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Hardcover Elementary Japanese Volume One: (cd-ROM Included) [With CDROM] Book

ISBN: 0804835047

ISBN13: 9780804835046

Elementary Japanese Volume One: (cd-ROM Included) [With CDROM]

This is an extensive beginning level Japanese textbook and language learning program. Elementary Japanese is designed for students who are just beginning their study of the Japanese language at the... This description may be from another edition of this product.

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Good

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Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Great Japanese Text Book

I studied Japanese in University and spend a lot of time in Japan. I needed to brush up on my Japanese and found the perfect book to get me back on track.

Great book

I haven't really got a chance to get through a lot of the book but it is very good. It teaches you how to read and write with actual characters and not just Romanji like other books. Its quite in depth and vol 2 is almost no English. You really need to memorize the characters and be dedicated to study! I got vol 1 and 2 for the same price Barnes and Nobles wanted for just 1 book.

Genki comparison

Elementary Japanese is one of the best textbooks for starting Japanese. I've compared this series to the highly praised Genki series, and I strongly prefer this one. This textbook explains grammar very well, and it goes much more in-depth than Genki. There are more examples and the grammar points are more thoroughly explained. The kanji lessons are integrated in the lessons, unlike Genki, which has them in the back. Words that were previously written in hiragana are replaced with kanji once you learn it. This is a great way to learn because all the kanji you encounter in the examples should be ones you know. Unlike Genki, the audio portion of the course is provided with the book, so you don't have to pay extra to practice listening. The CD is a great way to practice listening comprehension. This book is also a wonder reference since it has many appendices. There are vocabulary (both E->J and J->E), verb conjugation, grammar, and kanji appendices. Its appendices are much more thorough than Genki in every respect, making it easier to reference (if you get the second volume, its appendices reference both volumes, making that the definitive version to use.) <br /> <br />However, one drawback of this series is that it focuses mainly on normal polite Japanese (- forms). The reason for this is that this book was designed for UC Berkeley students, and the department was designed so the second year focused more on casual Japanese than the first year. Even so, this form is the most useful for daily conversations, so it's only a drawback for some people. Another drawback to this book compared to Genki is that it includes less cultural information. <br /> <br />Using this book will give you a very good foundation of Japanese grammar, and its weakpoints can be addressed in later courses since the most important part in the beginning is learning the basics.

An outstanding textbook for Beginning Japanese

"Elementary Japanese" does everything right. It is possibly the best, most comprehensive beginning Japanese text that I have seen, and if I were to teach a Japanese course, this is the book I would choose for my students. To begin with, there is absolutely no romaji. It starts with the assumption that the learner has become familiar with hiragana, which is an absolute necessity when studying Japanese. Learners of English start with the alphabet. Learners of Japanese should start with hiragana. However, even those with a less-than-masterful grasp of hiragana will swiftly find their ability increasing, through constant reinforcement and repetition. Once a word has been introduced, it always appears in hiragana for the remainder of the text. Kanji is reinforced in the same way. The layout and flow of information is interesting and logical. Beginning with greetings and self introduction, it moves onto places, weekend plans, restaurants, etc...Each section contains both a scenario, new vocabulary and new grammar. There is a "cast of characters," members of a Japanese study class, who have various dialogs and situational encounters that put the learned grammar and vocabulary into practical situations. Along with this, each section has several recommended activities to be done with a partner. The only drawback to "Elementary Japanese" is that it isn't such a great self-study text, unless you are a truly disciplined independent learner. It is designed to be part of a organized course, and many of the activities assume that you have a partner to work with. However, a serious learner shouldn't be studying in isolation anyways, as actually using the language in conversation is the best way to ensure retention. Anyone who works their way through "Elementary Japanese" will have a solid foundation in the language, a platform that they can build on for true fluency. I only regret that this isn't the book I started with when I began my Japanese studies.

Great textbook. Be prepared b/c there's a lot to learn.

This is a really great text book. I have looked through other texts books for colleges and other mainstream "learn Japanese" books before and this is the best I've seen so far. It's the most comprehensive, aesthetically organized, and user-friendly. I was a student at Berkeley who took 1st year through 3rd year Japanese courses and I loved them and learned a lot. Firstly, to break into these textbooks you *must* learn the hiragana and katakana first, which is why there is no romaji after the first chapter to baby you along. This is how our classes were designed -- all students learned both kana syllabaries in 2 weeks. The reason for this is b/c romaji is pretty much useless; it is better that you just learn the written language from the start. (A beautiful and fun language to speak or write). If you go to Japan and see signs or read Japanese published materials anywhere, they're either in Japanese or in English -- there is no romaji, and if Jp people to happen to use romaji, it tends to be the romaji-system that isn't English-reader friendly, such as 'tu' representing the sound 'tsu,' or 'sya' for 'sha.' The kana can't really be "taught" by the book. All it requires is memorization and self-testing. Make your own kana flashcards with index cards, test yourself, and then delve into the text. My teachers did forget the kana worksheets, so as a remedy in order to learn to write it, they ask that you go to http://Japanese.berkeley.edu/kana.html (which has video clips illustrating the stroke order) until they put the worksheets in the CDs or the texts of newer versions. If you can study and get through these two textbooks, you should have enough background to carry a very decent conversation (limited still, but much more than just basic) where you can respond with more than memorized sentences. These textbooks were designed with a classroom in mind, so it works optimally in a class setting or if you have a Jp-speaking person to talk to, but you can still easily learn the material by yourself, albeit at a slower pace. If you just want to learn basic phrases in a short amount of time just to get by, these aren't for you. These textbooks are meant to give you a comprehensive understanding of the Japanese language: parts of speech (like 'particles,' which mark parts of speech and do not exist in English), sentence structure, how to conjugate verbs and adjectives, types of speech (polite-less polite, formal-informal), vocabulary, kanji, and the most useful, basic grammar patterns. The advantage to learning all of this is that when you speak or write in Japanese to another Jp person, you understand what you're saying instead of reciting a memorized line (so you can be more flexible or varied with your language) and you can understand the person you're communicating with more often. One of the things I liked best about this set was the detailed grammar explanations, such as with the topic marker 'wa,' destination marker 'ni,' and the suffix-like 'tsum
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