Learn languages with quality native-speaking teachers on italki🎉. Buy $20 get $5 for free on your first purchase using my code MOCHI2023: Web: go.italki.com/japanesemochi App: italki.app.link/japanesemochi
I am looking to learn Japanese and i know you have patron but I have a question: I have a learning disability, will your patron course be able to teach me since i need to take things slowly?
@@vasyear patreon is for slow pace beginners and do quizzes every week to make sure you really understanding so I think it's good for you! If you don't like it you can quit in a month😉
To everyone who is learning Japanese I can say that I have no place saying whether it's easy or not sense it's my native language but you got this! I kind of understand sense english has a different writing system and learning the different between stuff like their they're and there was hard, but I can say I'm pretty good at it now and I believe you can do it!
A Japanese friend who came to Ireland and couldn't speak told me that she was too shy to speak for months.... but when out with Irish friends she found that as soon as she got drunk she would be speaking English by accident! But I think that its important to be patient with speaking - doing it too early leads to embedding back pronunciation habits. Focus on inputting and shadowing/chorusing until you feel confident and comfortable talking. Extroverts will want to do this from day 1, introverts need longer - either is ok I think so long as you feel ok about it and you make sure you don't just imbed bad pronunciation habits.
I think you're taking the wrong moral from this story, it didn't help her at all not speaking the language for months because she was embarrassed. Japanese have a tendency to do this, it's both a cultural and a lack of socialization thing. Not to say you should aggressively try and make people do things but it is necessary to try something that you want to do, otherwise you're just wasting time and effort. You don't need to be a wanker but once you know enough you have to go outside of your comfort zone here or pay the penalty of not doing that.
Been studying since September. I try to study everyday but unfortunately can't always because I am a uni student and work but I manage to 95% of the time. I like to think my level is decent but I know I need to start immersing myself more at this point (mostly listening, but reading too especially as I have only just started studying Kanji). I am currently in Japan on holiday and I can listen to and understand basic things like train announcements and maybe catch snippets of peoples conversations but I have not been able to talk at all. My main barrier is confidence. A couple days ago I went to Nara from Kyoto and we got on a train that we werent sure if it was going to Nara. I knew that I could ask someone if this train went to Nara ("この電車はならにいきますか?)but I didn't have the confidence. It ended up that it was the wrong train and we had to change and go back a stop. If only I had asked we would have known. As I have been on holiday though I haven't been able to study properly other than doing vocab flashcards for the past week but when I get back home I am determined to pick up my Japanese study as much as possible. I plan to start building up reading stamina as well as practicing my listening so that I am prepared to start reading manga and books, watching shows and playing video games in Japanese. Learning Japanese has been one of the most enjoyable experiences for me so I am very excited to fet back into it properly
At least it takes one year, maybe 3years. It's not because of confidence. as you said enjoying is important. When I was a beginner of English, I didn't hesitate to speak English, but my English was messy. You don't need to rush speaking, taking time makes real confidence.
@@coconutpineapple2489 Its nice hearing from someone for whom english is their second language. I think that trying to speak in english even if it wasnt perfect english probably helped you a lot though, so I think that me trying to speak more would probably help a lot. I am thinking of trying to make friends on HelloTalk where I can practice all aspects of Japanese while also getting help from a Native speaker. But I think I need to grasp just a bit more grammar before starting that.
I just downloaded the Japanese and English keyboard for phone. So I am studying Japanese. I have some stuff down in books. Now I have to learn another thing in the writing portions. Then it is learning words and sentences. Then practicing speaking. It would be fun for me. I can then listen to people speak Japanese and read it when I am good to understand.
I totally agree with everything you said, especially the last point. I have studied Japanese everyday for almost a year now, around 30 minutes everyday. I did a JLPT mock test, I am between N4 and N3. I created my own system, with CBC documentary as my input. I was able to communicate with people in Japan when I went there for 1 month. I was able to read 20% and succeed in 50% of my Japanese conversations. You can do it!
