Personally, I think Japanese has a greater prospect than Korean, although more and more people are learning Japanese. It is no exaggeration to say that at least two or three out of a dozen people must be learning Japanese or know some Japanese. But I still think so. Because in our country, there are more Japanese companies than Korean companies, and even if Korean companies developed in which year, think about it. Besides Koreans, there is another Korean in China. How many Koreans will compete for our jobs, not to mention that the Korean they speak will definitely be more obvious than ours, and they will definitely know more about Korean culture than us. I don't think we can beat them. But I think if you are proficient in Japanese and Korean, your English is good, and if you can master at least three foreign languages fluently, I think you will be very popular. After all, the development trend of small languages is getting bigger and bigger now, but after all, English is still the lingua franca in the world, and I think English is also a language that must be mastered.
Then the difficulty of Japanese and Korean, I have never learned Korean, but there has always been a saying in our circle that Japanese is more difficult to learn and Korean is easier to learn. I don't know Korean, but Japanese is true. Japanese pays more attention to the basics, so you must be very serious when you start learning. You must remember 50 notes. At the beginning, our teacher forced me to memorize 50 notes for two afternoons. Very painful. It's really hard to remember at first, but memorizing it will be very stressful. Here I can give the landlord a trick. You can put it in that pocket and carry it with you at any time, but it can't be too small. You fill in Hiragana on the front, write the corresponding pronunciations on the back, recite them slowly and repeatedly one by one, and then check them yourself, one by one. If you really can't think of it, just turn it over and look at the pronunciation, then recite this pseudonym several times for students to check, and katakana is also acceptable. It's better to recite Hiragana first. Katakana is a little difficult. Katakana is a foreign word because until you see a pseudonym, you can jump out of the pronunciation of it without thinking. The primary content after that is actually quite simple, mainly memorizing, as long as the landlord is willing to work hard. It is suggested that the landlord buy a set for beginners of Japanese, which is not bad. We all learned with this set of books, and then changed to standard Japanese for intermediate level. By the way, Japanese is divided into five levels. It was originally Level 4, but it was changed this year. Because there are many people studying it, it is difficult to change it. Grade 1 highest.
It can be said that reciting is good at the primary level. Besides, if you are careful in class, you can understand grammar. You'd better draw every grammatical point, draw inferences and make sentences, and you'll have a comprehensive understanding. But from the beginning to the intermediate level, the difficulty rises immediately, so you should study hard and seriously, so it's not just a matter of memorizing, a lot of reading questions, a lot of grammar, a lot of words, and copying notes will be very tiring. . . . Well, I can only say that I have a headache when I look at it. My class basically belongs to wandering in the sky, hehe. . .
Then there is the problem of the school. I don't think it's necessary for the landlord to go to a college specializing in Japanese, because what you learn at school, such as applied Japanese and business Japanese, can only be scratched, and it took three years to get Grade 2. I think the landlord should study a practical major and minor in Japanese, which is actually not helpful. If you can really learn knowledge, I think the landlord should find a trustworthy amateur. A local school with a good reputation for foreign language training, where you can learn a lot of Japanese knowledge, and if it is free, you can reach level 2 knowledge in 8 months, not three years at all!
I still suggest that the landlord learn a practical major first. After all, if you only know foreign languages now, your development prospects are not great. Few companies accept employees who only know foreign languages, unless you want to be a pure translator or you know a lot of foreign languages. If you know several foreign languages, it will be really popular.
Finally, I'm not from Yantai, so I can't help the landlord find a school. The landlord can check what training schools are available online, but be sure to keep your eyes open and don't be cheated, because there are many cheating schools now. Shop around, ask more about the feelings of internal students and make a field trip.
I hope my answer is helpful to the landlord. In short, I hope the landlord can gain something. Let's cheer together.
