Postby tintinium » September 14th, 2006 11:23 pm
Actually... a good way I found is by doing crosswords... Of course there are flashcard programs online... lots if you look, some better than others... I remember one made by dragonmedia was really good... which i found somewhere on nihongoresources.com.
What i mean by crosswords, is I took any word I knew in japanese (take tsunami for example and wrote it down...
つなみ
then I tried to think of a word with with either つ な or み。
つなみ
ま
わたし
たけのこ
ね
こ
ちかてつ
ゃ
ん
I would try to fill as much of a page and it got fun. Of course, I would also use made up words or just use katakana words like trying to tranliterate friend's names.
jo-n sumisu (jon smith) wa-ta- boteru (water bottle)
etc. etc. Especially ones I had trouble remembering... it's good to make words up, because like all languages, some characters aren't used as often (like nu in katakana, for example)
Sometimes I would also attach pictures... like in trying to remember the difference between さ and ち
I would write さち Satchi) and made a face out of it... add two dots in the circular part of the kana and draw a mouth below. Also ウcan be made to look like a rabbit (うさぎ・ウサギ)
Also シ and ツ I had an elaborate mental picture...
the two marks (ten ten) are laying down in one kana and standing up in the other... the standing up one looked like two people standing waiting for the つなみ to come in. (ツナミ) And the long stroke is right to left... the direction of the wave.
When you right the stroke from left to right, they are 死ぬ(しぬ・シヌ) or dead. Kind of morbid I know... but it helped me set them apart... if you're not sure what I mean... i can explain further if you wish... but it's difficult when typing... and not writing it out...
hth,
Tintin