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[Beginner] Site search (151)

  • 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?

  • sci.lang.japan Frequently Asked Questions

    This website presents a convenient collection of Frequently Asked Questions about Japan and the Japanese language.

  • マルチメディア「にほんごをまなぼう」

    You can learn the kind of language often used in Japanese schools, including greetings, conversation and classroom instructions.

  • 日本語らくだ Nihongorakuda

    This is a site created by the University of Jordan's Japanese language education programme.

  • J-LEARNING.COM Learn Japanese On Line

    This is a website where you can study all aspects of beginner-level Japanese grammar. Starting with basic words and expressions, you can study here with grammar explanations that make use of simple slides to help you understand, various questions or pieces to read, worksheets and kanji tutorials too.

  • Online Nihongo

    This is a site where you can learn how to read (pronounce) and write the kana. Check your knowledge of hiragana and katakana through a number of quizzes.

  • JOSHU – Japanese Online Self-Help Utility

    This is a self-study site where you can try some hiragana/katakana practice, or verb conjugation and particle practice. You can also watch videos showing Japanese culture seen through the eyes of American university students.

  • Digital EHON (Picture Book) Site

    On this site you can read, and listen to, Japanese folklore tales in 12 different languages, with accompanying pictures.

  • Online Japanese Tests

    On this site you can try quizzes on Japanese grammar, vocabulary, kanji, listening and reading comprehension and JLPT (Japanese Language Proficiency Test) questions. As well as English, the site has support for Chinese and Korean.

  • Kanji searches at sljfaq.org

    Here you can search for kanji by their components, or by writing them freehand. This is particularly convenient if you don't know the reading of the kanji you want to look up.

  • Jim Breen's Japanese Page

    This is a Japanese dictionary and learning website, where lots of information is presented to help you make use of computers in your studies.

  • WWW.JDIC: Word Search

    This is a website that has a dictionary function where you can search for words or kanji. You can also look for example sentences. The scale of the database here is astounding, with a large number of word entries.

  • Kanji Clinic

    This is a column that appears in the Japan Times, designed to help develop kanji learning methods aimed at foreigners. The background, make-up etc. of various kanji are introduced in articles with various themes.

  • Visualizing Japanese Grammar

    Here you can check your understanding of the main points of beginner-level Japanese grammar, through watching, listening and reading.

  • JPLANG 日本語を学ぶ

    Here you can study a range of different aspects of Japanese - grammar, vocabulary, conversation, reading, listening and so on - from beginner to intermediate level.

  • English-Japanese Vocabulary Quizzes 

    Vocabulary is included on a wide range of categories, from subjects such as animals, the human body, baseball and buildings to more academic contents. There are plenty of quizzes too.

  • かな・カナの書きかた

    This is a site where you can find how to read and write hiragana and katakana. You can learn about 'Writing' 'Pronunciation' and 'Vocabulary' for each.

  • Genki Japan

    Using this site you can study Japanese in an easy and fun way and find out some basic information about Japan. There's plenty of games and songs to be found here too.

  • Student Resources for Nakama 2nd edition

    This is a supplementary website designed to go with the revised edition of the "Nakama" series of Japanese language textbooks (Nakama 1a and 1b).

  • POPjisyo

    This is a pop-up dictionary you can use when you want to read websites written in Japanese. You can look up words from the Japanese to either English or German.

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