So I did just that by importing these decks, tagging them, and combining them. So I’ve accepted that it’s A never-ending journey but I thought it’d be a good idea to have a deck purely dedicated to onomatopoeia with huge anki intervals. Guess from now on I won’t bother looking up gion in novels unless it really intrigues me since there’s no audio which is the key to making gion easy/effortless to remember. Clearly due to the nature of gion, audio is indispensable and emotional usages are especially memorable. Also, I’ve also picked up gion effortlessly from songs since they’re so catchy and memorable like shanari shanari (the word sounds so pretty too). I only watch the cream of the crop when it comes to talk/variety shows. ![]() Now that I think about it watching talk/variety shows was the most effective way for learning gion in my japanese leisure time experience(I don’t like using the word immersion because people may think that means I’m watching shit that i don’t understand and may feel ambivalent about lol. People on Japanese TV try to tell stories in an interesting/scary/funny/etc way and there’s usually emotions involved and people tend to emphasize certain words when they talk and gion is emphasized OFTEN especially with the HUGE Japanese text they plaster all over the screen. ![]() ![]() I attribute this to the audio and additional available context. Also this tends to happen more often with novels than tv shows. Also I thought 10 years in I’d be able to just feel/infer the meaning of most unknown gion I come across based on how it sounds and the context but half of the time either I have no idea what the gion is alluding to or means or after I look it up I go I was not definitely feeling/guessing that (It is pure serendipity when I do guess correct or am close and of course I am filled with glee! :D). For some reason I thought once I’m 5 or 7 years into Japanese I’d see all the onomatopoeia and get used to them by then but it’s just never-ending and you can’t expect yourself to know/memorize 100% of them. There’s a cornucopia of onomatopoeia out there and it’s never-ending lol. One of them is from tofugu and it has over 900 cards. There are 3 decks that are shared currently. Also a lot of them are dirty or funny in a perv erse way so that makes remembering the stories easier. I always wanted to go DO THE RTK again with an amazing pre-made deck and now I can.Īs for the top 2 stories as an uncreative person I appreciate them a lot. I think I have 500 cards in that deck and it’s a struggle because I don’t have stories in all of them and I ain’t copying/pasting from the koohii site so some cards are easy and some are hard etc. ![]() Just in case you didn’t realize, if you do Remeber the kanji you still have to practic e kakitori to write actual Japanese words. So I ended up creating a new kakitori deck where I added words I wanted to know how to write. My heisig deck got messed up years back when all my cards duplicated and I didn’t know how to fix it. So if you get the deck HEISIG deck with top 2 stories and then combine it with the deck with japanese words in addition to the keywords for RTKyou save a lot of time! Now I can test myself with writing kanji without wasting time thinking of what the keyword is referring to or manually typing hiragana or copy pasting stories. The 2 types of de cks that I found indispensable were the HEISIG deck WITH the top stories and the onomatopoeia decks Especially in this day and age some pre-made decks may have the potential to be amazing with the advent of plugins like wordquery, sanseido. I’m gonna talk about the pre-made Japanese decks that I found indispensable and time-saving. I don’t blog that frequently because I have to be smart with my time and only blog about stuff that’s worthy of my time. Iĭon’t understand how those Japanese language learning bloggers write platitudes and common sensical statements about the most banal topics. No I am not writing to write platitudes about the benefits of making your owndeck.
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