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#japanese-language — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #japanese-language, aggregated by home.social.

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  1. utm_source=mastodon, and we never stop at the cute mnemonic. If you want Japanese taught the way it is actually built, in English, wherever you are: learn.japanology.nl/? utm_source=mastodon. If you are in or near Leiden and would rather learn it in person, in Dutch, that is www.japanology.nl. #Japanese #LearnJapanese #Kanji #JLPT #KanjiOfTheDay #Japanology #JapaneseLanguage #Etymology #Tsukiji

  2. utm_source=mastodon, and we never stop at the cute mnemonic. If you want Japanese taught the way it is actually built, in English, wherever you are: learn.japanology.nl/? utm_source=mastodon. If you are in or near Leiden and would rather learn it in person, in Dutch, that is www.japanology.nl. #Japanese #LearnJapanese #Kanji #JLPT #KanjiOfTheDay #Japanology #JapaneseLanguage #Etymology #Tsukiji

  3. utm_source=mastodon, and we never stop at the cute mnemonic. If you want Japanese taught the way it is actually built, in English, wherever you are: learn.japanology.nl/? utm_source=mastodon. If you are in or near Leiden and would rather learn it in person, in Dutch, that is www.japanology.nl. #Japanese #LearnJapanese #Kanji #JLPT #KanjiOfTheDay #Japanology #JapaneseLanguage #Etymology #Tsukiji

  4. utm_source=mastodon, and we never stop at the cute mnemonic. If you want Japanese taught the way it is actually built, in English, wherever you are: learn.japanology.nl/? utm_source=mastodon. If you are in or near Leiden and would rather learn it in person, in Dutch, that is www.japanology.nl. #Japanese #LearnJapanese #Kanji #JLPT #KanjiOfTheDay #Japanology #JapaneseLanguage #Etymology #Tsukiji

  5. utm_source=mastodon, and we never stop at the cute mnemonic. If you want Japanese taught the way it is actually built, in English, wherever you are: learn.japanology.nl/? utm_source=mastodon. If you are in or near Leiden and would rather learn it in person, in Dutch, that is www.japanology.nl. #Japanese #LearnJapanese #Kanji #JLPT #KanjiOfTheDay #Japanology #JapaneseLanguage #Etymology #Tsukiji

  6. While I was in the garden, I wrote a little text in Japanese about a special bird that just stayed with me today. I'm still studying, so I made use of simple words and grammar. I put a good amount of work in but it's probably not natural sounding or super accurate. Still, I liked it, so here it is:

    「フラミンゴ」は鳥の名前です。フラミンゴはクロウタドリです。フラミンゴは水を飲んでいます。羽は黒くて灰色です。くちばしはオレンジ色です。歌は美しいです。可愛い、だから好きです。

    十分以上、フラミンゴはいます。フラミンゴは庭と泉を見ます。フラミンゴは老いか若いかな?

    今、フラミンゴは女のクロウタドリといっしょに去りました。フラミンゴがいつか帰ることは楽しみです。

    Don't put it in deepl expecting it to correctly translate. Translator software is still bad for japanese as it seems. It will be super confused that the birds name is flamingo, and not understand that I mean "for ten minutes" not "ten flamingos".

    #deepl #japanese #japaneselanguage #blackbird

  7. While I was in the garden, I wrote a little text in Japanese about a special bird that just stayed with me today. I'm still studying, so I made use of simple words and grammar. I put a good amount of work in but it's probably not natural sounding or super accurate. Still, I liked it, so here it is:

    「フラミンゴ」は鳥の名前です。フラミンゴはクロウタドリです。フラミンゴは水を飲んでいます。羽は黒くて灰色です。くちばしはオレンジ色です。歌は美しいです。可愛い、だから好きです。

    十分以上、フラミンゴはいます。フラミンゴは庭と泉を見ます。フラミンゴは老いか若いかな?

