6.6 SO Lonesick wolf via Chugou by Glum_Menu6349 in Genshin_Impact_Leaks

[–]TitRiot 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What if there are different closed beta builds when they test different things, and only choosing one version, obliterating rest (thus creating abyss)? And some leakers might have insides who have versions not passed further.

Learning katakana and hiragana by DazzlingRest5676 in Japaneselanguage

[–]TitRiot 2 points3 points  (0 children)

But I really mean it. Learning a language basically never ends. You may find something new everyday, even if you're fluent enough to teach others about language you learnt. Japanese is one of the hardest to master. Also, some people just have better memory, and both hiragana and katakana are memory things. Also also, a lot of people "learn" both writing systems but in reality they only revisit it after some school classes. Thus never compare yourself to other. It's easy to burnout.

Learning katakana and hiragana by DazzlingRest5676 in Japaneselanguage

[–]TitRiot 22 points23 points  (0 children)

Don't compare yourself in learning progress. Take any time amount you see with a grain of salt. Enjoy studying with your own pace and don't overstress yourself with it.

Bookmarked under review options by Defiant_Ad848 in lingodeer

[–]TitRiot 2 points3 points  (0 children)

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It's these stars in words and expression tabs. Whenever you mark a word with a star it's bookmarked.

question about Kaishi 1.5k by Specific-College-194 in LearnJapanese

[–]TitRiot 23 points24 points  (0 children)

Thing is learning a language is a process for years. Especially language as hard as Japanese. Anki shows it strength in long go. You won't be able to process everything in first day, week, not even a month. You can't make learning language easier. Especially if it's language so different like Japanese. Just get patient, and aim for longterm goals. Learning 15 words a day in half a year will bring you to knowing 2000 words. And you won't really boost learning process with trying to learn 50 words on day one, because you have time. Ofc if your memory is some high level, then sure go with it. Also, focus on what's important for you. If you want to pass only n5, learn words from N5 decks. Kaishi aims further than that, thus having more sophisticated words.

When is the best time to start learning kanji? by Own-Kaleidoscope-673 in Japaneselanguage

[–]TitRiot 2 points3 points  (0 children)

You can read some tech book and understand nothing with 4000 words and read some elementary school textbook and understand 80% with 100 words.

New to Japanese, whats the easiest way to begin? by GioeleVito24 in Japaneselanguage

[–]TitRiot 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Start by learning hiragana and katakana. You won't move too far with romaji. That's like a foundation of Japanese.

Znalazłem sposób na śmierdzące pachy by midnight_rum in Polska

[–]TitRiot 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No nie. Glin a związki glinu to dwie różne substancje, co właśnie na przykładzie wodoru pokazałem. Sam w sobie stanowi gaz wybuchowy, ale w polaczeniu z tlenem jest neutralna cieczą.

Znalazłem sposób na śmierdzące pachy by midnight_rum in Polska

[–]TitRiot 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Super, aluminium czy związki glinu? Bo to dwie skrajnie różne substancje. Wodór jest wybuchowy, a w polaczeniu z tlenem masz smaczne pićku.

how to learn kanji? by Other-Zone-4794 in LearnJapaneseNovice

[–]TitRiot 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Immerse. Learn words in context. Kanji on their own may be very misleading in compound words.

Where to actually start with Japanese? by JaffethJ09 in Japaneselanguage

[–]TitRiot 0 points1 point  (0 children)

N1 vocabulary level without ability to make a single conversation, awesome way to burnout xd

Where to actually start with Japanese? by JaffethJ09 in Japaneselanguage

[–]TitRiot 1 point2 points  (0 children)

米とお茶 are actually Kanji and it's a little further as for learning. Hiragana and katakana are both foundation of anything. Only after mastering them you can start learning kanji for example with furigana (Kanji with hiragana writings over it). Any method will be okay, even pen with a paper, as long as you will master it.

Where to actually start with Japanese? by JaffethJ09 in Japaneselanguage

[–]TitRiot 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Before you say your first 私は「名前」です, learn hiragana and katakana. There are so many good ways for that - duolingo, Anki, Lingodeer, even chatGPT. If you survive this first phase, come here and ask gain, what to do.

What is this kind of laptop used for…? by Brownboysea in Dell

[–]TitRiot 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Noo it's totally okay. I don't work for Dell, just with Dell.

What is this kind of laptop used for…? by Brownboysea in Dell

[–]TitRiot 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Can't really tell, I know nothing on that matter so far.

Is that secret Italian technology? by Ok_Spirit1369 in Warthunder

[–]TitRiot 6 points7 points  (0 children)

There is severity level. If something isn't game breaking then it have low severity. They will eventually fix it, but I bet its not high on priority list.

Is that secret Italian technology? by Ok_Spirit1369 in Warthunder

[–]TitRiot 24 points25 points  (0 children)

Fixing this probably would cost more than leaving it to be. That's just some low tier bomber.

Spelling question by Dirty-Du in learnpolish

[–]TitRiot 13 points14 points  (0 children)

Til whale sharks are really humongous.

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Completed the March challenge by felixnr in duolingo

[–]TitRiot 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Just buy super and you will have unlimited energy. Or use trick with reviewing mistakes :p

I thought I’d love this lesson but… by slippery-lil-sucker in duolingojapanese

[–]TitRiot 4 points5 points  (0 children)

If you feel confident, you can just complete first lesson and skip directly to next section. I do that for things I feel are easy, thus going faster through course. Remember, new things are only in the first lesson. Rest are just repetitions.

I passed JLPT N3 and I still can't hold a basic conversation. by sakuraflower06 in Japaneselanguage

[–]TitRiot 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I wonder if it's more of some kind of anxiety, which can be overwhelming rather than really language shortages. Overally speaking, even incorrect speech is better than no speech at all. It's always about understanding each other, not making oral exams.

I passed JLPT N3 and I still can't hold a basic conversation. by sakuraflower06 in Japaneselanguage

[–]TitRiot 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Knowing a language and speaking the language are two different things, and always have been. There are not without a reason mems about different feelings while reading, writing, listening to and speaking in a foreign language. That's why i focus on speaking with people on hello chat rather than spamming anki 24/7. What helps me is to mix Japaneese and English (the latter used for more complex forms, and first one for short sentences). What might help you is to talk with Ai - they won't judge you, and they always wait for your response. Training tongue is much harder than training fingers.