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  • Nihongo Work

    This is a site that offers many worksheets designed by licensed practicing psychiatrists for non-Japanese school children to learn Japanese for free.

  • Roudoku Café

    This is a site where you can listen to literary works in Japanese.

  • にほんご発音ラボ

    This is a site where you can learn vocabulary and sentence structures along with rhythm and stress using fun songs and animated videos. Of the 16 songs introduced in the book, "Nihongo de Utaou (Let's Sing in Japanese)" (no longer in print), seven have been recreated on this website.

  • 数え方辞典ONLINE (Kazoekata Jiten ONLINE)

    This is a dictionary to look up counter words to use when counting something.

  • Kanshudo

    This is a site where you can learn Japanese comprehensively with tremendous content and manage your learning progress with Kanshudo AI.

  • United Links for Japanese Learning Web Resources

    This is a convenient collection of links to Japanese-study websites that allows you to choose the site you want to visit by selecting various categories, such as Japanese ability-level, display language and skills covered.

  • 動画・変体仮名百語 100 Classical Kana Words in Motion

    This is a useful site for those studying Japanese classical literature.

  • 『Japanese Pronunciation Practice through Shadowing』Mini course on 「Pronunciation Points」

    Japanese teachers explain pages on  「Pronunciation Points」 in a total of 20 videos as supplementary material that comes with the book 『Japanese Pronunciation Practice through Shadowing 』published by 3A Corporation.

  • Waseda Course Channel

    This is the study content of Pronunciation: Speaking with Fluency 3-4, a Waseda University Japanese Course for International Students. It consists of videos (all in Japanese) created as a special class for people who don't have many opportunities to practice pronunciation. They're very useful for advanced learners who want to be able to speak fluently.

  • JF Japanese e-Learning Minato

    Minato is a platform that offers a place to learn and meet new friends. You can learn by choosing the course that suits your level, from six levels based on the JF Standard for Japanese-Language Education (JFS).

  • Japanese for the Western Brain

    This is a site that offers an introduction to the Japanese language. Though no contents where you can actually practise yourself are available, you can read detailed explanations about Japanese.

  • memrise

    This is a site where you can enjoy learning via flashcards for free. It’s also a community style site with a registration system (SNS-type).

  • Learning and Teaching Japanese

    The basics of Japanese are carefully explained here, making it a very useful site for people who are thinking about starting to learn Japanese, or for Japanese learners who have just begun their studies.

  • International University of Japan “Lesson For Useful Expression in Japanese”

    This is a series of videos to help beginners learn Japanese. There are 10 videos showing sequences in a story style to help you easily learn how a dialogues between two people are spoken.

  • ONOMATOPELABO

    This is a site aimed at Japanese people. Onomatopoeias are introduced through articles that use them and real examples from Twitter. It’s a site about onomatopoeias with an interesting design.

  • TTBJ - Tsukuba Test-Battery of Japanese

    This is a collection of Japanese tests, the TTBJ (Tsukuba Test-Battery of Japanese), developed and improved by the International Student Center at the University of Tsukuba.

  • Fun Trivia Quizzes - Japanese

    Here you can try quizzes on kanji or other aspects of Japanese.

  • 世界の国旗(National Flags of the World)

    Lets you search for world flags and obtain basic information about that country.

  • GAKUU REAL JAPANESE

    This is a website that offers explanations on Japanese language and culture by using things encountered in daily life as learning materials.

  • YOUR NAME IN JAPANESE

    This is an online tool which converts names written using the Roman alphabet into katakana notation. How do you write your own name in katakana? Why not try checking here?

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