I've been having once-a-week lessons with an iTalki teacher for about ten months now, and she is awesome. I still wish I could find more people to talk to. It is the hardest aspect of learning for me.
i would use italki if i had the money. im still under 18 and im trying to become fluent at japanese before i get old enough and move out of my country but everything good is just expensive, all i know is some basics
these are the same tips i give to my Japanese English students at my high school where i teach at in Saga, Especially in my juku. Also during their AIKEN and TOIC lessons. Im originally from US (Texas) however i also learned English in school. great content. Hello from Saga.
I just saw your Instagram story about the new video. Funny enough, I just signed up for italki before I watched your video. And now your video is encourages me even more to take a lesson through italki.
In my study the real reason why people fail in the output part is the lack of confidence. When language learning any language it is okay to make mistakes. Language learning is Just immersion when u get more of your target language be it listening AND reading, repitition, grammar learning (This is not the number one priority its just for understanding the patterns like in Japanese the pattern is subject shugo + Meishi Subjsect + Doushi verb) and confidence building. This is how we learned our first language or our native language. No body really taught you grammar.
I used to be able to talk with Japanese so that they understood what I was saying. My friend heard me talking and said I sound really rude when I talk. After that I am really shy to speak. There are so much politeness to learn and I don't want to sound rude
don't worry about it, most of japanese people don't get offended when it's a foreigner (at least thats what some natives told me) , don't be shy, speak out and they will nicely correct you! that's how you learn faster! Ask you friend how you should say instead
I have just started learning Japanese. I am from the US and at an older age, and just seeing how well I can grasp the language. My goal right now is to see how many basic phrases I can learn and retain from online Japanese "You Tube" lessons. Finding Japanese is much harder than another language I took which was Spanish. I listen to each simple phrase and then use a Google translator to see if I am saying the phrase correctly. With the translator I can flip back and forth from Japanese to English and English to Japanese. So far seems to work good for me. Gives me good input/output Also starting to learn Hiragana "Saying and Writing" the letters. Right now I know the 5 basic Vowel letters. All I can do is try and see how far I can go. ビデオをありがとう。 バイバイ。
I'm having enough trouble with Italian as it is and they use the Latin alphabet. I'm very intimidated by Japanese, the writing system is going to be impossible for me to learn.
@@thebigphilbowski Yes Japanese is tough. I find if I mess up with one little pronunciation in a phrase, it comes out to mean something else. Japanese is like doing complex tongue twisters. But it is fun to see how much i can pick up. Some Japanese letters are very hard to say into my Google translator to get them correct, and some letters are not even pronounced - they are silent. Such as "desu ka" which when said is "des ka". i never hear the "u". The "e" sound is "eh" and the "a" sound is "ah" Take care.
@@dathyr1 The most difficult thing about Japanese, I think, is the writing. Japanese phonetics is simple and euphonious, and grammar is logical. There are, of course, subtleties like styles of speech and lots of homopones, but it's even interesting to learn. :)
@@Dmitry_Timchenko Hi Dmitry. Another thing I find hard with Japanese is their writing of the language where I don't see any distinct breaks for individual words like in English. Their symbols are all strung together (no breaks) to make a sentence. Unless someone writes the Hiragana words above the symbols, it is quite confusing to me right now as a beginner.
Being a Japanese American, who was born in Japan and moved to the US when I was 8, I just returned to Tokyo to find my "roots" after 50 years and It was an eye-opener for me. I clearly understood what most was saying (as we spoke "Nipponglish" at home) but I was only able to speak and respond as if I was 8 years old. I guess I need to sit down with a native Japanese speaker and, perhaps, subscribe to your course. My goal is to be a literate speaker at the N1 level (I'm an Eastern medicine practitioner that would like to collaborate with my Japanese counterparts). Can you guide me in the right direction, please? Arigatou gozaimashita. 😊
I have been learning Japanese for 3 to 4 years and still can not speak Japanese fluently and I promise to myself that starting from this year, I will listen to Japanese conversation for one hour everyday and I hope I could have great improvement by the end of 2023. BTW your English level is much better than my Japanese level, but my English level should be the same as yours. Cheers from Alfred
Thank you Very much for posting this video and making this interesting and important content. I felt that this message you spoke about, cares about the person receiving the message of this video content..
I (Italian Gaijin) heard many (subtitled) Japanese movies and anime ... it is incredible how women can sound absolutely sweet while men can sound absolutely aggressive.