    今、フラミンゴは女のクロウタドリといっしょに去りました。フラミンゴがいつか帰ることは楽しみです。

    Don't put it in deepl expecting it to correctly translate. Translator software is still bad for japanese as it seems. It will be super confused that the birds name is flamingo, and not understand that I mean "for ten minutes" not "ten flamingos".

    #deepl #japanese #japaneselanguage #blackbird

  8. In older Japanese articles, essays etc., authors often used 君 to refer to their peers. While it’s a casual "you" today, it then functioned as a formal and respectful way to address a colleague in public discourse.

    It’s not casual intimacy but a sign of intellectual equality and professional esteem, closer to a respectful "my friend" or a formal address than the "tutoying" (duzen) style it implies today.

    #Japanese #JapaneseLanguage #Linguistics #JapaneseLiterature #Etymology

  9. In older Japanese articles, essays etc., authors often used 君 to refer to their peers. While it’s a casual "you" today, it then functioned as a formal and respectful way to address a colleague in public discourse.

    It’s not casual intimacy but a sign of intellectual equality and professional esteem, closer to a respectful "my friend" or a formal address than the "tutoying" (duzen) style it implies today.

    #Japanese #JapaneseLanguage #Linguistics #JapaneseLiterature #Etymology

  10. In older Japanese articles, essays etc., authors often used 君 to refer to their peers. While it’s a casual "you" today, it then functioned as a formal and respectful way to address a colleague in public discourse.

    It’s not casual intimacy but a sign of intellectual equality and professional esteem, closer to a respectful "my friend" or a formal address than the "tutoying" (duzen) style it implies today.

    #Japanese #JapaneseLanguage #Linguistics #JapaneseLiterature #Etymology

  11. In older Japanese articles, essays etc., authors often used 君 to refer to their peers. While it’s a casual "you" today, it then functioned as a formal and respectful way to address a colleague in public discourse.

    It’s not casual intimacy but a sign of intellectual equality and professional esteem, closer to a respectful "my friend" or a formal address than the "tutoying" (duzen) style it implies today.

    #Japanese #JapaneseLanguage #Linguistics #JapaneseLiterature #Etymology

  12. In older Japanese articles, essays etc., authors often used 君 to refer to their peers. While it’s a casual "you" today, it then functioned as a formal and respectful way to address a colleague in public discourse.

    It’s not casual intimacy but a sign of intellectual equality and professional esteem, closer to a respectful "my friend" or a formal address than the "tutoying" (duzen) style it implies today.

    #Japanese #JapaneseLanguage #Linguistics #JapaneseLiterature #Etymology

  13. Japanese expressions of happiness – 悦に入る

    Let’s learn how to describe entering a state of happiness! We could also describe this feeling as being very self-satisfied, or being happy at the result of something.

    This word is written with Kanji and Hiragana as 悦に入る. Using just Hiragana, we can spell it like as えつ・に・いる. Please take care to remember that we use the いる reading of 入る here, not the はいる reading.

    The Kanji and their meanings

    The phrase 悦に入る is made up of two Kanji characters:

    • 悦・Happiness, joy
    • 入・To enter

    When to use 悦に入る in a sentence

    • When you’re so filled with self-satisfaction that you become very happy.
    • When you’re so pleased with your progress / results that you become ectatic.

    Sample sentences using 悦に入る

    ** The English translations are more on the literal side for easier comprehension **

    English: After taking the top place in the exam, she was extremely pleased with herself.

    Hiragana only: しけん で いちい を とって、かのじょは えつに いっていた。

    Japanese: 試験で一位を取って、彼女は悦に入っていた。

    English: The presentation I stayed up all night to make was praised by the teacher, so I was very self-satisfied.

    Hiragana only: てつや して つくった はっぴょうを せんせいに ほめられて、えつに いりました。

    Japanese: 徹夜して作った発表を先生に褒められて、悦に入りました。

    English: When I saw my favourite actress wearing the same dress as me, I thought “I have good style” to myself smugly.

