Hi Guys ! So glad to be back. Hope you’re all keeping warm 🌸 You can use this link to get a 7 day free trial and a 55% discount on Lingopie : learn.lingopie.com/RheaStudies Small typo at 3:44! it should be N5 in the doodle on screen, not N3 T_T Also since I recorded this voiceover without any real script, i did forget to mention one important bit, which is that everyone learns at a different pace and has different situations that allows for varying bandwidth/time they can put into language learning, and I’m in *no way saying that 3 months is a timeline that will work universally*! Please go at your own pace 🤍
@ImSoHappy777
Жыл бұрын
How to study and get good at different hand writing for kirean?
@paolarmz5247
Жыл бұрын
@@ImSoHappy777You need to practice a lot, there's some sheets to practice that are literally just squares but they have on one side the letter and the other side you have to practice it like 5 times or do it in all sheet. You can start journaling in Korean, that way you will be practicing vocabulary and handwriting. Good luck❤
@ashmorris4067
Жыл бұрын
Please can you tell me what that app is you are using for writing
@Camille-sm2ry
Жыл бұрын
Nice clickbait idiot
@sheridanvance7426
Жыл бұрын
❤
@DustyCatOff
Жыл бұрын
Please remember that how fast you are able to learn a new language depends on various influences like your own mothertongue, which writing System you use/know, what cultures you are exposed to, if you were exposed to that new language before, if this language is very different or more similar than your own, if you had studied other languages before, personal skills such as the ability to memorize or pick up patterns, and and and... You don't need to be able to rush through and it doesn't make you dumb to be slower than others, because of all these influences and personal skills. Japanese is one of the hardest languages to learn, especially for most westerners. So enjoy your journey until you reach your goal! Every little step you take is already an improvement you've made! がんばって!✨️
@Sarafey.jpVlogs
Жыл бұрын
Yeah but if your motivated and get hyperfocused it should help. And you can accomplish anything plus living or visiting Japan will help because it's a good teacher but avoid speaking English.
@southcoastinventors6583
Жыл бұрын
Kinda sad people actually believe this is possible it isn't but it is a good way to get views.
@mira.r
Жыл бұрын
@@southcoastinventors6583 yeah i mean i get that she did it for clickbait to get views and shit but still, this isn't feasible for most ppl at all
@southcoastinventors6583
Жыл бұрын
@@mira.r Yeah if you made Japanese your job maybe you would be able to use all roughly 3500 words and all their variations in 1 year, 8 hours a day but 3 months is completely unrealistic and people who believe videos like this will only end up quitting faster.
@SuperMegaLamp
Жыл бұрын
no
@IamNoLongerHuman
Жыл бұрын
As a native Japanese speaker, I'm so impressed with your effort and speaking skills! Also, I was glad that you watched A Whisker Away, one of my favorite anime ever! (2:12) I just started learning Mandarin days ago, so let's keep going together!
@irisnomo
Жыл бұрын
omg I wanna learn Mandarin as well, I haven't starter yet but do you have tips for me🥹
@IamNoLongerHuman
Жыл бұрын
@@irisnomo I guess it's easier for Japanese folks to learn Chinese cuz we've similar characters. So for people who don't know Chinese characters yet, I recommend learning them, especially basic ones first. English letters express sounds, but Chinese characters represent their meanings, so once u master them, ur gonna get written language better. That's why I strongly believe learning them will make your language acqisition faster and more efficient. Also, I recommend a yt playlist named 'EverydayChinese' which I'm currently watching:) Sorry for my long reply...
@irisnomo
Жыл бұрын
@@IamNoLongerHuman thank you I appreciate this tons, will definitely check that channel out
@roxazaloah
Жыл бұрын
I started learning Japanese a couple of weeks ago. I'm using Duolingo, a book to learn common japanese words/phrases, and practicing hiragana as I go in a genkouyoushi. To me, it's easier to figure out how to write it if I have to write it larger, first. It is a lot to learn, but I am having a fun time with it. I never knew just how many characters Japanese has, and some of them look very similar, so sometimes I mess up, but I'm not getting discouraged!
@Kumo_st4r
Жыл бұрын
Ohhh I plan on learning Japanese and I’m Chinese
@shoyoagatsume5292
Жыл бұрын
This is so motivational 😭😭😭 I was so ready to go back to learning Korean but I’ve been procrastinating and now that school is back around I have to focus on my human anatomy studies
@dirys24
Жыл бұрын
same i got 4 months of holidays and i didnt do shit
@balticrevolt2552
Жыл бұрын
Being a language lover and also a stem major is hard lol
@feliciasuharja4466
Жыл бұрын
Though anatomy study is like an investment, when you master it completely, any physiology, pathophysiology, and diseases, you could explain to anybody
@mrmo7818
Жыл бұрын
Same here... I said to myself i would learn French and Japanese... 4 years have passed.... And all i can say is Konnichiwa.... Bonjour😅
@Librty
Жыл бұрын
@@user-np2ty9mc5jcause anatomy is hard as fuck
@Brakdayton
8 ай бұрын
The more I see these click bait titles, the more annoyed I get. You can ‘teach’ yourself Japanese in three months but it’s *impossible* to learn it from scratch in that time. A year and a half in Japan, studying up to six hours a day has taught *me* that.