My goal is I wanna speak to my friends in Japanese & reach at least N2 level or N1. I used Drops & Kawaii dungeon apps & of course immersion & more. I struggle to remember & pronounce.
You are so ADORABLE! 🤩🤯🥰 Can we adopt you? Sending hugs from Sweden! 🙋♂️ Keep doing the videos and funny sparkles/dividing of screen. Very good work and dont listen to those who say otherwise! ❤
When I was studying, I was pretty good at speaking and writing, and to some extent reading. However, I had enormous difficulty understanding what I'd hear even though I got a lot of opportunities for listening practice.
I hoping to learn and study Kanji for the first time, when I get a chance I will go on patreon and study hard. I been trying to find the right like patreon to study hopefully I will learn good Japanese . I don't know when I'll be able good at speakinng but I should get the hang of speaking it.
I think there is only one rule. If you wish to improve your speaking, listen to the language a lot. Anything from music to movies is fine. If you wish to improve your writing, read a lot.
I will tell you something right now. The main reason why I still can't speak Japanese even though I studied was because I couldn't get any Japanese women to be friends with me and also in Japanese church none of the single women has ever chosen me. They always speak Japanese, but I couldn't follow along with their conversations. I feel that they don't find me interesting at all which goes to show that Japanese women have thinking differences and cannot socialize with me that well. This is why I have given up on this. I feel very discourage by all this I went through. :(
Hi are you also on italki? I would love to take a lesson with you and see if it works but I dont have instagram, is there another way to get in touch with you?
most lessons and tutorials concentrate on speaking rather than reading? would anyone have advice on how i can concentrate on reading rather than speaking Japanese? 前もって感謝します
arigatougozaimashita ❤ your english is perfect thanks for your hard work, I hope one day I can be like N3 level, come to japan and then progress to N5 :) I love Japan 😍
The first tip isn't true though. You don't have to speak to become fluent. Just listening is enough. Most Swedish people grow up without really having spoken English. We just listen to it on TV/internet and by the time we reach adulthood most of us are fluent. When you know everything that's being said, it's not gonna be a big leap when you start speaking. Ofc it's a bit awkward at times and we might make grammatical errors, but like 90% of the population can hold daily conversations in English without any problem.
you guys must be smart!😊 Most of Japanese people love hollywood films and american TV drama, we watch it sooo often, and 10 years of studying in school, but 80% of people really can't speak English, I mean, not even BASIC English because we never do conversation practice😂
@@mochirealjapanese3430 Perhaps the reason is that Swedish and English are not as different as Japanese and English. Though, with so many words borrowed from English in Japanese, and with Japanese people learning English in school, you'd think that Japanese people would speak at least basic English. :) Especially since English is now the main international language, the language of science and technology, and so on.
ok so no oki moe mushi mushi .i know how to talk sweet and order food. the only way id be full flaunt is to have a long relationship with a Japanese female that speaks English..and for most of my family to mind there own business
Your knowledge may be very limited. Foreigners cannot speak Japanese because they do not read well or memorize the vocabularies. You speak Japanese because it is your own mother language, and you speak the language from your childhood. Japanese people all study English from junior and senior high schools. It is kind of compulsory in schools. They must also qualify the so-called AIKEN; this is necessary for them to enter into college. Why then a great majority of Japanese people cannot speak English? It is because they do not want to speak!! They speak English only after drinking alcohol. LOL
Just be aware though, you will come across some Japanese people in Japan from time to time who will be irritated by the fact you can speak Japanese and some who will reply to all your Japanese questions/conversation in broken English or ignore you completely if you are with a Japanese friend answering any questions you ask to your Japanese friend instead of to you. Just saying. I am not trying to dissuade anyone from learning Japanese, I still continue to study to try and improve more and I enjoy it.
That’s true of all languages except English. For whatever reason in English speaking countries everyone actually speaks your target language to you no matter what.
and then I ask Japanese ... " what's the kanji for ' earthworm ' " ... or someone speaks in Aomori dialect,... I don't think Japanese people know how to understand Japanese.
