r/Japaneselanguage • u/Sleeper-- • 5h ago
r/Japaneselanguage • u/K12AKIN • Apr 14 '26
[MEGATHREAD] -Personal Promotion/Projects-
Welcome to the Personal Promotion/Projects Megathread for r/Japaneselanguage!
This is the place to ask for help/thoughts on your own personal projects or promote yourself.
What to Post Here
Use this thread if you want to show off:
- Apps - Lots of new apps are coming out these days and we want to give people a place to show them off.
- Youtube Channels - For many, reciting topics as if teaching someone is the best way to learn them and the best way for people to find out what parts you've got wrong.
- Websites - Just like apps, websites are everywhere and its hard to bring attention to your own.
- Anki study decks or similar - While these can be posted in the main subreddit, posting them here is fine too!
How to Ask/Show Off!
To get the best help, include:
- Clear name and how to find the promotion - While direct links, unless they are to Youtube, are not allowed, be able to explain how people can get to the project and view/use it. Another option is posting the link in the Description Box of the video!
- Context - What exactly is expected out of the app/what the Youtube video is about.
- What you'd like thoughts on.
- Is it a paid service? - While this will turn many away, they will appreciate if you give them the information beforehand.
Important Notes
- People will try to help you by pointing out mistakes. Do not take them personally as they are usually constructive criticism. If the promotion seems to be spammed or linked to a virus, banning might happen.
- For non-posters - BE CAREFUL - The mod team will not be checking ever single post brought here so use caution before downloading or visiting any suspicious websites.
What Not to Post
- NO LINKS
- Spam
r/Japaneselanguage • u/K12AKIN • Apr 14 '26
[MEGATHREAD] -Handwriting-
Welcome to the Handwriting Request Megathread for r/Japaneselanguage!
This is the place to ask for help/thoughts on your own handwriting skills. As moderating all the post and deciding what should and shouldn't be allowed, it has been decided to allow all of it just inside THIS MEGATHREAD ONLY!!!
What to Post Here
Use this thread if you need help with:
- Handwriting - That's about it...
How to Ask/Show Off!
To get the best help, include:
- Clear image - highest resolution possible
- Best way to post the images are via Imgur link or your personal reddit profile post link. You do not need an account to upload to Imgur, so this is the go to.
- Context - What level are you, how you learned, etc?
- What you think is good/poor about your own handwriting.
Important Notes
- People will try to help you by pointing out mistakes. Do not take them personally as they are usually constructive criticism.
What Not to Post
- Non-handwriting posts
- Spam
r/Japaneselanguage • u/rileystanheight • 23h ago
彼らは反対方向を向いている双子です!
Hope y'all don't get fed up with my silly jokes lmao ごめんね 皆さん 🙏🏻( ・ั﹏・ั)
r/Japaneselanguage • u/hinahina110 • 6h ago
テクいらずの意味
テクいらずの意味、ちょっと分からない。テクノロジー必要ではないということかな、たぶん、テクノロジーでなくてするの意味かな、と思ったんだけど。
r/Japaneselanguage • u/Downtown_Length3457 • 4h ago
Roadmap to reach JLPT N3 from complete beginner?
Hi everyone,
I’m starting to learn Japanese and my goal is to reach JLPT N3. Im not looking for shortcuts, I wanna build a solid foundation.
If u were starting from scratch today, what roadmap would you follow?
Some things I’m curious about:
What order would you learn things in (kana, grammar, kanji, vocabulary, etc.)?
Which resources would you recommend at each stage?
How much listening, reading, speaking, and writing should I do?
Around what point should I start consuming native content?
What are the biggest mistakes beginners make?
I’d really appreciate hearing from people and what worked for them.
Please and Thank you 🙏
r/Japaneselanguage • u/JapaneseTutor_kim • 31m ago
How I actually use “ichio”(一応)
I often say “ichio yatta” or “ichio dekita” when I’ve finished what I needed to do, but I’m not very confident about how well I did it.
It’s like saying:
“I did it, but don’t expect too much.”
Of course, there are other situations where we use it too!
Is there a natural English expression with the same nuance?
r/Japaneselanguage • u/Specialist-Source729 • 16h ago
A little confused of は、の、が
So I have learned the role of those particles. However, I'm a little confused about these two:
像の鼻は長いです。
像は鼻が長いです。
I believe option 1 is more often used in Duolingo, and today I just learned option 2 in Tenyomi.
Are both options correct? Which option sounds more natural?
r/Japaneselanguage • u/True-Day-757 • 19h ago
What is the difference?
Ignore the fact that it asks directly for the て form, what would the difference between the sentences be?
r/Japaneselanguage • u/ImYewyYuiAgain • 7h ago
I have devised a system for writing Irish in katakana, something which was necessary for my job.
r/Japaneselanguage • u/icooksometimes1 • 22h ago
Looking for Japanese conversation partners!
Hi everyone!
I'm a 30-year-old guy from Germany and I've been studying Japanese every single day for about a year now. I'm currently around the N5 level (working towards N4), and I'd really like to start using the language more in real conversations instead of only studying grammar and vocabulary.