@獭水
6 ай бұрын
I agree with you I also spent two years (taking Japanese course) just to get N4 and close to N3 But my sensei makes sure we have good basics so it took some time And I still find out that there are so many things to learn!
@ChrisElliott1333
5 ай бұрын
Its possible. I know someone who went from nothing to N2 in 1 year. However they ended up living in Japan and attending Japanese school with Japanese studies. So unless you sort of have that experience or time to replicate it, it's kinda hard.
@blueswallow3096
5 ай бұрын
Thank you! All those videos make me feel like I'm not capable enough. I study by myself and it takes time. Hopefully I will progress much quicker when I'll attend school in Japan. Also, JLPT doesn't mean you can actually speak real japanese.
@Ashana.
5 ай бұрын
It is possible, everyone learns differently. I’m a slow learner that struggles to self study, I would love a teacher but can’t afford one .
@vtv5558
4 ай бұрын
@@Ashana. Can you maybe afford Italki lessons? I have a teacher on there and it's $8 per lesson hour. Edit: No subscription or anything.
@Blank-kg9vf
Жыл бұрын
This video is only there for advertisment of Lingopie. Even though she didn't thaught herself japanese. Complete nonsense. Don't use lingopie. I actually learned japanese and there are so much better and free tools. There is no need to spend any money at all.
@480pvibes
10 ай бұрын
10+ years of studying. My advice to everybody is to enjoy learning regardless of speed. You’re going to have other priorities in life other than Japanese, so you’re gonna be in it for the long haul. I used to be in an intermediate conversation class with two 50+ year olds, and they had been learning since they were in their 20s. Now I just have private lessons with a native teacher but focusing on conversation. It’s been a slow process but from where I was 10+ years ago with speaking it, light years in comparison.
@devashreep4332
9 ай бұрын
Oh my god.... "to enjoy learning regardless of speed" is the one phrase I needed to hear. THANKS MUCH !!
@imamsanji
8 ай бұрын
As for me, I want to make my japanese learning as my main project this year, I am unemployed so I don't have things to do anyway. 😂 I hope that I will be able to read, listen to, and watch authentic contents in Japanese by the end of the year. And I hope that I can save money so that I can take an online course to practice speaking later.
@thecelestialgoddess_
6 ай бұрын
I've also been 10+ years in and out between life happening, long road.
i’m glad that most comments agree that this is a motivational video! it really helps watching these (and it’s awesome to see someone else’s progress). what app did you use to practice writing your japanese on ipad? if it was mentioned in the video i definitely missed it ^^;
@rhea_irl
Жыл бұрын
I use OneNote! I have a dedicated video on how i use it so you can check that out if you’d likeee
@kpopgirl1992
Жыл бұрын
You are a BEAST with languages, great job! I need to get back into learning Japanese too, especially since I plan to go there next year!
@sethaldrich6902
6 ай бұрын
She already knew Japanese before doing this
@BathersonMote
Жыл бұрын
I suppose that there is a chance I'm wrong, but I'm not believing the claim of n5 to n3 in three months. By the time a person passes n3 they will have learned around 3700 words and over 600 kanji. Also, you have to figure in all the grammar that must be learned, and the speaking and listening skills. To put it into perspective, just the kanji is equal to that of a Japanese student when the complete the 4th grade. 3700 words in 3 months rounds down to 41 words each day. She did say that she knew a bit of Japanese beforehand, but even if she already knew half of the words required for n3 that still is around 20 new words every day for 90 days. How many people can learn and correctly use 20 new words each day for 90 days in their native language? 20 to 40 new Japanese words each and every day for 3 months straight. Enough Kanji that it takes it takes Japanese children years of school to reach a similar amount. All the grammar rules, plus the ability to speak and listen to the language. Again, I might be wrong, but this seems like a nearly impossible task for anyone, even if it was the only thing they did for 3 months straight. So, I do have my doubts about this video's claim.
@oh-noe
Жыл бұрын
haha I spent 3 years to get to N3. Can’t say I was very effective studying though
@BathersonMote
Жыл бұрын
@@oh-noe 3 years is still pretty good. The US Foreign Service Institute trains diplomats and others who need to speak foreign languages. They have a language school and rank languages on their difficulty and how long it would take to learn each language. Japan is listed listed as a level 4 language and that is the most difficult. There are a total of 5 level 4 languags, Arabic, Chinese - Cantonese, Chinese - Mandarin, Japanese, and Korean. According to them, it would take 88 weeks at 5 hours of classroom instruction (not including study time at home) to reach a level in Japanese equivalent to N3. That's 88 weeks of dedicating yourself to learning Japanese in a classroom setting with an instructor who speaks native level, and the ability to practice speaking and listening in person with others. No job, no other classes, just learning Japanese. So, three years is a very reasonable amount of time for someone who probably has other responsibilities like a job and family life to reach N3. That's why I believe it would be very difficult to even reach N1 in three months, let along N3.