I checked out that website. Doesn't work for me. You have to pay just to listen to how they teach. There is no free trial. I've seen better places than this, and for free. So? Bye.
This is actually not true. In general, Japanese absolutely hate when foreigners speak Japanese at a legitimate level. You will experience many very uncomfortable situations if you attempt to speak Japanese with Japanese anywhere in the world. For example, I would come out of technical interpretation meetings only to walk to Starbucks and have a Japanese barista tell me in English, "I have no idea what you are saying. Speak Engrrrrrrrrrrrish!!!" There are honestly many horrible people in Japan but you weebs just don't know because you are stuck in animeland.
How long does it take a native Japanese to achieve the goals she outlined at the beginning of the video? From birth to being able to shoot the shit with random strangers at the bar...Is it reasonable to expect a newcomer to the language to take any less time?
Learn languages with quality native-speaking teachers on italki🎉. Buy $20 get $5 for free on your first purchase using my code MOCHI2023:
Web: go.italki.com/japanesemochi
App: italki.app.link/japanesemochi
I am looking to learn Japanese and i know you have patron but I have a question:
I have a learning disability, will your patron course be able to teach me since i need to take things slowly?
@@vasyear patreon is for slow pace beginners and do quizzes every week to make sure you really understanding so I think it's good for you!
If you don't like it you can quit in a month😉
@@mochirealjapanese3430 i'll take a look for a month i am also using duolingo so hopefully between the both of you, I'll be able to learn something
@@mochirealjapanese3430 mochi real japs bitch so japs like you really like me love me the white oriental man?😏
To everyone who is learning Japanese I can say that I have no place saying whether it's easy or not sense it's my native language but you got this! I kind of understand sense english has a different writing system and learning the different between stuff like their they're and there was hard, but I can say I'm pretty good at it now and I believe you can do it!
for 5 months now ive committed myself to reading writing and speaking. all at the very basic level. and your videos do help when i need refreshers
1. 話す必要があります
2. 学んで練習する必要があります
3. 目標を設定する必要があります
4. 毎日勉強する必要があります
A Japanese friend who came to Ireland and couldn't speak told me that she was too shy to speak for months.... but when out with Irish friends she found that as soon as she got drunk she would be speaking English by accident! But I think that its important to be patient with speaking - doing it too early leads to embedding back pronunciation habits. Focus on inputting and shadowing/chorusing until you feel confident and comfortable talking. Extroverts will want to do this from day 1, introverts need longer - either is ok I think so long as you feel ok about it and you make sure you don't just imbed bad pronunciation habits.
It was a BIG lie. She wanted you to speak Japanese!!
They absolutely will have bad habits if they rush production.
I think you're taking the wrong moral from this story, it didn't help her at all not speaking the language for months because she was embarrassed.
Japanese have a tendency to do this, it's both a cultural and a lack of socialization thing.
Not to say you should aggressively try and make people do things but it is necessary to try something that you want to do, otherwise you're just wasting time and effort.
You don't need to be a wanker but once you know enough you have to go outside of your comfort zone here or pay the penalty of not doing that.
@@jaskarvinmakal9174 And you sir are obviously not a language professional.
@@yishihara55527 and you are inexperienced.
We just need a teacher as lovely as you. All the trouble can be overcame.
Been studying since September. I try to study everyday but unfortunately can't always because I am a uni student and work but I manage to 95% of the time. I like to think my level is decent but I know I need to start immersing myself more at this point (mostly listening, but reading too especially as I have only just started studying Kanji).
I am currently in Japan on holiday and I can listen to and understand basic things like train announcements and maybe catch snippets of peoples conversations but I have not been able to talk at all. My main barrier is confidence. A couple days ago I went to Nara from Kyoto and we got on a train that we werent sure if it was going to Nara. I knew that I could ask someone if this train went to Nara ("この電車はならにいきますか?)but I didn't have the confidence. It ended up that it was the wrong train and we had to change and go back a stop. If only I had asked we would have known.
As I have been on holiday though I haven't been able to study properly other than doing vocab flashcards for the past week but when I get back home I am determined to pick up my Japanese study as much as possible. I plan to start building up reading stamina as well as practicing my listening so that I am prepared to start reading manga and books, watching shows and playing video games in Japanese. Learning Japanese has been one of the most enjoyable experiences for me so I am very excited to fet back into it properly
At least it takes one year, maybe 3years. It's not because of confidence. as you said enjoying is important.
