Posts Tagged ‘vocabulary

24
Mar
11

3/11 Earthquake-Tsunami-Nuclear Power Vocab

There’s nothing like learning vocabulary from current events that really makes these otherwise hard to learn words (for me personally) stick.

These are just some words I learned when talking with Sensei and emailing some friends in Japan in these past few days since on that fateful day, March 11, 2011.

jishin

地震

  • jishin
  • じしん
  • earthquake

津波

津波

  • tsunami
  • つなみ
  • A very large ocean wave caused by an underwater earthquake or volcanic eruption (definition c/o Free Online Dictionary)

原発

原子力発電所

  • genshiryokuhatsudenjo
  • げんしりょくはつでんじょ
  • nuclear power plant
  • shortened: げんぱつ

停電

  • teiden
  • ていでん
  • power outage

計画停電

  • keikakuteiden
  • けいかくていでん
  • planned power outages

節約

  • setsuyaku
  • せつやく
  • conservation

節電

  • setsuden
  • せつでん
  • conservation of electricity

These are all probably all over the news in Japanese. The next time you hear the word, hope you’re able pick it out from now on. ^_^

09
Oct
10

The JLPT 2 Grammar Read Out Project – No. 45 ~ことになっている

ご無沙汰、本当にごめんなさい!いろいろなことあるし。。。

では、今日の文法は発表します!

This one, you hear a lot! And it becomes a little confusing as its made up of lots of common words.

The trick to remembering this pattern is to memorize it as a phrase, a set, that means one thing and not per word combined together to form meaning. It helps to know what each word means though, if that is of any help to you.

こと (koto) – means thing

になっている – means ‘become’ or more precisely, because it’s originally になる + ている, it means has become (resultant state)

SO, thing + has become = It has been decided, supposed to, set to

^_^ hope you got that!

[grammar pattern]

~ことになっている

[meaning] It has been decided, supposed to, set to

[sample sentence]

鈴木さんと、5時にここで合うことになっている。

[English] We are supposed to meet Suzuki-san at 5pm here.

[romaji] suzuki-san to, go ji ni koko de au koto ni natteiru.

22
May
10

Study Tip 1 – Ruler Magic

Hey there guys ^_^

Just thought I’d share a little genius that struck me. It might not be genius to you – but it’s like the answer to my search for ease of use, less preparation, and quick to get studying!

So the story goes that I have had in my possession a cool ruler in the  CheckAge set by Zebra that is red on one half and green on the other. It comes with a red marker and red pen. When I got it, I’ve always thought it was great! Now I’ve got a hide-the-word-you-are-studying study method – like we all used to do back in highschool when we were studying for a test or something… Now the thing is, unlike in highschool, I didn’t have as much luxury of time in writing that humongous amount of vocabulary to learn in such small time. So though its a wonderful product, it got stashed away in my pencil case.

ruler and marker from the checkage set by Zebra

Great tool for studying

Anyhow, I’ve moved my study method from the whiteboard to the mobile. It’s great because we all carry our mobile and now there are apps available to list down just about anything. I installed some japanese fonts, japanese input and some mdict mobile app and in no time, I was jotting down every unknown word in word mobile or excel mobile. I thought I’d just look for a flash card app and load all those words to review later. But that is where I got stuck! There were no good enough apps for it. If there were, I’d have to input everything I’ve already inputted (something I think is very counterproductive)… no way… well, not now anyway… I’ll get to it later, so I thought to myself. But like everything that we put off it goes into the “maybe or maybe never” list of things to do. ^_^

Now you see it...

Now you dont!

I know, I know… you probably know where I’m going with all this so let’s get straight to the point.

Pad, marker, and ruler to ruler and phone

I thought what if we combined those two methods? So, I launched my word list, formatted the kanji and hiragana readings to fuschia and the english meanings into cyan (why those colors? Patience my dear, patience … read on).

Fuschia for the kanji and hiragana - cyan for the english

red part for studying kanji and hiragana

green for studying the meanings

And voila!

I got myself a great seamless learn-input-study-review method with just my phone and a great ruler. ^_^

I just format the text’s colors and overlay it with the ruler when it’s time to study on the go.

I don’t know about you, but believe me, it’s super convenient and totally not counterproductive.

By the way, instead of red, I chose fuschia because the text totally vanishes. So with cyan for the green.

Your phone doesn’t have to support word mobile – it can be anything! Heck, it can even be NOT a phone for all you care! Like let’s see, there are iphones, itouches, anything you carry around with you that can be formatted into colors. It can even be a notebook (and I mean both the netbook notebook and the notebook made of paper).

The important thing is that its where you first put all you learn into.

If you write all your stuff on a pad, go ahead and get a ballpen that switches red and green (not necessarily of those colors though) of sorts.

A side note though: If you really want to make kanji stick (and I mean remembering it), you got to write it down. Nothing beats writing it down. And nothing beats reviewing. That – you can make easier but cannot do without if you really want to get somewhere with this. ^_^

That’s it! I hope that struck some chord in you and gets you looking for more creative and fun ways to take the boring out of studying something we’re really into. ^_^ I know that’s seems contrary but contrary to popular belief, sometimes when the hard work gets heavier the most interesting stuff in the long run will be overruled by the pain of effort… ^_^ So go keep loving what you love to do… ^_^