@champdude17
Жыл бұрын
They probably did, what they didn't mention is that they speak fluent Korean already. If you know another East Asian language the grammar rules aren't going to be as alien.
@windyrain9470
Жыл бұрын
Maybe its because I dont speak Japanese but to me it sounds like you're using korean inotation to speak Japanese 💀 just curious abt that no hate I lv your vids!
@rhea_irl
Жыл бұрын
Yess ahaha i feel that way too, right now I’m just glad I’m able to even form sentences, but fixing the intonation is what I’m looking to work on next ^^
@rac--
Жыл бұрын
“For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life.” - John 3:16 God bless everyone here. Jesus loves you and died for you on the cross. He did this to wash away the burden of sins, and if you open your heart to Him, He can take away the burden of your sins and give you a peace incomparable to anything in this world. ✝✝🙏
@Kazoku4
Жыл бұрын
It’s fine but you try too hard to use a babydoll voice. This is something foreigners do a LOT, they think they have to use the kawaii onee-chan voice. Japanese can tell that foreigners don’t naturally have that high pitched voice so it just sounds really awkward. you can use your natural low voice when speaking Japanese. A tip for casual speaking: instead of pronouncing vowels perfectly like あ as “ah”, pronounce it as “aw” more closer to “o”. It will make you sound more natural instead of like a train announcer
@rhea_irl
Жыл бұрын
agreed, i usually cannot listen back on any of my videos once they're uploaded because of this exact reason :(( its something im trying to work on for all the foreign languages i speak because it does get a lot more high pitched than normal; hard habit to break but fingers crossed 🤞
@eiarromba7149
Жыл бұрын
I stopped learning Korean I think two years ago. I just noticed now that now that I've actually grabbed a notebook and started writing down all phrases that I understand from the K-dramas I watch, and get new phrases from that, I've been getting so much better to the point where I get a lot of what the characters are saying even without the subs on. :)
@sams__
Жыл бұрын
How can I be fluent in Korean do u have any advices?? Btw I also watch kdramas so I do know a lot of Korean wordss😊 but I wanna be fluent so do u have any advices please:)?😊
@eiarromba7149
Жыл бұрын
@@sams__ I'm not fluent yet lol but I advice since you enjoy k-dramas start writing down the words and phrases you understood without subs (write it in 한글) and then put the episode on korean subs to learn more words and phrases. I just realized I've gotten better because I've been studying for so long :)
@sams__
Жыл бұрын
@@eiarromba7149 dangg thanks a lot for the recommendation!! I hope it really helps😭😭 I wanna be fluent in Korean so bad so that I can watch kdrama with subs and watch kpop idol's live because they be speaking in Korean while I understand nothing😭😭😭
@thiya4627
4 ай бұрын
@@sams__ other than korean drama, maybe try to watch some vlogs? some people put korean sub in their so it'll help a lot. especially if their channel is catered towards international people, they will do double subs (eng-kr). i think it's more helpful in a way they talk in a realistic way. or maybe watch some variety show. they always put some caption
@sams__
4 ай бұрын
@@thiya4627 got it, thanks!^_^
@shawnh2651
9 ай бұрын
N1 from N3 in 3 months? Complete 100 % bullshit !
@ROSHTRACK
Жыл бұрын
Good Video, not only you explained things patiently to make sure that it was understood, but also doing the voice over fully with the Japanese you learned, shows that it was a real achievement, as you fully demonstrate it, and for a pretty good amount of time. Congratulations!🙌
@nekkyoeditz
Жыл бұрын
When I first saw this video on my recommended, I had to click on it. Your entire process to learning Japanese is what I find really admiring, and I must thank you a thousand times for making this video. It gets me motivated to study Japanese more, so thank you! ☺
@@keliamitsu about a year and a half. I mainly used imabi paired with Genki(Tokini Andy videos) and the Tango books. I also tried to read some manga but it didn't click with me until I started a bit with N2. I also dropped Anki about a year in because it was so demotivating and boring.
@ImbotTobmi
Жыл бұрын
@@Luigi_Luigi2401did anki help you tho if so how much?
@disturbeddude303
Жыл бұрын
For anyone starting a language, the goal isn't to rush learning. Recognizing a word can happen quickly, but it takes a LONG time to practice producing the language. Nuance of a language and culture can't be fully understood in 3 months. These videos are encouraging, but notice the plug of products. What is the creator's goal in this? Also, a standardized test like the JLPT doesn't test for things like every day speaking and writing. Take all of these videos with a grain of salt.