When I was a beginner of English, I didn't hesitate to speak English, but my English was messy. You don't need to rush speaking, taking time makes real confidence.
@@coconutpineapple2489 Its nice hearing from someone for whom english is their second language. I think that trying to speak in english even if it wasnt perfect english probably helped you a lot though, so I think that me trying to speak more would probably help a lot. I am thinking of trying to make friends on HelloTalk where I can practice all aspects of Japanese while also getting help from a Native speaker. But I think I need to grasp just a bit more grammar before starting that.
This is true with ANY language. I think having a tutor on top of studying helps immensely especially
I just downloaded the Japanese and English keyboard for phone. So I am studying Japanese. I have some stuff down in books. Now I have to learn another thing in the writing portions. Then it is learning words and sentences. Then practicing speaking. It would be fun for me. I can then listen to people speak Japanese and read it when I am good to understand.
I totally agree with everything you said, especially the last point. I have studied Japanese everyday for almost a year now, around 30 minutes everyday. I did a JLPT mock test, I am between N4 and N3. I created my own system, with CBC documentary as my input. I was able to communicate with people in Japan when I went there for 1 month. I was able to read 20% and succeed in 50% of my Japanese conversations. You can do it!
Take the jlpt
@@adamfatam4316 I will study in a Japanese Language school in Yokohama during three months in fall, I will take the test after that 👍🏻
I've been having once-a-week lessons with an iTalki teacher for about ten months now, and she is awesome. I still wish I could find more people to talk to. It is the hardest aspect of learning for me.
do you use discord? I can recommend you a server to interact with natives and students!
@@ajotaaaa hi, can you invite me to the server?
@@farisfitri7627 here disboard.org/server/696438030189330482
🤓3 phrases I use that can hold a casual conversation:
1. そうですね / そうだね
2. なるほど
3. えーーーーー
😂thats something I use offen too
So so so so
i would use italki if i had the money. im still under 18 and im trying to become fluent at japanese before i get old enough and move out of my country but everything good is just expensive, all i know is some basics
these are the same tips i give to my Japanese English students at my high school where i teach at in Saga, Especially in my juku. Also during their AIKEN and TOIC lessons. Im originally from US (Texas) however i also learned English in school. great content. Hello from Saga.
Great tips. Thank you, Mochi!
I just saw your Instagram story about the new video.
Funny enough, I just signed up for italki before I watched your video. And now your video is encourages me even more to take a lesson through italki.
In my study the real reason why people fail in the output part is the lack of confidence. When language learning any language it is okay to make mistakes. Language learning is Just immersion when u get more of your target language be it listening AND reading, repitition, grammar learning (This is not the number one priority its just for understanding the patterns like in Japanese the pattern is subject shugo + Meishi Subjsect + Doushi verb) and confidence building. This is how we learned our first language or our native language. No body really taught you grammar.
2 hours of output to 1 hour of input sounds like a lot of output 😂.
That's right!
I used to be able to talk with Japanese so that they understood what I was saying.
My friend heard me talking and said I sound really rude when I talk. After that I am really shy to speak.
There are so much politeness to learn and I don't want to sound rude
don't worry about it, most of japanese people don't get offended when it's a foreigner (at least thats what some natives told me) , don't be shy, speak out and they will nicely correct you! that's how you learn faster! Ask you friend how you should say instead
with you I can learn this difficult language but stay beside me
I have just started learning Japanese. I am from the US and at an older age, and just seeing how well I can grasp the language. My goal right now is to see how many basic phrases I can learn and retain from online Japanese "You Tube" lessons. Finding Japanese is much harder than another language I took which was Spanish.
I listen to each simple phrase and then use a Google translator to see if I am saying the phrase correctly. With the translator I can flip back and forth from Japanese to English and English to Japanese. So far seems to work good for me. Gives me good input/output
Also starting to learn Hiragana "Saying and Writing" the letters. Right now I know the 5 basic Vowel letters.
All I can do is try and see how far I can go.
