based on difficulty and allows you as a learner to have key kanji facts all on the one page. One of the the things you find when you study Japanese in an all Japanese environment is how little time they actually spend on kanji. They just expect you to know it, like hiragana, katakana. They just expect you know it. So you quickly find out that you have some pretty big gaps in your knowledge. When we went to language school in Japan, we were given up to 50 new kanji a day, we got these through reading. This method is good for cramming & exposure but sometime you have to go back and pull these kanji apart because they are just so layered. This is where Kanji in context comes in as a good reference and resource for self - studying Japanese. You have the shape, the on, the kun and the meaning in english all on one page. In a simple easy to look at way that allows the logic of western thinking to absorb it more easily.
Kanji in Context
Look inside the book here
Read the full review here
Kanji in Context is developed by the
Resources - Book 4 - Kanji in Context for studying the N3 JLPT test
As we mentioned in the last post. Kanji is an important element in your study for the N3 JLPT. To study Kanji we have to understand the many layers that are associated with them. Unfortunately there is no one book that has all the layers associated with kanji yet written, we hope there is soon. So in the meantime, we have to collect a range of resources, each which have their unique benefits to the self study student of Japanese who is sitting alone in a room all over the world, wondering how to pass the N3 JLPT test .
Well help is at hand. Kanji in Context is also a kanji reference. It is different to a dictionary in that it clearly lays out the kanji you need to know in a systematic order based on difficulty and allows you as a learner to have key kanji facts all on the one page. One of the the things you find when you study Japanese in an all Japanese environment is how little time they actually spend on kanji. They just expect you to know it, like hiragana, katakana. They just expect you know it. So you quickly find out that you have some pretty big gaps in your knowledge. When we went to language school in Japan, we were given up to 50 new kanji a day, we got these through reading. This method is good for cramming & exposure but sometime you have to go back and pull these kanji apart because they are just so layered. This is where Kanji in context comes in as a good reference and resource for self - studying Japanese. You have the shape, the on, the kun and the meaning in english all on one page. In a simple easy to look at way that allows the logic of western thinking to absorb it more easily.
Kanji in Context
Look inside the book here
Read the full review here
Kanji in Context is developed by the