    Hiragana only: すきな はいゆうが わたしと おなじ ワンピースを きているのを みて、「わたし、センスが いい」と えつに いった。

    Japanese: 好きな俳優が私と同じワンピースを着ているのを見て、「私、センスがいい」と悦に入った。

    English: On top of getting a promotion, my boss also treated me to dinner, I was feeling good about myself for a week!

    Hiragana only: しょうしん できた うえ、かちょうが ばんごはんを ごちそう して くれて、いっしゅうかん えつに いっていました。

    Japanese: 昇進できた上、課長が晩ご飯をご馳走してくれて、一週間悦に入っていました。

    #Japan #japanese #JapaneseLanguage #learnJapanese #study #writing
  14. Japanese expressions of happiness – 悦に入る

    Let’s learn how to describe entering a state of happiness! We could also describe this feeling as being very self-satisfied, or being happy at the result of something.

    This word is written with Kanji and Hiragana as 悦に入る. Using just Hiragana, we can spell it like as えつ・に・いる. Please take care to remember that we use the いる reading of 入る here, not the はいる reading.

    The Kanji and their meanings

    The phrase 悦に入る is made up of two Kanji characters:

    • 悦・Happiness, joy
    • 入・To enter

    When to use 悦に入る in a sentence

    • When you’re so filled with self-satisfaction that you become very happy.
    • When you’re so pleased with your progress / results that you become ectatic.

    Sample sentences using 悦に入る

    ** The English translations are more on the literal side for easier comprehension **

    English: After taking the top place in the exam, she was extremely pleased with herself.

    Hiragana only: しけん で いちい を とって、かのじょは えつに いっていた。

    Japanese: 試験で一位を取って、彼女は悦に入っていた。

    English: The presentation I stayed up all night to make was praised by the teacher, so I was very self-satisfied.

    Hiragana only: てつや して つくった はっぴょうを せんせいに ほめられて、えつに いりました。

    Japanese: 徹夜して作った発表を先生に褒められて、悦に入りました。

    English: When I saw my favourite actress wearing the same dress as me, I thought “I have good style” to myself smugly.

    Hiragana only: すきな はいゆうが わたしと おなじ ワンピースを きているのを みて、「わたし、センスが いい」と えつに いった。

    Japanese: 好きな俳優が私と同じワンピースを着ているのを見て、「私、センスがいい」と悦に入った。

    English: On top of getting a promotion, my boss also treated me to dinner, I was feeling good about myself for a week!

    Hiragana only: しょうしん できた うえ、かちょうが ばんごはんを ごちそう して くれて、いっしゅうかん えつに いっていました。

    Japanese: 昇進できた上、課長が晩ご飯をご馳走してくれて、一週間悦に入っていました。

    #Japan #japanese #JapaneseLanguage #learnJapanese #study #writing
  15. Japanese expressions of happiness – 悦に入る

    Let’s learn how to describe entering a state of happiness! We could also describe this feeling as being very self-satisfied, or being happy at the result of something.

    This word is written with Kanji and Hiragana as 悦に入る. Using just Hiragana, we can spell it like as えつ・に・いる. Please take care to remember that we use the いる reading of 入る here, not the はいる reading.

    The Kanji and their meanings

    The phrase 悦に入る is made up of two Kanji characters:

    • 悦・Happiness, joy
    • 入・To enter

    When to use 悦に入る in a sentence

    • When you’re so filled with self-satisfaction that you become very happy.
    • When you’re so pleased with your progress / results that you become ectatic.

    Sample sentences using 悦に入る

    ** The English translations are more on the literal side for easier comprehension **

    English: After taking the top place in the exam, she was extremely pleased with herself.

    Hiragana only: しけん で いちい を とって、かのじょは えつに いっていた。

    Japanese: 試験で一位を取って、彼女は悦に入っていた。

    English: The presentation I stayed up all night to make was praised by the teacher, so I was very self-satisfied.