ビデオをありがとう。 バイバイ。
I'm having enough trouble with Italian as it is and they use the Latin alphabet. I'm very intimidated by Japanese, the writing system is going to be impossible for me to learn.
@@thebigphilbowski Yes Japanese is tough. I find if I mess up with one little pronunciation in a phrase, it comes out to mean something else. Japanese is like doing complex tongue twisters. But it is fun to see how much i can pick up. Some Japanese letters are very hard to say into my Google translator to get them correct, and some letters are not even pronounced - they are silent. Such as "desu ka" which when said is "des ka". i never hear the "u". The "e" sound is "eh" and the "a" sound is "ah" Take care.
@@dathyr1 The most difficult thing about Japanese, I think, is the writing. Japanese phonetics is simple and euphonious, and grammar is logical. There are, of course, subtleties like styles of speech and lots of homopones, but it's even interesting to learn. :)
@@Dmitry_Timchenko Hi Dmitry. Another thing I find hard with Japanese is their writing of the language where I don't see any distinct breaks for individual words like in English. Their symbols are all strung together (no breaks) to make a sentence. Unless someone writes the Hiragana words above the symbols, it is quite confusing to me right now as a beginner.
@@dathyr1 My answer was blocked. :(
Being a Japanese American, who was born in Japan and moved to the US when I was 8, I just returned to Tokyo to find my "roots" after 50 years and It was an eye-opener for me. I clearly understood what most was saying (as we spoke "Nipponglish" at home) but I was only able to speak and respond as if I was 8 years old. I guess I need to sit down with a native Japanese speaker and, perhaps, subscribe to your course. My goal is to be a literate speaker at the N1 level (I'm an Eastern medicine practitioner that would like to collaborate with my Japanese counterparts). Can you guide me in the right direction, please? Arigatou gozaimashita. 😊
I have been learning Japanese for 3 to 4 years and still can not speak Japanese fluently and I promise to myself that starting from this year, I will listen to Japanese conversation for one hour everyday and I hope I could have great improvement by the end of 2023.
BTW your English level is much better than my Japanese level, but my English level should be the same as yours.
Cheers from Alfred
gambatte!
アドバイスをありがとうございます。
Thank you Very much for posting this video and making this interesting and important content. I felt that this message you spoke about, cares about the person receiving the message of this video content..
hi. nice to talk with you
first i love japan so much . and i need learn japanese language
I don't why *you* can't. I can perfectly 🌸
I (Italian Gaijin) heard many (subtitled) Japanese movies and anime ... it is incredible how women can sound absolutely sweet while men can sound absolutely aggressive.
I hope you know that anime and real life are very different and that differences between the sexes are exaggerated in media.
Good video. Thank you. 🙂
I teach at a Highschool 😂 to buy a plane ticket, then I have to save money for 10 years 😂😢😂
of fyi i can never remember how to ask were a bathroom is .ill never actually get to use this knowledge
My goal is I wanna speak to my friends in Japanese & reach at least N2 level or N1. I used Drops & Kawaii dungeon apps & of course immersion & more. I struggle to remember & pronounce.
You are so ADORABLE! 🤩🤯🥰 Can we adopt you? Sending hugs from Sweden! 🙋♂️ Keep doing the videos and funny sparkles/dividing of screen. Very good work and dont listen to those who say otherwise! ❤
thank you😂❤❤
@@mochirealjapanese3430 is it allowed for europeans to come visit japan now? Is corona over yet? Or do you still use face masks?
@@tvamanadsloner6217 they still use masks, but as I know Japan is open now. But maybe you still need negative corona test, this one I dont know.
ありがとうございます😊
When I was studying, I was pretty good at speaking and writing, and to some extent reading. However, I had enormous difficulty understanding what I'd hear even though I got a lot of opportunities for listening practice.
I'm like that in any language, even my native one 😅
I hoping to learn and study Kanji for the first time, when I get a chance I will go on patreon and study hard. I been trying to find the right like patreon to study hopefully I will learn good Japanese . I don't know when I'll be able good at speakinng but I should get the hang of speaking it.