@roxazaloah
Жыл бұрын
I don't think everyone would take that away after watching the video but I understand where you are coming from. It could be that the creator is sharing the tools they used to help in their studies, and I like new suggestions, as someone who is a couple of weeks into learning the language. But creators on youtube also probably want to grow their channel, and a good way is through sponsorships, so I don't see the harm in this.
@oh-noe
Жыл бұрын
@@roxazaloah I agree 100% with him. These types of videos are abundant in a part of the language learning sphere, and not only in Japanese. They are fun to watch, but in the end they are more akin to movies. Unrealistic and made for entertainment. I have now spent soon to be fours years learning Japanese by myself, and I have spent a couple months in Mandarin Chinese and recently started French. My views on these types of videos drastically changed over time. At first I loved watching them, rather I was actively searching for them, maybe I had some inner desire to extract their “genius” and apply it to my own studies. Now I still somewhat enjoy them because they are entertaining, but they are far from motivating. I mean you wouldn’t watch a high school drama to focus up and motivate yourself on your school work. You watch it to just have fun.
@tokkigifs
Жыл бұрын
I love that you don’t have a fear of speaking, I want to get over it esp since I been learning Japanese since 2019 and still at n5 level
@rhea_irl
Жыл бұрын
I actually used to have a really big issue with speaking, so i’d practice speaking to myself/to my plush dolls haha, i managed to get over it over time ^^
@nano_ni7880
Жыл бұрын
Me too been learning it since 2019 and still I want to talk to Japanese people too but I can't cuz I'm still beginning and I'm soo introvert 🥲💔 I feel so nervous I hope I can do it too
@tokkigifs
Жыл бұрын
@@rhea_irl thst’s so cute haha
@Lukka_art
5 күн бұрын
same, i spent 10 months in japan for an exchange year and ended up understanding a lot of the language and writing decently, but speaking??? i couldnt form a decent sentence
@rakshanand7980
Жыл бұрын
Favourite KZitemr has Posted 💪🏾
@sethaldrich6902
6 ай бұрын
Title is clickbate, she knew Japanese before doing this
@egglololol
4 ай бұрын
“N5 to N3”??? anyways, you can get the gist of n5 in less than a month, being generous
@Rinachanslife
Жыл бұрын
Omg I am beyond impressed , you speak so fluently after 3 months! In the same time I could only learn hiragana and katakana somewhat besides uni classes. But I’m determined to become fluent ! This was so motivational thank you!
@emilydavinci9045
9 ай бұрын
Me too! I'm learning in between uni classes and moving slow but I'm determined! We're both going to become fluent one day!
@PranshiP
Жыл бұрын
Hey Rhea, I'm just starting to learn Japanese. This video is very helpful and motivating! Really love your confidence and flow that you speak with. Had seen your korean video as well, very very impress. Hoping that soon I am able to speak with the same level of confidence and fluency. I'm learning both Japanese and Korean. Wanted to know, how do I learn to write the characters in both languages especially Japanese, any recommendations where I can learn the strokes etc from ? Any books, youtube channels, websites ?
@rhea_irl
Жыл бұрын
Korean writing is pretty straightforward so almost any resource would work tbh, as for japanese i used/still use jisho(dot)org to look up stroke orders!
@PranshiP
Жыл бұрын
@@rhea_irl Thank You so much! One more thing, the Korean Japanese language tests can be given even if you self learn the language right? I mean I can just enroll for their beginner level test if I think I can give it, is that correct ?
@rhea_irl
Жыл бұрын
@@PranshiPyes! I took the TOPIK exam after just self studying, and am planning to do the same for the JLPT
@TheSnipSnapz
6 ай бұрын
These clickbait videos make me so mad
@zoulinos242
Ай бұрын
ikr
@wavim
Жыл бұрын
As someone who's still learning Japanese since last January I hope I reach your level by the end of this year
It sounded that like your trying to speak badly in the first conversation
@unusedflint6066
Жыл бұрын
I SWEAR I WANT TO LEARN KOREAN BUT J HAVE JO MOTIVATION YOURE LITERALLY SO COOL I HOPE YOU ARE AWAre
@Oscario8
Жыл бұрын
Thank you for creating this inspirational video ! I'm sure this will help lots of people get motivated and study !!! ❤ One note for the viewers so you won't get discouraged : 🎯Her speaking skills in the video are clearly N3 and quite solid. 🎯It takes two or three times faster for advanced Korean speakers to learn Japanese (they share similar grammar patterns and a truck load of vocab). A native Korean speaker can get fluent in Japanese in a year or two. So if you only know English, be kind to yourself and don't set to be as fluent in 3 months. Take it at your rythm and stay consistent. You'll get there.❤
@dryadalis_
6 ай бұрын
I really recommend "The bite size japanese podcast".
i really missed your videos, rhea! i hope you have been doing well :) i have been wanting to learn another language, but i am afraid of forgetting the language that i am already learning (been learning for 4 years), how did you manage to balance it out? also, i think it is so amazing how far you have come in three months, you are truly an inspiration
@rhea_irl
Жыл бұрын
Hey! Hmmmm that’s a good question, i sometimes do get confused with words between languages, but i dont think I’ve ever really forgotten any bits because of learning another lang. If anything, i feel like sometimes it actually helps me learn better, for example when learning japanese with a base of korean, or arabic with a base of hindi, there are overlaps between these languages that help me create associations and links in my head to memorise better ^^
@Arabiclia
Жыл бұрын
@@rhea_irl wow, does it mean you're learning Arabic? Or was it just an example?
