▲ | marsavar 4 days ago | |||||||
People are reacting quite strongly to this answer, but it is unfortunately correct. OP has essentially created an application for memorising vocabulary, which is... fine, and it's an achievement to be celebrated. But no amount of flashcards will make you a competent language speaker. There is no substitute for immersion. What made it really click for me for me was reading. Lots and lots of it. My suggestion is to start with short, easy stuff (stories for kids) and then move on to progressively harder material (short newspaper articles, essays). I passed JLPT N1 back in 2013, and preparing for the test was just an exercise in memorising vocabulary and grammar patterns. What really made the language click for me was reading novels in Japanese. That alone helped me more than any amount of Anki-style JLPT prep material ever did. Vocabulary is important, but it's much, much easier to absorb and retain if you learn it in context. | ||||||||
▲ | tillcarlos 4 days ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||
Do you know of a tool that can generate texts to read based on exactly your level? I think that was Krashen’s input hypothesis. If I read a text in Vietnamese with more than one unknown word, it’s too much. Exactly one would do it. Haven’t seen a tool doing that. | ||||||||
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▲ | tkgally 4 days ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||
That matches my experience, too. I passed JLPT N1—then called 1-kyū—back in 1985 (!). I did spend a lot of time memorizing vocabulary with flashcards, but I spent even more time on extensive reading—novels, newspapers, magazines, anything I was interested in, even if at first I understood little. The repeated exposure to vocabulary in real-world contexts really made a difference. |