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Forums - What’s the quickest way to memorize grammar?

Top > 日本語を勉強しましょう / Let's study Japanese! > Anything About Japanese



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NovusStar
Level: 15

There’s some pieces of grammar I have memorized really well. But in other moments, I struggle. I have recently started immersing through reading and I’m thinking of reading one article a day while doing grammar on here (maybe bunpro) too. Is this a good idea to learn it?


For me, it’s more so sentence structure that’s messing me up, instead of words. Like I can tell when someone likes or hates something, possessives, iru/aru, o, but whenever it gets to be a placement that isn’t English I get confused.

1
3 days ago
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Sasayaki3
Level: 186

Listening and reading are always a good thing to do, regardless.

If you are feeling lost, try to stop translating word-for-word and start Logical Mapping. Think of a Japanese sentence like a set of LEGO bricks:

  1. Find the Engine (The Verb): In Japanese, the verb is almost always at the very end. It’s the anchor of the whole sentence. Look there first!
  2. Identify the Actors (Particles): Instead of looking at the position of a word (like we do in English), look at the Particle attached to it.
    • は (wa) or が (ga) = This is your Subject/Topic (The "Who").
    • を (o) = This is your Object (The "What").
  3. The "Descriptor" Rule: Anything that comes before a noun—even a whole mini-sentence—is just a "modifier" describing that noun. Treat it like one big adjective.

Before you try to understand the meaning, try to "dissect" the sentence. Label the subject, the object, and the verb. Once you see the "skeleton" of the sentence, the meaning will click into place much faster!

Hope it helps.

6
3 days ago
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Icepick87
Level: 625
Sasayaki3 (055, 3:15)

は (wa) or が (ga) = This is your Subject/Topic (The "Who").

を (o) = This is your Object (The "What").

​Note, there are some more advanced topics relating to how these work, but there are also a couple other things.

There's such a thing as Øが, where it's something in a sentence that doesn't mention a subject, in which case, is implied by context.

There is another, when something is mentioned, but there is a は that is missing. This isn't Øは like the case for が, but it is something that changes the nuance of the sentence towards something personal and emotional in the perspective of the speaker.

But it's also possible for は to be omitted in another way like が, but it is inherently there as well when the topic is also omitted, unlike the above. This is more like Øが as well.

2
3 days ago
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Sasayaki3
Level: 186

Oh yes. Thanks for clarified that. I always say languages are not like math that 1+1 = 2. Languages are full of exeptions and other things.

1
2 days ago
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NovusStar
Level: 15

ありがとう、みんあ!

also really interesting icepick87, thanks!

0
2 days ago
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Level: 37

I’m struggling with kanji but grammar is challenging too. I just know it by getting used to it and trying to make my own sentences

0
1 day ago
Getting the posts




Top > 日本語を勉強しましょう / Let's study Japanese! > Anything About Japanese


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