@rhea_irl
Жыл бұрын
@@Arabiclia I really want to! Haven’t seriously gotten to it yet, but i was in the middle east for a very short time where i kind of picked up how to read !
@Arabiclia
Жыл бұрын
@@rhea_irl oh wow, you picked it up just by being there. That's some real high IQ right there, haha! I have never really commented on your videos though I have discovered your channel months ago, but since I finally did and I even got a reply from you, I want to say that your Korean and Japanese accents and pronunciation are super good! I'm obviously not a native speaker (I'm an Arabic native speaker btw), but I have been exposing myself to the Korean & Japanese languages and all I can say is that you definitely sound like a native in both languages. Wish I could one day sound like you do speaking Japanese. Thank you for inspiring. May you have a lovely day! 💜
@iamthestormthatisapproaching69
Жыл бұрын
This affects me a lot myself, but if you need to read this, DO NOT LET NUMBERS DISCOURAGE YOU FROM LEARNING!! Japanese is NOT easy for English speakers. Some people are able to learn faster than others. That's fine! Learn at your pace. If you have better things to do, or if you need to be productive, please let those things keep you busy. But if you want to learn Japanese, find a way to make that a hobby. Only you can do that!
@Beciax-e3i
Ай бұрын
98.9% comments: WOW, nice, thank u for film! 1% comments: it's clickbait, it's not possible 0.1% comments: 99% comments
@johnweak-123
7 ай бұрын
you are lying
@JazzyXZY
6 ай бұрын
What makes you say that?
@griffian4454
6 ай бұрын
What software is she using on the tablet... The pen looks like a Samsung pen so probably an android app?
@karaagee_
Жыл бұрын
so cute! I love seeing your progress!
@aims617
Жыл бұрын
I've been wanting to learn Japanese for a while but I've been putting it off and procrastinating for a long time..this video makes me want to start learning again so im gonna do it!
@islandg.8348
Жыл бұрын
I've been learning for nearly 3 years now and its one of the best experiences i've had. There are so many ressources out there for casual learning so you should def start if you want to ! :)
@aims617
Жыл бұрын
@@islandg.8348 Aw, thank you for letting me know! Definitely :D
@nano_ni7880
Жыл бұрын
sometimes your japanese prononciation like korean's, but yeah you're going well that's perfect お疲れ様でした
@RingoIta
Жыл бұрын
So basically be N4 level in week1. Got it!
@JacobMiller-q6y
Жыл бұрын
그렇게 짧은 시간에 당신의 발전을 보고 저도 새로운 언어를 배울 수 있는 영감을 얻었습니다! 감사합니다!
@nachoboe
Жыл бұрын
Hello!! I am learning korean and I’m motivated by your comment to learn more. Do you mind telling me what you used to study? 저는 한국 사람인데 미국에서 태어나서 한국말 잘 못해요.
@knmid
Жыл бұрын
@@nachoboe 음,, 저건 누가 봐도 번역기 돌린건데요? 아님 죄송해요,,ㅋㅋ I hope your Korean study is going well now~ imho consistency is the most important resource and is totally free ;)
Your videos really help highlighting ways to learn Japanese effectively and this remind me not to procrastinate while studying. I really hope that by this year I will able to understand and speak Japanese well enough.
@StudywithMiejie
Жыл бұрын
すごい! レヤさんの日本語は本当に上手です。うらやましい! 私も日本語が上手になりたいです。 頑張ります!৻( •̀ ᗜ •́ ৻) Thank you Rhea for sharing this video. This is very inspiring. I have been studying Japanese for years and I’m still mustering my courage to speak Japanese only in my vlogs. (๑>ᴗ
@rhea_irl
Жыл бұрын
Would love to collaborate! Feel free to reach out on email/discord/insta
@StudywithMiejie
Жыл бұрын
@@rhea_irl レヤさんのおかげで文法が下手でも勇気を出して日本語を話すことができました。 (⊃。•́‿•̀。)⊃ Thank you so much for your reply. Would send you a message soon. ଘ(੭*ˊᵕˋ)੭* ੈ♡‧₊˚
@enma_____14138
Жыл бұрын
You did amazing!!! I skipped some seconds off the beginning and was about to comment that it was nowhere near N3, but I'm glad I continued listening! Incredible improvement (not only for having studied for 3 months, but in general!) and it was so great that you had the courage to talk to other people from the very beginning!