    Hiragana only: てつや して つくった はっぴょうを せんせいに ほめられて、えつに いりました。

    Japanese: 徹夜して作った発表を先生に褒められて、悦に入りました。

    English: When I saw my favourite actress wearing the same dress as me, I thought “I have good style” to myself smugly.

    Hiragana only: すきな はいゆうが わたしと おなじ ワンピースを きているのを みて、「わたし、センスが いい」と えつに いった。

    Japanese: 好きな俳優が私と同じワンピースを着ているのを見て、「私、センスがいい」と悦に入った。

    English: On top of getting a promotion, my boss also treated me to dinner, I was feeling good about myself for a week!

    Hiragana only: しょうしん できた うえ、かちょうが ばんごはんを ごちそう して くれて、いっしゅうかん えつに いっていました。

    Japanese: 昇進できた上、課長が晩ご飯をご馳走してくれて、一週間悦に入っていました。

    #Japan #japanese #JapaneseLanguage #learnJapanese #study #writing
  16. Japanese expressions of desire – 欲の皮が張る

    Have you ever desired something so strongly that the feeling enveloped your whole body Almost like you were wearing a “pelt of greed”? Today we’re going to learn how to describe that feeling in Japanese!

    The phrase is: 欲の皮が張る

    Sometimes you may also see it written as: 欲の皮が突っ張る

    The Kanji and their meanings

    欲の皮が張る is a set phrase, consisting of three Kanji characters.

    • 欲・to want, desire
    • 皮・pelt, skin, leather
    • 張・to stretch, to spread

    When to use 欲の皮が張る in a sentence

    • When you want something so badly that you’re exasperated
    • When you feel desire so strongly that you do something you may otherwise not do
    • When you desire something desperately

    Sample sentences using 欲の皮が張る

    ** The English translations are more on the literal side for easier comprehension **

    English: I worry about whether she won’t fall for a scam (because she’s desperate).

    Hiragana only: よくの かわが はる かのじょは、さぎに あわないか しんぱいだ。

    Japanese: 欲の皮が張る彼女は、詐欺に遭わないか心配だ。

    English: When you want something badly enough, you’ll easily do things you normally wouldn’t.

    Hiragana only: よくの かわが はると、ふだん やらない ことは かんたんに やってしまう。

    Japanese: 欲の皮が張ると、普段やらないことは簡単にやってしまう。

    English: You never know what a desperate person will do.

    Hiragana only: よくの かわが はる ひとは、なにを しでかすか わからない。

    Japanese: 欲の皮が張る人は、何をしでかすか分からない。

    English: You must not trust his words (because he’s desperate for something and will say anything to get it)

    Hiragana only: よくの かわが はる かれの ことばを しんじちゃ だめ。

    Japanese: 欲の皮が張る彼の言葉を信じちゃダメ。

    #Japan #japanese #JapaneseLanguage #learnJapanese #study #writing
  17. Japanese expressions of desire – 欲の皮が張る

    Have you ever desired something so strongly that the feeling enveloped your whole body Almost like you were wearing a “pelt of greed”? Today we’re going to learn how to describe that feeling in Japanese!

    The phrase is: 欲の皮が張る

    Sometimes you may also see it written as: 欲の皮が突っ張る

    The Kanji and their meanings

    欲の皮が張る is a set phrase, consisting of three Kanji characters.

    • 欲・to want, desire
    • 皮・pelt, skin, leather
    • 張・to stretch, to spread

    When to use 欲の皮が張る in a sentence

    • When you want something so badly that you’re exasperated
    • When you feel desire so strongly that you do something you may otherwise not do
    • When you desire something desperately

    Sample sentences using 欲の皮が張る

    ** The English translations are more on the literal side for easier comprehension **

    English: I worry about whether she won’t fall for a scam (because she’s desperate).

