Question:
Best books for a beginner to learn Japanese on a tight budget?
anonymous
2009-08-13 22:19:06 UTC
I want to learn Japanese but don't have a lot of money to spend on books, though I did do some research and some people recommended Remembering the Kana: The Hiragana / The Katakana by Heisig and the Genki books but they seem expensive so I'm not sure if they are worth the cost. So what books or series of books in a specific order would you recommend that would be most effective? Thanks.
Six answers:
anonymous
2009-08-14 00:17:30 UTC
just try to learn Japanese online, for example:

here is a good site:



http://japaneseclass.jp/



this site allows you to:

- Practice, improve and enrich your vocabulary and kanji

- Motivate yourself from the EXP you earned and get ranked among others

- Organize your learning - don't get stuck, learn Japanese level by level. know where to begin and where to continue.

- Weak List feature will intelligently record vocabulary/kanji that is difficult for you. the weak list allows the program of this site to set a bias for the vocabulary or kanji that is difficult for you, where more questions from your weak list will be given in the practice page.

- this site allows you to tag an object in user's photo with a vocabulary. the tagged object will be automatically cropped from the photo and given as a question in Photo Quiz.
?
2016-09-11 14:26:49 UTC
I do not know approximately books, however the Rosetta Stone application is likely one of the exceptional studying ways to be had. It is high-priced to shop for (round $230 for stage a million) however valued at the cost. You will be taught rapidly. If you're watching for a extra cheap alternative, you may also desire to take a look at your regional group school or school. Many have grownup schooling categories in which you'll be able to be taught a language by way of an teacher for a modest price.
verygoodjokes
2009-08-15 01:20:56 UTC
You don't really need to pay when you are thinking to learn the basics... there're lots of free materials out there, plus with a book you don't listen to audio but with internet you have that.



try this one for learning hiragana/katakana:



http://www.sayjack.com/learn/japanese/hiragana

http://www.sayjack.com/learn/japanese/katakana



If you really want a book I would say you borrow it from the library... :-) "Genki" or "Nakama" is the most popular introductory Japanese textbooks for college students.
anonymous
2009-08-14 15:46:51 UTC
You can use this language learning product:Listen & Learn Japanese. It is easy to follow and helpful with the pronounciation of the Japanese language.You can learn so much for so little money... $1.69 http://www.keeplookingbusy.com/itemDetails.aspx?id=0486252779
Srta. Argentina
2009-08-13 22:26:34 UTC
Get the ISBN and you can find them for cheaper on Google.



When I took Japanese in college, my professors had us use "Japanese For Busy People" books (kana editions, not romaji).



Look into that. My books I bought for under $10.
anonymous
2009-08-15 10:59:35 UTC
I strongly recommend you on Rocket Japanese, you can read

more info here:



http://learn-japanese-easy.info/japanese/


This content was originally posted on Y! Answers, a Q&A website that shut down in 2021.
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