多くの日本語を勉強する人は間違いを恐れるので話そうとしないほどと思う。話そうとするは必要があるよ!話の練習しなければ上手にならない。間違いは起これるけど大丈夫になる。
Bienvenida a España! yo me marcho para japon dentro de un mes :)
when you will become fluent in english?
I can speak it somewhat. When things get too fast I end up tripping on pronunciation. Slowly-medium is fine, but fast speaking is a inability to me.
I think there is only one rule. If you wish to improve your speaking, listen to the language a lot. Anything from music to movies is fine. If you wish to improve your writing, read a lot.
I watched this in 1.5 speed and it was slightly too fast for me, please slow down.
I heard "Mochivated" at the end. ;)
hehehe
Love your videos!!!
ありがとう✨
トルコの夜から hii モチさん。I put a like in advance 👍🏻 がんばってね❤️
ありがとうございます😊
@@mochirealjapanese3430 どういたしましてモチさん。❤️
I will tell you something right now. The main reason why I still can't speak Japanese even though I studied was because I couldn't get any Japanese women to be friends with me and also in Japanese church none of the single women has ever chosen me. They always speak Japanese, but I couldn't follow along with their conversations. I feel that they don't find me interesting at all which goes to show that Japanese women have thinking differences and cannot socialize with me that well. This is why I have given up on this. I feel very discourage by all this I went through. :(
Onēsan arigatogojaimas that's a great help 💖
thank you!✨
Mochi sensei, I am interested in lessons but do not have Instagram. Are you able to discuss on messages here on RUclips?
please send an email to
mochi2english@gmail.com
thank you😊
私も そういうことに 賛成です。日本語を上達するようになるためには 一番大事なのは 自分から なるべく output することです。なぜかいうと 教科書や動画で聞いた情報は 外からです。私も そんな 問題で 困っていました。例えば 私は 国にいたころは 日本語ができましたが弱点は 会話でした。その問題を消すために 日本人 9ヶ月前に 留学生としてきたばかりです。日本で実生活で日本人と会って お話をかけて今だんだん 会話が上達していする感じです。それで機会があったとき いつも 習った文法やことばなど使っています。そうすると間違えた時も日本人が教えていただいたこともあります。皆さん 私の 日本語は まだまだですから 少し間違えても 楽しんでくださいね。😅
A loud or out loud?
Kyoka sa reta ??
Hi teacher! I wish you have a good time, thankyou for sharing this tips. Anyway can we be friends ?
Is your name same as 餅 ?
Hi are you also on italki? I would love to take a lesson with you and see if it works but I dont have instagram, is there another way to get in touch with you?
I'm not on italki😢
mochi2english@gmail.com
please send an email here😊
@@mochirealjapanese3430 Thank you very much I will
most lessons and tutorials concentrate on speaking rather than reading? would anyone have advice on how i can concentrate on reading rather than speaking Japanese? 前もって感謝します
お疲れ様でした - お金を稼ぐ
arigatougozaimashita ❤ your english is perfect thanks for your hard work, I hope one day I can be like N3 level, come to japan and then progress to N5 :) I love Japan 😍
クリス, N5 Is lower than N3! Beginners level is N5.
@@Emsworth377 oh my fault
@@qrisgames haha, no problem! It's confusing!
めっちゃ美人
The first tip isn't true though. You don't have to speak to become fluent. Just listening is enough. Most Swedish people grow up without really having spoken English. We just listen to it on TV/internet and by the time we reach adulthood most of us are fluent. When you know everything that's being said, it's not gonna be a big leap when you start speaking. Ofc it's a bit awkward at times and we might make grammatical errors, but like 90% of the population can hold daily conversations in English without any problem.
you guys must be smart!😊
Most of Japanese people love hollywood films and american TV drama, we watch it sooo often, and 10 years of studying in school, but 80% of people really can't speak English, I mean, not even BASIC English because we never do conversation practice😂
@@mochirealjapanese3430 Perhaps the reason is that Swedish and English are not as different as Japanese and English. Though, with so many words borrowed from English in Japanese, and with Japanese people learning English in school, you'd think that Japanese people would speak at least basic English. :) Especially since English is now the main international language, the language of science and technology, and so on.