    Hiragana only: よくの かわが はる かのじょは、さぎに あわないか しんぱいだ。

    Japanese: 欲の皮が張る彼女は、詐欺に遭わないか心配だ。

    English: When you want something badly enough, you’ll easily do things you normally wouldn’t.

    Hiragana only: よくの かわが はると、ふだん やらない ことは かんたんに やってしまう。

    Japanese: 欲の皮が張ると、普段やらないことは簡単にやってしまう。

    English: You never know what a desperate person will do.

    Hiragana only: よくの かわが はる ひとは、なにを しでかすか わからない。

    Japanese: 欲の皮が張る人は、何をしでかすか分からない。

    English: You must not trust his words (because he’s desperate for something and will say anything to get it)

    Hiragana only: よくの かわが はる かれの ことばを しんじちゃ だめ。

    Japanese: 欲の皮が張る彼の言葉を信じちゃダメ。

    #Japan #japanese #JapaneseLanguage #learnJapanese #study #writing
  18. Get it wrong, and the character sounds off before the player even notices why. We wrote a deep dive with 25 real game dialogue examples (from Graveyard Keeper, Dustborn, Punch Club 2, and more), interactive quiz, and audio on every sentence. Free to read. No signup. learn.japanology.nl/article/ka #Japanese #GameLocalization #JapaneseGrammar #LearnJapanese #Localization #JLPT #JapaneseLanguage

  19. Get it wrong, and the character sounds off before the player even notices why. We wrote a deep dive with 25 real game dialogue examples (from Graveyard Keeper, Dustborn, Punch Club 2, and more), interactive quiz, and audio on every sentence. Free to read. No signup. learn.japanology.nl/article/ka #Japanese #GameLocalization #JapaneseGrammar #LearnJapanese #Localization #JLPT #JapaneseLanguage

  20. Get it wrong, and the character sounds off before the player even notices why. We wrote a deep dive with 25 real game dialogue examples (from Graveyard Keeper, Dustborn, Punch Club 2, and more), interactive quiz, and audio on every sentence. Free to read. No signup. learn.japanology.nl/article/ka #Japanese #GameLocalization #JapaneseGrammar #LearnJapanese #Localization #JLPT #JapaneseLanguage

  21. Get it wrong, and the character sounds off before the player even notices why. We wrote a deep dive with 25 real game dialogue examples (from Graveyard Keeper, Dustborn, Punch Club 2, and more), interactive quiz, and audio on every sentence. Free to read. No signup. learn.japanology.nl/article/ka #Japanese #GameLocalization #JapaneseGrammar #LearnJapanese #Localization #JLPT #JapaneseLanguage

  22. Get it wrong, and the character sounds off before the player even notices why. We wrote a deep dive with 25 real game dialogue examples (from Graveyard Keeper, Dustborn, Punch Club 2, and more), interactive quiz, and audio on every sentence. Free to read. No signup. learn.japanology.nl/article/ka #Japanese #GameLocalization #JapaneseGrammar #LearnJapanese #Localization #JLPT #JapaneseLanguage

  23. 激怒する (gekido suru) is waiting for you in the quiz on learn.japanology.nl - Kiko will make sure you remember it tomorrow. We start with the basics, so jump in even if you're just beginning. What would push you to 激怒する (gekido suru)? Drop it below. #Japanese #LearnJapanese #Kanji #JLPT #WordOfTheDay #Japanology #JapaneseLanguage #EmotionsInJapanese #JapaneseVocabulary #Rage

  24. 激怒する (gekido suru) is waiting for you in the quiz on learn.japanology.nl - Kiko will make sure you remember it tomorrow. We start with the basics, so jump in even if you're just beginning. What would push you to 激怒する (gekido suru)? Drop it below. #Japanese #LearnJapanese #Kanji #JLPT #WordOfTheDay #Japanology #JapaneseLanguage #EmotionsInJapanese #JapaneseVocabulary #Rage