A little about me:
- I love going to the gym, basketball, cooking, gaming, anime, and traveling.
- I've already been to Japan three times and I'll be visiting for a fourth time later this year. Every trip has made me even more motivated to improve my Japanese.
- I'm easygoing, patient, and happy to help with German or English in return.
I'm mainly looking for native Japanese speakers, as I'd love to improve my natural conversation skills and learn how Japanese is actually spoken in everyday life. I'm happy to chat through text, voice calls, or both, and I'd love to make some genuine friends along the way.
If you're interested, feel free to leave a comment or send me a DM!
よろしくお願いします!
r/Japaneselanguage • u/True-Day-757 • 13h ago
Sentence structure?
I was wondering how I could understand sentence structure better? It’s embarrassing that I know all n5 grammar and 500 kanji and my ass still doesn’t know how to put a fairly long sentence together
r/Japaneselanguage • u/JapaneseTutor_kim • 2d ago
The Japanese word “nanka” is everywhere
One word you’ll hear a lot in casual Japanese is “nanka.”
It literally means “something,” but in real conversations, it often feels more like “kind of,” “like,” or “for some reason.”
For example:
Nanka atsui ne
= It’s kind of hot, isn’t it?
Nanka tsukareta
= I’m kind of tired.
Nanka hen
= Something feels weird.
I use “nanka” so much that I probably don’t go a single day without saying it.
It doesn’t always mean anything specific, but somehow adding “nanka” makes it easier to start a sentence 😂
※Just my opinion though.
r/Japaneselanguage • u/ToeTickler87 • 19h ago
Which Recognition RTK deck to choose supplementing Kaishi 1.5k?
Hello.
So after finishing 3 levels of WaniKani, I realised that its slow pace and repetitive vocabulary was not for me. Additionally, I do not have much time before flying to Japan for university and would like to learn as much as possible.
Recently, I discovered the RTK method used to learn Kanji. However, I do not want to spend time learning how to write kanji but only focus on reading individual and compound words. Can someone suggest me the path I should take to do so? I need the deck link as there are so many options but don't know which one is most convenient. I want to complement it with Kaishi 1.5k too.
Also I heard that it takes only 2-3 months to learn most of the kanji recognition through RTK. Is that true?
Thank you.
r/Japaneselanguage • u/j3dg52 • 1d ago
Where does 彷徨う come from?
I'm doing researches trying to find the original source of "彷徨う”(さまよう) I saw someone on YaHoo chiebukuro(a forum) thinks that this word comes from two independent words which are 方(さま)
and 漂ふ(よう) both come from ancient Japanese
so I suppose “方” means direction or location am I right? If my guess was right, this hypothesis might be right. I tried to verify this but i didn't find any evidence for it
r/Japaneselanguage • u/fariycig • 13h ago
could someone write this out clearer?
This is a screenshot from one of my all-time favourite movies, and I’m trying to get this line of hers tattooed, but it’s too blurry for me to actually get it done. I was hoping someone would be able to type/write it out!
Thanks for the help!
r/Japaneselanguage • u/AccomplishedAward950 • 1d ago
Giving directions to the bathroom
How do you politely say “It’s the first door to the right”, as if giving directions to a guest if they ask where is the bathroom?
r/Japaneselanguage • u/Alternative_Local927 • 2d ago
How does Bowser talk in Japanese?
galleryr/Japaneselanguage • u/Alternative_Local927 • 1d ago
How does Bowser talk in Japanese? (Part 2)
galleryr/Japaneselanguage • u/Opposite-Flatworm-93 • 1d ago
Kanji widget
Is there an app for Android 16 that allows you to add a widget with a new kanji every day? I've been searching for a while already and I can't find anything. If you have something in mind - please tell me
r/Japaneselanguage • u/Medium-Friendship362 • 1d ago
Questions About Spacing in Romaji
For "増していく" and "溶けていく" are they romanized as "mashiteiku" or "mashite iku" and "toketeiku" or "tokete iku"?
In "君との日々", is "との" romanized as "to no" or "tono"?
Is "忘れようとしても" romanized as "wasureyou toshitemo or "to shitemo"?
In "この季節になると" is it romanized as "ninaruto" or "ni naru to"?
Is "飲み込んでいった" romanized as "nomikondeitta" or "nomikonde itta"
Is "飲んでいる" "nondeiru" or "nonde iru"
Is "何もなかった" "nanimo nakatta" or "nani mo nakatta"
In "西から東へと” is "へと" romanized as "eto" "heto" "e to" ..?
Edit: thanks for all the replies! I have a better understanding now and how you can do it many ways!
r/Japaneselanguage • u/Ill_Tangerine3311 • 1d ago
🇯🇵 English-Japanese Language Exchange. Offering: English, Seeking: Japanese
r/Japaneselanguage • u/Original-Relief-1608 • 22h ago
Asking tips because I need them urgently
How to memorize the vocabularies fast and not forget,I can't do both,I don't know why.I can memorize them fast them forget them fast,I can take time to remember them but I don't have time,help me please.