I saw a lot of comment said it click bait but it actually not, i for one got to N4 pretty fast but N3 is really difficult right now. You just need to keep open mind when learning language. The are a lot of people who speak even more than 3-4 languages . Keep fighting and be kind pls cause in future, smarter people than you might don’t make video because of hated comment are all over the place. Keep learning and Thank you for video :)
@michaelsanchez9983
Жыл бұрын
No you didn’t.
@sonicthesilly
Жыл бұрын
HELLPPPP these comments are so motivational, im seriously about to make a whole schedule on japanese.
i was looking at korean studying tips and remembered your channel. i come on here to see that you uploaded one day ago... literally just listening to the first thirty seconds of this video made me emotional,, like i am genuinely inspired now.
@CatherineChaw312
Жыл бұрын
OMG! Yessss. I have been looking forward to studying Japanese, thanks for the motivation. Btw are you planning on studying Chinese and making a video like this?
@tunjungdewata2929
Жыл бұрын
Wow i can't believe you're learning it for only 3 month at that level, i recently wants to learn japanese seriously and i've been learning it for 3 years but still in the n4 level i didn't use texsbook and only use free apss because i couldn't afford it. And recently i want to give up because i think i didn't make any progression. i can imagine how much effort you put into learning it, and it made me realize my learning progress isn't effective and wants to change my method. I always struglle how to find new words to learn. If you don't mind what resources do you use when it comes to get new vocabularies? Thankyou for answering ❤😊
@rhea_irl
Жыл бұрын
I use my anki card sets mostly!
@tunjungdewata2929
Жыл бұрын
@@rhea_irl thank you for answering 😊
@oh-noe
Жыл бұрын
I have spent around 3 years as well ending up on N3, now on my fourth year with the goal of N2 in mind. I spent a year on Duolingo, but dropped it and other language course apps because I found out that after using them for a little while their effectiveness plummeted. Since then I have only used pre-made Anki decks for vocabulary, (5 new words every day) going through thousands of cards. And my source for grammar was reading books and watching native videos until I came across a grammar point I had seen repeatedly, then I searched KZitem for a video explaining the grammar point. Input has been a big part in my learning, especially from native content.
@M0NE4
Жыл бұрын
if she can learn i can too
@Rairosu
Жыл бұрын
Here is just a few words I learned there is more but I won't list them all here. At the end of the day EVERYONE has different ways they can learn Japanese just like how diets don't work for everyone おはいよございます! げんきですか? こんいちわ! はい! いいえ! さよなら ありがとございます! I used Microsoft IME to type in Japanese and I remember these words very easily and quick. Just for the record I am asian and my actual native tongue is Thai.
@eecorr
Ай бұрын
i'm just learning and 3 months sounds like I have to sleep with my books as well
This was nice to watch as I have been learning Japanese for almost a month now, it motivates me to keep studying hard so I can also begin to be able to explain certain things, express myself and my goals for learning the language. 頑張るます🫡!
@itssquishy3364
Жыл бұрын
i'm learning polish and i come back to this to get motivation also i used to be fluent in japanese and i love how you perfectly pronounce (i mean in pitch accent) some words and also we get to hear you try to sort the words out in real time when you relaise you were wrong in something this just made me feel normal to make mistakes while learning a language from scratch
@Cdefgahc2
Жыл бұрын
So sorry for you for learning polish, goodluck
@oh-noe
Жыл бұрын
@@Cdefgahc2 hahaha
@ebiiseo
Жыл бұрын
Hi @rheastudies this is very inspiring. Thank you for the video! By the way, may I know your schedule breakdown? Like how many hours per day and how do you juggle between kotoba, bunpou, and probably kaiwa? Thanks
@arnavgupta5673
Жыл бұрын
Missed my fav youtuberrr!!! Love your videos!!! 🫶🏽🫶🏽🫶🏽🫶🏽
@Z_03
Жыл бұрын
Oh my god!! A couple hours ago I was like: "When is Rhea gonna post"? Thank you for uploading this video Rhea!! Your videos always make me happy. 🔥❤️
@갸악갹갹
Жыл бұрын
한국인입니다^^ 저도 일본어 배우고 있는데 히라가나도 다 못 외웠습니다…한국어도 잘하시지만 일본어도 진짜 잘하시네요!!
@brodover
Жыл бұрын
You're such an inspiration for me because I was learning Korean and had tried to pick up hiragana a few months back, but gave up. Definitely should get back to it. Memorizing the different forms of characters has always been a weak point of mine :( (English and Korean are the best alphabets T^T boo Chinese and Japanese) I'm also wondering how many hours a day did you put into learning Japanese during these 3 months
@rhea_irl
Жыл бұрын
Depends on the day, but i tried to aim for atleast an hour per day
@aria9772
Жыл бұрын
@@rhea_irl I have very little knowledge of Japanese, would learning and memorizing all hiragana/katakana before learning sentence structures/kanji be worth doing?