  25. 激怒する (gekido suru) is waiting for you in the quiz on learn.japanology.nl - Kiko will make sure you remember it tomorrow. We start with the basics, so jump in even if you're just beginning. What would push you to 激怒する (gekido suru)? Drop it below. #Japanese #LearnJapanese #Kanji #JLPT #WordOfTheDay #Japanology #JapaneseLanguage #EmotionsInJapanese #JapaneseVocabulary #Rage

  26. 激怒する (gekido suru) is waiting for you in the quiz on learn.japanology.nl - Kiko will make sure you remember it tomorrow. We start with the basics, so jump in even if you're just beginning. What would push you to 激怒する (gekido suru)? Drop it below. #Japanese #LearnJapanese #Kanji #JLPT #WordOfTheDay #Japanology #JapaneseLanguage #EmotionsInJapanese #JapaneseVocabulary #Rage

  27. 激怒する (gekido suru) is waiting for you in the quiz on learn.japanology.nl - Kiko will make sure you remember it tomorrow. We start with the basics, so jump in even if you're just beginning. What would push you to 激怒する (gekido suru)? Drop it below. #Japanese #LearnJapanese #Kanji #JLPT #WordOfTheDay #Japanology #JapaneseLanguage #EmotionsInJapanese #JapaneseVocabulary #Rage

  28. From whipping horses to Sunday walks, 策 (saku) has range. What's the most strategic Japanese word you know? This kanji is on learn.japanology.nl? utm_source=mastodon. Kiko the fox teaches you kanji through etymology and spaced repetition. We start with the easy stuff, so jump right in. #Japanese #LearnJapanese #Kanji #JLPT #WordOfTheDay #Japanology #Strategy #Etymology #KanjiOfTheDay #JapaneseLanguage #Confucius

  29. From whipping horses to Sunday walks, 策 (saku) has range. What's the most strategic Japanese word you know? This kanji is on learn.japanology.nl? utm_source=mastodon. Kiko the fox teaches you kanji through etymology and spaced repetition. We start with the easy stuff, so jump right in. #Japanese #LearnJapanese #Kanji #JLPT #WordOfTheDay #Japanology #Strategy #Etymology #KanjiOfTheDay #JapaneseLanguage #Confucius

  30. From whipping horses to Sunday walks, 策 (saku) has range. What's the most strategic Japanese word you know? This kanji is on learn.japanology.nl? utm_source=mastodon. Kiko the fox teaches you kanji through etymology and spaced repetition. We start with the easy stuff, so jump right in. #Japanese #LearnJapanese #Kanji #JLPT #WordOfTheDay #Japanology #Strategy #Etymology #KanjiOfTheDay #JapaneseLanguage #Confucius

  31. From whipping horses to Sunday walks, 策 (saku) has range. What's the most strategic Japanese word you know? This kanji is on learn.japanology.nl? utm_source=mastodon. Kiko the fox teaches you kanji through etymology and spaced repetition. We start with the easy stuff, so jump right in. #Japanese #LearnJapanese #Kanji #JLPT #WordOfTheDay #Japanology #Strategy #Etymology #KanjiOfTheDay #JapaneseLanguage #Confucius

  32. From whipping horses to Sunday walks, 策 (saku) has range. What's the most strategic Japanese word you know? This kanji is on learn.japanology.nl? utm_source=mastodon. Kiko the fox teaches you kanji through etymology and spaced repetition. We start with the easy stuff, so jump right in. #Japanese #LearnJapanese #Kanji #JLPT #WordOfTheDay #Japanology #Strategy #Etymology #KanjiOfTheDay #JapaneseLanguage #Confucius

  33. Our learners completed over 3,000 quiz reviews in the first month, with accuracy rates hitting 89%. Kiko the fox is waiting for you on learn.japanology.nl. We start with the easy stuff, so you can build up to words like 中腰 (chūgoshi) at your own pace. #Japanese #LearnJapanese #Kanji #JLPT #WordOfTheDay #Japanology #JapaneseLanguage #KanjiEtymology #BodyLanguage #JapaneseVocabulary

