RobGillon wrote:I am planning on taking the JLPT 2 in London this December. I feel like I have so much to do for it, but I've actually worked my way through most of the grammar and kanji you need for it... it's just the vocabulary which gets me. Does anyone have any good ways to remember vocabulary? I studying by trying to think in Japanese, trying to name all the objects around me, and to describe what I can see people doing, etc. but this doesn't help with really obscure / very situation specific words which seem to be all over the place on the JLPT 2 vocab list.
What are people's thoughts?
I recommended it in one of the threads on the old board (which likely could have slipped past you).
The book "Kanji In Context" is the easiest way to remember kanji & vocab. EVER.
Absolutely amazing. Pick up a copy of the reference book and Workbook 1 (which covers the first 1200 kanji and the most common vocab based on each of these kanji (all that you need for the JLPT2, and a little more, "just in case")) When you go on to JLPT1, you just pick up a copy of Workbook 2, which covers the rest of the 常用漢字.
I recommended it to one of my friends and he agreed that it was simply amazing. The examples in the workbook keep reusing the kanji compounds that you've already learned, so there's no reason to go back and study them over and over--you simply won't have a chance to forget them. I think the examples that are used were actually taken from Japanese newspapers and magazines from the 90s, so they are all "real Japanese".
It's not for beginners though. You need to know all of the JLPT3 kanji to get started on it. (Which I guess would be another reason to recommend it to you: you won't have to start again at square 1 like in most kanji books.)
I can't recommend these books enough. I'm backpacking across Asia, and other than Lonely Planet, they're the only books I took with me. The workbook is perfect for reviewing the kanji compounds you already know.
One more thing you can do:
Read Hiragana Times (boring but easy) & Japanese Wikipedia (interesting but challenging). Sadly, they've stopped publishing 日本語ジャーナル, but if you can find a copy, hold on to it for dear life.