Also NHK easy or whatever its called where they show the furigana for each kanji.
I would recommend starting with a radicals deck on anki (or DM me and ill send you a spreadsheet I made). If you have a reasonable grasp of the 215 radicals then kanji becomes a little simpler. Not entirely necessary tho
Genki is rly good as a textbook tho and it's available for piracy pretty easily
Learning the radicals is useful, but after that, one should learn characters not by xemselves, but in combination within words. One character can have multiple meanings, and unless it is an specific character, or one used only in one and only one context, then it is best to learn it in pairs. The best way to learn would be by learning the strokes first, then the radicals xemselves, and then look at how pretty much every single character is a combination of another character you learnt, (like 輸 is composed of 車 , 人 , 一 , 月 , and 刂, or 魔 which is composed of 广 , 木 , 木 and 鬼 ). I would reccomend learning with a shape based input method so one can retain the characters more easily (considering the fact that most of the time you are not going to actually write characters, but type xem using an IME), but that is a little too eccentric, although i would reccomend it to anyone that doesn't want to forget characters easily and wants to be able to write xem down, not just rely on the pronunciation/the input method that converts the pronunciation into a list of reccomended characters.
Yeah I am not denying that, but the thing with j#p#n#se is that knowing the entire word rather than one character gives you more context and ends up being more expressive rather than if you were to say one character, kinda like in english where you could say "It's really hot right meow" or be more expressive and say "It's scorching hot right meow". For example: 憂 means sad, melancholic, hopeless, and 鬰 also has a somewhat similar connotation, meaning depressed, gloomy, despodent, but it makes more sense to use 憂鬰 so as to be more specific when referring to depression/state of depression. Another example is with the word poor as in lacking in money/destitute, which is 貧窮; you can use both by xemselves to mean the same thing, but you narrow down the choices when you use the whole word rather than 貧 or 窮 by xemselves. Just like in english you could say sad for when in an state of gloomyness, you could also use other words to say the same and be more precise, and as to be less ambiguous, since you could write one of the characters by xemselves but could confuse with another meaning. I don't have examples in english for the aforementioned case but I hope you get the idea. Hope that helps!
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Also NHK easy or whatever its called where they show the furigana for each kanji.
I would recommend starting with a radicals deck on anki (or DM me and ill send you a spreadsheet I made). If you have a reasonable grasp of the 215 radicals then kanji becomes a little simpler. Not entirely necessary tho
Genki is rly good as a textbook tho and it's available for piracy pretty easily
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Learning the radicals is useful, but after that, one should learn characters not by xemselves, but in combination within words. One character can have multiple meanings, and unless it is an specific character, or one used only in one and only one context, then it is best to learn it in pairs. The best way to learn would be by learning the strokes first, then the radicals xemselves, and then look at how pretty much every single character is a combination of another character you learnt, (like 輸 is composed of 車 , 人 , 一 , 月 , and 刂, or 魔 which is composed of 广 , 木 , 木 and 鬼 ). I would reccomend learning with a shape based input method so one can retain the characters more easily (considering the fact that most of the time you are not going to actually write characters, but type xem using an IME), but that is a little too eccentric, although i would reccomend it to anyone that doesn't want to forget characters easily and wants to be able to write xem down, not just rely on the pronunciation/the input method that converts the pronunciation into a list of reccomended characters.
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I found the decks with the kanji in most common context to be useful
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Yeah I am not denying that, but the thing with j#p#n#se is that knowing the entire word rather than one character gives you more context and ends up being more expressive rather than if you were to say one character, kinda like in english where you could say "It's really hot right meow" or be more expressive and say "It's scorching hot right meow". For example: 憂 means sad, melancholic, hopeless, and 鬰 also has a somewhat similar connotation, meaning depressed, gloomy, despodent, but it makes more sense to use 憂鬰 so as to be more specific when referring to depression/state of depression. Another example is with the word poor as in lacking in money/destitute, which is 貧窮; you can use both by xemselves to mean the same thing, but you narrow down the choices when you use the whole word rather than 貧 or 窮 by xemselves. Just like in english you could say sad for when in an state of gloomyness, you could also use other words to say the same and be more precise, and as to be less ambiguous, since you could write one of the characters by xemselves but could confuse with another meaning. I don't have examples in english for the aforementioned case but I hope you get the idea. Hope that helps!
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japanese is just endless honestly, i felt it was prudent to focus on the most common ones to streamline learning
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That's great and all, but I asked for my burger without cheese.
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