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Application Video #25

3 neue Apps und vom letztem Video Doodle Jump, Inkvaders

iTunnel 3D lite(free)
Dirt Moto Racing lite(free)
dict.cc(free)

Duration : 0:9:57

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Written by admin on November 16th, 2009 with 3 comments.
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Linnéa spelar piano

Min underbara dotter spelar piano för första gången

Duration : 0:0:48

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Written by admin on November 7th, 2009 with 2 comments.
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John Williams is the man with music

Duration : 0:3:46

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Written by admin on November 3rd, 2009 with 1 comment.
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The best site to learn Japanese language CosCom.co.jp

In this video i will show you the best site to learn Japanese language, and why ot is the best.

http://www.coscom.co.jp/

http://www.freedict.com/

P.S.: sorry my english speeking is bad,
and this is my first video so there might be mistakes.

TAGS:
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Duration : 0:6:49

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Written by admin on October 31st, 2009 with 21 comments.
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I need help with the Japanese language!?

Okay so this is really composed of two questions. First I would like to know what type of writing this is in. I use this site, http://www.freedict.com/onldict/jap.html , to get single japanese words and it uses the english alphabet. So what exactly is that form of writing.
Also I’ve been wanting to learn Japanese. Would the Rosetta Stone thing be enough or should I use some other things? Give me some tips and such on what makes it less difficult to learn.
Thanks for your answers but for the next person who feels the need to answer I have one more question. And if either of you want to continue to help plz email me. But which style would be better to learn first and what are each used for??

i love japanese, but i’ve taught myself mainly, hah. um, I’d say get a dictionary and some inexpensive beginner’s software, and use as much Japanese stuff as you can. I listen to J-music and i watch J-movies all the time, so since it’s native Japanese people speaking you get a feel for how it’s done. anime and manga also help if you’re into that.

when japanese is written in the Latin alphabet [ours~] it’s called Romaji, meaning Roman characters. so like, "sakana" is romaji, ??? is Hiragana,???? is Katakana, and?? is Kanji. [means fish btw :P ]

to learn hiragana and katakana, I printed out a chart [no idea where i got it though] and practiced writing song lyrics. like, i’d take a song written in Romaji and I write it all out in Hiragana until I had the characters memorised.

i’ve heard Rosetta Stone doesn’t work all that great with Japanese. and since it’s so expensive [i just looked at the prices - woh] i wouldn’t bother trying it out only to see it’s not helpful. i used Human Japanese and a few other programs.

it’s sort of hard, but it’s a really fun language so if you decide to go for it have fun~

ee, forgot to put that. oops sorry ><

hiragana is the most basic, it’s what kids learn first. all native japanese words are written with hiragana on a basic level, so do that first. each character stands for a sound, not a letter. ? is ka, ? is sa, ? is ta, etc. there are 46 hiragana and 46 katakana, but it doesn’t take that long to learn them.

katakana are for foreign words [japanese borrows words all over the place] and foreign names. it’s also used to emphasise words, sort of like italics or underlines.

kanji are the most difficult. there are something like 20.000 kanji, but you only need maybe 2 or 3.000 to read a typical newspaper. they’re used to express meaning. some words sound exactly the same as others, so in writing it helps to differentiate between these. most names are kanji, as are place names, etc. japanese kids start learning kanji in the first year of school, i think, and continue all the way to high school [if i'm not mistaken, which i could be :X] they 2.000 or so of them arranged in grades by difficulty and frequency in the language. most people know around 5.000. if you don’t know a certain kanji you can just write it in hiragana, based on context people will know what you mean.

kanji are crazy XD i have a lot of fun.

Written by admin on October 30th, 2009 with 4 comments.
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Where can I find how to pronounce words in Japanese?

i don’t want to know how to write or read them in kanji or stuff but like how to actually pronounce the word like kon (spirit) or mizu (water). Also I already know http://www.lingvozone.com/LingvoSoft-Online-English-Japanese-Dictionary and http://www.freedict.com/onldict/jap.html. But I really need one for phrases like "spirit of the air" and "the one who protects". So PLEASE help me.
sorry but i mean how do i find how to say the word in english? I can not read kanji and the symbols so i need to see how to pronounce them… kon for example means spirit so… so I want to type spirit in a Eng-Jap dictionary and get the word kon not the kanji spelling…
sorry but i mean how do i find how to say the word in english? I can not read kanji and the symbols so i need to see how to pronounce them… kon for example means spirit so… so I want to type spirit in a Eng-Jap dictionary and get the word kon not the kanji spelling…

