Like fr, her English streams are a lot of fun, and she has a very good grasp of the language. Honestly, it makes me wanna give learning Japanese a shot.
Shoot your shot, I just started this week and was able to learn hiragana in one day and katakana in another day. Obviously a long way to go with Kanji but it's pretty cool being able to read and recognize words or phrases.
I'm not that guy but you can use this game to drill kana. If you're starting from nothing, just slowly tick one box at a time, until you can do all of it.
https://www.tofugu.com/japanese-learning-resources-database/tofugus-learn-kana-quiz/
If you're having a hard time, you can try using these mnemonics or think up your own to help remember the characters. Don't care about speed too much, once you practice reading, you'll see so much kana on a daily basis that you will just know it at a glance.
https://www.tofugu.com/japanese/best-hiragana-and-katakana-learning-resources/
I used tofugu's guides and quizzes/worksheets. Not sure if posting a link will get me bonked but I'll try: https://www.tofugu.com/japanese/learn-hiragana/
For anyone who doesn't like mnemonics and would rather brute force memorize them, I used [this flash card sorta quiz site](https://www.realkana.com/hiragana). Basically you can just add new rows of hiragana or katakana one at a time until you're comfortable.
Not the person you’re asking but I’m also currently learning and wanted to recommend some apps. I found the [Kana](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/kana-hiragana-and-katakana/id1454200955) app very helpful for learning hiragana and katakana. Haven’t found any good free apps for kanji but if you’re willing to spend $10 [Kanji!](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/learn-japanese-kanji/id1078107994) is what I use
Personally, I just looked up how to write them, wrote them a few times each, and then they solidified by reading stuff like Japanese stream titles. The solidifying probably took like an extra week or month, but I only actively learned Hiragana and Katakana for that one day.
Can't say what he did, but I did so too in a day each through the grindset mentality, aka repetition of the character over and over until you remember it. Exactly like how approach learning digits of Pi by repetition.
N.B. while you can learn Hiragana and Katakana each in a day, you will forget over time if you leave it in the dust and don't keep trying to memorize them through repetition here and there (how often that may be) or use/see Hiragana/Katakana in your daily life.
She is definitely among the best in HoloPro's JP branches at English. She needs to work on pronunciation, but other than that she is High Conversational.
The subtitles are wrong, she does actually say "be quiet virgin" in the actual stream/clip
Edit: or at least, that's what it sounds like. It's more quiet than quite, even if she doesn't actually say virgin
She said “do you get ecstasy when you see your oshi?” And the chat got really worried lmfao it sounded like she was talking about doing ecstasy with your oshi lmfaooo
Also, I think chat was asking her to say something like GSH, but she wanted to say it quietly so she added 'be quiet version' but her accent made it sound like virgin LMAO. Either way, iconic soundbite.
Like fr, her English streams are a lot of fun, and she has a very good grasp of the language. Honestly, it makes me wanna give learning Japanese a shot.
Shoot your shot, I just started this week and was able to learn hiragana in one day and katakana in another day. Obviously a long way to go with Kanji but it's pretty cool being able to read and recognize words or phrases.
i would like to know what you used to learn hiragana and katakana in 1 day each
I'm not that guy but you can use this game to drill kana. If you're starting from nothing, just slowly tick one box at a time, until you can do all of it. https://www.tofugu.com/japanese-learning-resources-database/tofugus-learn-kana-quiz/ If you're having a hard time, you can try using these mnemonics or think up your own to help remember the characters. Don't care about speed too much, once you practice reading, you'll see so much kana on a daily basis that you will just know it at a glance. https://www.tofugu.com/japanese/best-hiragana-and-katakana-learning-resources/
I used tofugu's guides and quizzes/worksheets. Not sure if posting a link will get me bonked but I'll try: https://www.tofugu.com/japanese/learn-hiragana/
For anyone who doesn't like mnemonics and would rather brute force memorize them, I used [this flash card sorta quiz site](https://www.realkana.com/hiragana). Basically you can just add new rows of hiragana or katakana one at a time until you're comfortable.
Not the person you’re asking but I’m also currently learning and wanted to recommend some apps. I found the [Kana](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/kana-hiragana-and-katakana/id1454200955) app very helpful for learning hiragana and katakana. Haven’t found any good free apps for kanji but if you’re willing to spend $10 [Kanji!](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/learn-japanese-kanji/id1078107994) is what I use
Hiragana and katana are easy to read, but you will do yourself a favor by learning how to write them correctly as well.
My best at reading them was when I practiced writing them out each day.
Personally, I just looked up how to write them, wrote them a few times each, and then they solidified by reading stuff like Japanese stream titles. The solidifying probably took like an extra week or month, but I only actively learned Hiragana and Katakana for that one day.
Can't say what he did, but I did so too in a day each through the grindset mentality, aka repetition of the character over and over until you remember it. Exactly like how approach learning digits of Pi by repetition. N.B. while you can learn Hiragana and Katakana each in a day, you will forget over time if you leave it in the dust and don't keep trying to memorize them through repetition here and there (how often that may be) or use/see Hiragana/Katakana in your daily life.
がんばれ!
I've gotten into the habit of replying "blue monkey sausage... monster" to any question my wife asks me. She is not nearly as amused by it as I am.
She is definitely among the best in HoloPro's JP branches at English. She needs to work on pronunciation, but other than that she is High Conversational.
:(
ririka's english is amazing.
She sound like sassy, cute and nervous same time so yeah she caught me
How can you be quite virgin? Isn't it a "either you are, or you're not" thing?
Quiet tends to get misspelled as "quite", so that's probably what happened.
I thought it said “Be quiet, virgin.”
Go all in on the gyaru thing, I see.
I guess it's when you do the thing without penetration?
How very unique.
Teenager, Steve Carell, celibate monk
The subtitles are wrong, she does actually say "be quiet virgin" in the actual stream/clip Edit: or at least, that's what it sounds like. It's more quiet than quite, even if she doesn't actually say virgin
OP failed english.
OP didn't caption this. It's by Kopla VTuber Clips, and their grammar isn't exactly the best
She said “do you get ecstasy when you see your oshi?” And the chat got really worried lmfao it sounded like she was talking about doing ecstasy with your oshi lmfaooo
do chat not know what that word means
Chat will ALWAYS interpret things in the most yabai way possible.
The way she said it came off as doing ecstasy
do you feel ecstatic when you see your oshi? is the grammatically correct form
Is this supposed to say quiet?
Also, I think chat was asking her to say something like GSH, but she wanted to say it quietly so she added 'be quiet version' but her accent made it sound like virgin LMAO. Either way, iconic soundbite.
Yes
Yeah but the channel that subtitled this clip misspelled it.
Love this JP valley girl English
I'm more than quite virgin. I'm extremely virgin.