![]() ![]() It's like a textbook but in app format, so it's really interactive, with a lot of audio clips and a little test at the end of each chapter. But I have to recommend Human Japanese, cause I think it's the best for beginners. By biggest problem with the app is that it's always landscape, so I have to turn my phone to use it. I would absolutely recommend giving it a try. Human Japanese is not at all like Duolingo, but it's well done and, I think, very helpful. ![]() Some lessons also have something like a vocabulary matching game at the end, which isn't required to continue to the next lesson. It also mentions cultural details, which is nice and keeps things from getting boring.Įvery word and sentence has an audio clip that you can play to listen to a native speaker say the word, but the only interactivity there really is would be the short quiz at the end of each lesson. They explain things better than Duolingo does, which is helpful when dealing with a language so different from your own. Each lessons reads like someone is explaining something to you, rather than overly technical exposition of basic ideas. The lessons are excellent at explaining things, like grammar features. I've only ever used the Lite app for Human Japanese, and I enjoy it. ![]() I'm sure that, eventually, we'll have Chinese and Japanese (I mean, we're getting Korean), but I don't see it being any time soon, y'know? Well, when it comes to the incubator, it's done entirely by volunteers, so to get something added, a few native speakers have to be incredibly devoted to making it happen.
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