@rhea_irl
Жыл бұрын
@@aria9772 yes 100%! Personally i always feel like learning the script first is essential, although it does depend on your learning style and your own goals
@Lilimida
9 ай бұрын
Hobby? Jujutsu Kaisen 🤣❤️ I love that 😭 same girl 💅anddd I love your sweet voice 😍💖
@dreamgrllll
Жыл бұрын
6:20 me too! its called comprehensible input if you didnt know! its such a good way to learn. there are also comprehensible input Japanese and korean channels
@rhea_irl
Жыл бұрын
I didn’t know the term for it! Thank you^^
@pau.7604
7 ай бұрын
what japanese channels would you recommend 😊
@humanbean3
Жыл бұрын
n3 in 3 months is absurd. im probably not far above that and im approaching 2 years...
@jflabeets1
9 ай бұрын
I’m working right now on going from passing N5 to N3. I know 600 words and 150 Kanji and all Kana. You have to learn 10 words per day to get from 5 to 3 in one year. Even at 6 hours per day studying that’s has been a stretch for me but attainable. Are you saying you have all 3200 words, the grammar, and the Kanji done in 90 days? The M5 test was significantly harder in person than any of the study materials. You cannot pass them if you cannot read fast, that includes Kanji. I’m interested to know how you mastered 10 kanji per day with on and kun readings plus grammar and 24 vocabulary words. I can’t seem to do that, and I’ve got a native speaker in the house helping me
@vicentecollao2288
4 ай бұрын
Step 1: Be native. Seriously, she's scamming you all. Unless you don't have literally any other thing to do other than learning japanese, learning N5 to N3 is just nuts and not very logical.
@90934384
4 ай бұрын
You achieved a lot in such a small amount of time! So inspiring ✨ It's fascinating to me that your Japanese has a slight Korean accent, which shows how deeply you internalized Korean. I genuinely think it's impressive... I don't think I have an English accent when I speak Chinese, nor a Chinese accent when I butcher Korean. I just have a Japanese accent since it's my first language and I can't shake my tendency to pronounce unnecessary vowels😂
@nicoleyoshihara4011
Жыл бұрын
Awesome job! I want to get back into studying Japanese and Spanish. I got to be more disciplined lol
@hopewrld1_
Жыл бұрын
I am so happy to see you posted again! I absolutely love your channel 😭I have been thinking about learning Japanese so this video is perfect. 💜
@jho_ann
14 күн бұрын
I personally think that people who often used "nanka" in kaiwa are already fluent in japanese. I am currently here in Japan for about a year now (came here with N4 level) and somehow on N3 level right now but I'm still not used to it.
@victorine7203
Жыл бұрын
Hi ! I wanted to thank you for motivating me again, for learning languages. I also wanted to wish you good luck for learning French, it’s my mother tongue and I’m happy to have learned it this way (it’s rather complicated). 😊
@JohnA...
6 ай бұрын
The video was great, very inspirational for anyone wanting to learn a new language. If I could make a couple suggestions to help those viewing your videos. Putting a list of the apps/programs/podcasts you use and/or mention in your videos in the description would be very helpful. Adding links to those things would be a further step in helping others access them easy (maybe suggestions for specific flash cards, etc. that you personally use). And of course you are doing this for your own channel so with the links to various apps have links to the videos you have done going over those resources to better help those wanting to learn AND help grow your channel. Keep up the great content and good luck on your own language journey.
@blondesloth
Жыл бұрын
What apps are you using to write? It’s impressive how fluent you are in spite of studying for only 3 months. Great job!
@rhea_irl
Жыл бұрын
I use OneNote! I have a dedicated video on notetaking in OneNote that you could check out if you’d like ^^
@blondesloth
Жыл бұрын
@@rhea_irl thank you! I will check it out for sure :)
@chamster4584
Жыл бұрын
This is truly inspiring! After a year of learning, I am still stuck at memorizing vocab and some grammar points, still couldn't quite get out of the "a は b を verbます" sentence structure to express myself fluently 😭😭😭 How did you get so used to it? How much time did you spend learning a day? Did you talk a lot to a native? You sound so natural in this video after only 3 months of serious learning I am feeling stressed and frustrated, motivating nonetheless.
@rhea_irl
Жыл бұрын
Hiii honestly the structure was really easy to get used to because of my existing knowledge of korean sentence structure ( theyre so so similar )! I spent at least an hour per day, and although i tried to speak with natives, most of my speaking practice was just me talking to myself/to my plush toys in my room (talking to people is way more intimidating and i feel like sometimes i think too much about what the other person is thinking; with plushes i can go at my own pace and they keep listening haha). Immersion also is really important and i feel like continuously hearing the language being spoken helps with getting used to more varied structures. I really hope you dont feel stressed, since i really do believe there are so many factors that affect the pace of language learning, and ive also spent years on other languages and given up because i felt like it was going nowhere, which in hindsight i really wish i hadn’t given up on. My only advice would be to keep sticking to it and do it at a peaceful and consistently sustainable pace ^^
@chamster4584
Жыл бұрын
@@rhea_irl Thank you for the encouraging words! I will try my best! ありがとう!