  34. Our learners completed over 3,000 quiz reviews in the first month, with accuracy rates hitting 89%. Kiko the fox is waiting for you on learn.japanology.nl. We start with the easy stuff, so you can build up to words like 中腰 (chūgoshi) at your own pace. #Japanese #LearnJapanese #Kanji #JLPT #WordOfTheDay #Japanology #JapaneseLanguage #KanjiEtymology #BodyLanguage #JapaneseVocabulary

  35. Our learners completed over 3,000 quiz reviews in the first month, with accuracy rates hitting 89%. Kiko the fox is waiting for you on learn.japanology.nl. We start with the easy stuff, so you can build up to words like 中腰 (chūgoshi) at your own pace. #Japanese #LearnJapanese #Kanji #JLPT #WordOfTheDay #Japanology #JapaneseLanguage #KanjiEtymology #BodyLanguage #JapaneseVocabulary

  36. Our learners completed over 3,000 quiz reviews in the first month, with accuracy rates hitting 89%. Kiko the fox is waiting for you on learn.japanology.nl. We start with the easy stuff, so you can build up to words like 中腰 (chūgoshi) at your own pace. #Japanese #LearnJapanese #Kanji #JLPT #WordOfTheDay #Japanology #JapaneseLanguage #KanjiEtymology #BodyLanguage #JapaneseVocabulary

  37. Our learners completed over 3,000 quiz reviews in the first month, with accuracy rates hitting 89%. Kiko the fox is waiting for you on learn.japanology.nl. We start with the easy stuff, so you can build up to words like 中腰 (chūgoshi) at your own pace. #Japanese #LearnJapanese #Kanji #JLPT #WordOfTheDay #Japanology #JapaneseLanguage #KanjiEtymology #BodyLanguage #JapaneseVocabulary

  38. This is one of 30,000 words on learn.japanology.nl. Whether you're starting from zero or deep into JLPT prep, Kiko tracks what you know and brings back what you're forgetting. Sign up free and try it: learn.japanology.nl #Japanese #LearnJapanese #Kanji #JLPT #WordOfTheDay #Japanology #Etymology #最も #KanjiOrigin #JapaneseLanguage #LanguageLearning

  39. This is one of 30,000 words on learn.japanology.nl. Whether you're starting from zero or deep into JLPT prep, Kiko tracks what you know and brings back what you're forgetting. Sign up free and try it: learn.japanology.nl #Japanese #LearnJapanese #Kanji #JLPT #WordOfTheDay #Japanology #Etymology #最も #KanjiOrigin #JapaneseLanguage #LanguageLearning

  40. This is one of 30,000 words on learn.japanology.nl. Whether you're starting from zero or deep into JLPT prep, Kiko tracks what you know and brings back what you're forgetting. Sign up free and try it: learn.japanology.nl #Japanese #LearnJapanese #Kanji #JLPT #WordOfTheDay #Japanology #Etymology #最も #KanjiOrigin #JapaneseLanguage #LanguageLearning

  41. This is one of 30,000 words on learn.japanology.nl. Whether you're starting from zero or deep into JLPT prep, Kiko tracks what you know and brings back what you're forgetting. Sign up free and try it: learn.japanology.nl #Japanese #LearnJapanese #Kanji #JLPT #WordOfTheDay #Japanology #Etymology #最も #KanjiOrigin #JapaneseLanguage #LanguageLearning

  42. This is one of 30,000 words on learn.japanology.nl. Whether you're starting from zero or deep into JLPT prep, Kiko tracks what you know and brings back what you're forgetting. Sign up free and try it: learn.japanology.nl #Japanese #LearnJapanese #Kanji #JLPT #WordOfTheDay #Japanology #Etymology #最も #KanjiOrigin #JapaneseLanguage #LanguageLearning