If you know how to write the words with English letters, and you know the Japanese alphabet sounds, then it is kind of easy.
I don’t know a website offhand that shows you how to pronounce them, but I can try to help.
The vowel sounds are ‘a’ as in ah, ‘i’ as in eat, ‘u’ as in ooh, ‘e’ as in bet, and ‘o’ as in yo. You just put those with the consonants, and "mizu" would sound like "mee-zoo".
I hope this helped you at all…

Written by admin on October 28th, 2009 with 1 comment.
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Where can I find how to pronounce words in Japanese?

i don’t want to know how to write or read them in kanji or stuff but like how to actually pronounce the word like kon (spirit) or mizu (water). Also I already know http://www.lingvozone.com/LingvoSoft-Online-English-Japanese-Dictionary and http://www.freedict.com/onldict/jap.html. But I really need one for phrases like "spirit of the air" and "the one who protects". So PLEASE help me.
sorry but i mean how do i find how to say the word in english? I can not read kanji and the symbols so i need to see how to pronounce them… kon for example means spirit so… so I want to type spirit in a Eng-Jap dictionary and get the word kon not the kanji spelling…
sorry but i mean how do i find how to say the word in english? I can not read kanji and the symbols so i need to see how to pronounce them… kon for example means spirit so… so I want to type spirit in a Eng-Jap dictionary and get the word kon not the kanji spelling…

If you know how to write the words with English letters, and you know the Japanese alphabet sounds, then it is kind of easy.
I don’t know a website offhand that shows you how to pronounce them, but I can try to help.
The vowel sounds are ‘a’ as in ah, ‘i’ as in eat, ‘u’ as in ooh, ‘e’ as in bet, and ‘o’ as in yo. You just put those with the consonants, and "mizu" would sound like "mee-zoo".
I hope this helped you at all…

Written by admin on October 28th, 2009 with 1 comment.
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English to kanji translator/dictionary?

Ok, i need something that will translate english text in to kanji, but written in english characters. what i mean is something that will take an english word(s) and translate them into kanji, but display the english pronounciation (i.e take slashing moon and turn it into zangetsu). I’ve tried some simple online dictionaries but it always spits out the translation in kanji characters. im looking for something like this site :http://www.freedict.com/onldict/jap.html if you use it it takes english text and translates it into japanese (not kanji) but in english characters.
its not important what language zangetsu is, but just the general idea of what i’m looking for

No translate spits out even remotely accurate or good translations so any translator anyone posts will be a waste of your time. If you want to know something in Japanese either ask here or study the language yourself because a computer cannot do it for you.

Written by admin on October 26th, 2009 with 3 comments.
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Are these Japanese words correct?

Here’s the following words

Shinja (Sacred Snake)
Kingusari (Gold Chain)
Gingitsune (Silver Fox)
Hiryuu (Flying Dragon)
Hyourin (The Moon)

I found these words on this site while I was translating english words to japanese words from it http://www.freedict.com/onldict/jap.html

but to tell you the truth, i’m not sure if it’s 100% reliable. I mean it’s one of a few sites I know that actually translate English words to Japanese words (not Kanji) but I think some translations are wrong, I really don’t know.

Some are not correct.
Seijya (Sacred Snake) ??
Kin no Kusari (Gold Chain) ???
Hyourin (The Moon) <<< I have no idea but this is no meaning.

Written by admin on October 26th, 2009 with 3 comments.
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i need help with a translation in japanese?

what does "nihongo wo hanashi yasui desu ne" mean?? from what i can understand it has something to do with speaking in japanese is easy?? or something along those lines. i have no idea.

and if you dont know that, if you could tell me how to say "sorry, i do not speak that well" i know sumimasen. im guessing something along the lines of "sumimasen. watashi wa hanashi no nakare" but i am possitive that isnt right. please help me….. i speak german not japanese. this is very hard for me to wrap my head around…..

also any sites for good online romaji translation would be helpful :) freedict doesnt do much….

nihongo wo hanashi yasui desu ne

The sentence is not so good. It seems the sentence looked like kind of unskilful machine-made one. It is unnatural anyway.

It could be Nihongo wa hanashi yasui desu ne.
(It is easy to speak Japanese, isn’t it?)

For instance, if It is not easy to speak Japanese, is it? woud be
Nihongo wa hanashi yasuku wa naidesu ne.

It is equal to it is difficult to speak Japanese, isn’t it? would be
Nihongo wa muzukasii desu ne.

Sorry, i do not speak that well, must be

sumimasen, watashi wa Nihongo(Sono Kotoba or Sore) wo umaku wa hanasimasen.

http://japanese.about.com/

The above site might help you.

Ich freue mich, Sie ze sehen. Auf Wiedersehen!?

Written by admin on October 24th, 2009 with 3 comments.
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