@oh-noe
Жыл бұрын
Use Japanese more and you will get used to it. Studying can only provide you with the knowledge to do something, but using it will provide you with the dexterity and mental ability to make it easy to do.
@Phillip_02
Жыл бұрын
Thank you, i have to do it too. HAVE TO DO IT! I CAN'T BE LAZY!!!
@moonpiemoonpie
7 ай бұрын
Immediately subscribed. My Japanese is so bad but I’m trying my best to improve
@Pjungwp
7 ай бұрын
This is a super healthy attitude of learning languages. Not to be bogged down by not reaching "advanced" level and just learning to have fun. Not to be afraid of conversing and creating content in the language without "mastering it." Having learned Japanese active for several years and passively for over 25 years, I can read and listen quite well but I could barely speak. Well done. Keep it up! Looks like Madanrin next for you (logical progression from Kanji study)
@MrSlaniac
Жыл бұрын
Its hard to find motivation... Thank you for your video and good luck with french!
@ann_8703
6 ай бұрын
Here i am after made big mistake by paying for N3 instead of N4 😭
@stephenswistchew7720
Ай бұрын
Ire ralso lerald jappanski tolk flom lecolds and itok pletty goody Japan tok but now I julst halve to meet sumwun who learned the same way I did so we can tok allygarto iffy yoo can tok goody japanesy wot like I kin shend me a retter PS no French retter s soo Nara
ありがたい❗️私はNihongo con Teppei のpodcastも大好き!!!! お疲れ様でした‼️一緒に日本語を勉強しましょう🎉
@manalg8721
Жыл бұрын
Hi rhea! Can i know where you bought the cover of your ipad? I know it's a very weird question but i want to buy the cover...😅😊 Great video btw, loved the tips!
@rhea_irl
Жыл бұрын
Hiii im pretty sure i just looked up “pink ipad cover” on amazon haha, it was really cheap and from some non name brand but its lasted over a year now !
@mrmo7818
Жыл бұрын
Rhea i believe you have the potential to become a polyglot
@mirelandthecats7981
Жыл бұрын
OMG, you are amazing!!! 🎉 I struggle learning languages, but your videos help me to be more consistent and keep studying 🤓 Thank you 😊
@jimytim2437
Жыл бұрын
I just watch your video, you have sound is so cute +1 subs
@suika9299
Жыл бұрын
久しぶりの動画うれしいです✨ 日本語の勉強応援しています🥰
@平和-s6p
Жыл бұрын
3ヶ月でそんなに上手になるのは本当凄すぎ
@solareclipzz1741
Жыл бұрын
Also having Japanese friends is a big help I have 1 that speaks English better than me and he can speak Japanese really good so I always talk with him and I have another Japanese friend who can’t really speak English at all , so talking to him is usually challenging でも it’s also good for practicing and they told me to watch a lot of anime 😭
@ashmorris4067
Жыл бұрын
Whats that app you are using to write the kanji out does anyone know please
@rhea_irl
Жыл бұрын
I use onenote^^
@seed9607
10 ай бұрын
I just started learning Japanese and I have no idea where to start 😭 This video did give me the clarity that, yes, I want to learn this language!
@christopherfleming7505
Жыл бұрын
I loved the video! Your Japanese sounds great to me, but I'm only a beginner, so I wouldn't know if you made any mistakes. I hope to be able to speak as fluently as you one day. I have been learning Japanese on my own for nearly a year now. I did the JLPT n5 exam in July, but I still don't have the results. To be honest, I think I failed, because the listening went pretty badly! I'm not really that bothered though, and I have actually studied far harder AFTER the exam than leading up to it. Yes, I know, that's not what you're supposed to do! I'm now on chapter 16 of the Genki books (that's the fourth chapter of book II), and I'm doing a lot of kanji study with Wanikani. You didn't mention this app in your video, but I'm sure you've heard of it, as a lot of Japanese learners use it. I find the discipline of turning up every day for your reviews and doing a set number of lessons each day very fulfilling. It won't work for people who prefer a less structured approach, but for an aspie like me it's ideal! My plan is to take the n3 exam in a couple of years. I know, that's much slower than you, but there are several reasons why I am slow. Firstly, the amount of time I can allocate to Japanese study. I have a full time job, as well as a wife and three children, so I can't normally fit in more than 2 hours a day. That's including listening to stuff during my commutes and doing SRS reviews in toilet breaks, etc. Secondly, I am older than you (approaching 50), and I suspect my brain is not as supple as yours. It takes me ages to learn new kanji and I forget them a thousand times. I try not to get cross with myself, and I just accept it now. It's part of getting older. Thirdly, I'm not bothered by how long it takes to get fluent. I have no real professional need to learn Japanese, it's purely a hobby, as well as an intellectual challenge that will hopefully stive off dementia ;) Good luck with your journey, and congratulations for your achievements!
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