I think finding a Japanese wife would help improve my Japanese language ability 😁
i need your help if i will go to japan soon
some information . i hope you guide to me. if you do mind. thanks my beauty 💝🌹
日本語で話す機会があまりないので、会話能力が落ちそうだと思います。その上、僕が内向的で、人と日本語で話そうとすると、緊張で汗をかくこともあります。こんな事情で、どういう風に会話能力を強めますか?
わかりますよ〜!わたしも汗をかいたりします!毎回新しい人だと緊張するので、わたしは気が合う人を見つけて、同じ人とたくさん話すようにしています!
Study everyday is my problem 😥
I feel you, but only 10min is fine too, try to keep doing everyday😊
🥰👍 🙇♂️ 👋😊
It's really hard to speak Japanese coz they use different kind of grammar form with different person
おはよう mochi sensei
Can you speak Malayalam?
👍🙏👍
and i love have girl friend from japan. i love japanese girls
ok so no oki moe mushi mushi .i know how to talk sweet and order food. the only way id be full flaunt is to have a long relationship with a Japanese female that speaks English..and for most of my family to mind there own business
インプットとアウトプットのバランスについてはなんか根拠あるんですか
yu r singil mosHi moshi ; )
💌 AaaaaSoooo🈷️🈶
hee hee😁 you're cute🤗
You speak English more clearly than native English speakers because you equally stress each syllable like Japanese people do.
hahaha thank you I guess!
Your knowledge may be very limited. Foreigners cannot speak Japanese because they do not read well or memorize the vocabularies. You speak Japanese because it is your own mother language, and you speak the language from your childhood. Japanese people all study English from junior and senior high schools. It is kind of compulsory in schools. They must also qualify the so-called AIKEN; this is necessary for them to enter into college. Why then a great majority of Japanese people cannot speak English? It is because they do not want to speak!! They speak English only after drinking alcohol. LOL
ありがとうございました、モチ先生!
日本語で間違うのが恐れしました。
でも、練習しないの一方がだめです。
もっと日本語を話すつもりよ 😄
いいですね!
間違いは、成長の一歩です✨
Are your eyes real ?! no way !
What do you mean!? lol
I can speak Japanese tho, 日本語をしゃべるよ。
Just be aware though, you will come across some Japanese people in Japan from time to time who will be irritated by the fact you can speak Japanese and some who will reply to all your Japanese questions/conversation in broken English or ignore you completely if you are with a Japanese friend answering any questions you ask to your Japanese friend instead of to you. Just saying. I am not trying to dissuade anyone from learning Japanese, I still continue to study to try and improve more and I enjoy it.
That’s true of all languages except English. For whatever reason in English speaking countries everyone actually speaks your target language to you no matter what.
I prefer to study English. It is more useful. Many people don`t want to study Japanese.
People has each choice :)
u are so cute😍🥰
just a saleswoman...
i can speak and understand whats spoken but cant read or write lmao
the answer is simple I'm not good
I don't know how to speak Japanese
and then I ask Japanese ... " what's the kanji for ' earthworm ' " ... or someone speaks in Aomori dialect,... I don't think Japanese people know how to understand Japanese.
If I had a beautiful GF like this, I would be more inspired to speak Japanese more quickly.
I checked out that website. Doesn't work for me. You have to pay just to listen to how they teach. There is no free trial. I've seen better places than this, and for free. So? Bye.
This is actually not true. In general, Japanese absolutely hate when foreigners speak Japanese at a legitimate level. You will experience many very uncomfortable situations if you attempt to speak Japanese with Japanese anywhere in the world. For example, I would come out of technical interpretation meetings only to walk to Starbucks and have a Japanese barista tell me in English, "I have no idea what you are saying. Speak Engrrrrrrrrrrrish!!!" There are honestly many horrible people in Japan but you weebs just don't know because you are stuck in animeland.
How long does it take a native Japanese to achieve the goals she outlined at the beginning of the video? From birth to being able to shoot the shit with random strangers at the bar...Is it reasonable to expect a newcomer to the language to take any less time?
Asian monke
Be fair. Japanese have difficulty with kanji.
I want to learn Japanese just to get married to you❤
Beautiful 😍 Angel 😍 😇