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God, first of all, I want to say a word to the coolest boy. A Japanese school teacher told me about N 1-N5. I've been talking for days. What do you think is wrong? You can go to official website to check, including when I took the grade test, that's the slogan of my admission ticket. In addition, the new difficulty standard of the grade examination is inherently more difficult than before. Isn't this obvious? Otherwise, how can there be reform? Is it necessary to say that? Originally, N 1 was more difficult than before. The landlord has never studied Japanese before, so there is no need to tell him the previous standards. Do I need to tell you the difficulty of changing N 1 to N+ 1 from this year? N2 is not level two, okay? N2 has long been changed from level 2 to 1 level. If you test N2, many words and grammar points of 1 are also involved. This was changed in 2009, right? I've experienced it myself. When our teacher gave us a simulation in 2009, our teacher said that n 2 has now been included in the question of Level 1 exam. Aren't you doing exercises in Coolestboy? Your standard was a few years ago, right? N2 has become what I said a long time ago. Indeed, I don't know where the ranges of N4 and N5 are, because N4 and N5 don't have to be tested. If you really want to take a test to prove your strength, I recommend J-TEST. The first j is cheaper than the grade exam. Secondly, personally, I think J is simpler than the grade test, but J's certificate is more conducive to studying abroad. If the landlord does not study abroad, he should take the grade test, which is more important in China.
Also, I want to say that although many people say that learning Japanese is equivalent to learning Korean, because Japanese and Korean do have many similarities, if you really learn it, you will actually find that the grammar of the two languages is very different and there are many differences. But it is true that Korean is quite simple, that is to say, we laymen who have never studied Korean will never understand the subject of language. For example, I think many laymen who have never studied Japanese are eager to learn Japanese, just like Chinese, so they can speak freely. In fact, they don't understand Japanese. Although there are many Chinese characters, many don't agree with the same word. And I don't know whether some words are not copied well in Chinese or not. They are all copied too much and copied too little, so Japanese is actually quite difficult to learn. Basically, people who have just learned Japanese characters for a few months often forget how to write Chinese characters. I was the same at the beginning, including now, it is difficult for me to write Chinese characters correctly, and people often complain that I have made some typos. Alas, they can't be changed, which is what I hope the landlord will pay attention to.
Then, in fact, I don't know the major of liberal arts in China, because I'm confused myself, but I only know that science is very popular in Japan, and many China people who come out of Japanese science are developing very well now. A few months ago, a teacher asked us if we had any seniors, majoring in science, preferably accounting. First, we went to Japan to develop an internship, with an internship of 200,000 yen, equivalent to more than RMB14,000. . Otherwise, I will volunteer immediately. hey
By the way, the landlord will also go to Japan for further study. I don't know whether the landlord wants to work in Japan or China. What should I say about domestic majors? Anyway, it's a popular major, and people who study it can transport n trains. If it is unpopular, it will be difficult to find a job. And with the current development trend, most people's work is not professional, so I suggest that the landlord find a major he likes to study. You can change it when you study in Japan. There are all kinds of majors in Japan. Choose a subject that interests you and study hard, and you will have two majors in hand and several foreign languages. It shouldn't be difficult to find an ideal job when you go back to work.
By the way, I am already applying for a visa. I want to study home economics. I think this major is quite interesting. To be honest, there are so many majors and community activities in Japan. If possible, I think the landlord can go to Japan to study in a university, and then take the postgraduate entrance examination naturally. Japanese culture class is actually much simpler than ours. That is to say, their high school level is only similar to our junior high school. I think if the landlord goes there to take the exam again and work harder, he may be admitted to a better university and feel the humanistic customs of Japan earlier. To be honest, if you want to master a language and live in their country, you will master it better and faster.
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A Le, maybe I'm really bumpy. Has the grade been changed to this? That's my fault, but that's what my Japanese teacher, foreign teacher and the president of Japan ARC told me, including the exam I took in 2009. N2 does have many words and grammars of 1, so the landlord should preview 65438 in advance if he wants to take the N2 test in the future. Anyway, whether it is based on official website's experience or my own practice, it should be of some use, as long as the landlord can learn textbook knowledge well and take notes carefully in class, and don't doze off in class like me. Hey, I took an exam on July 4th the other day, N 1. Hey, I won't say anything specifically, anyway. Many new topics have been added, which is really annoying. Why should the reform be changed to our session? Bad luck. . .
In other words, how do I feel that English is much simpler than Japanese? In Japanese, grammar must be completely integrated, but English is not necessary. Although I have completely forgotten English because I concentrate on learning Japanese now, according to my own learning method, I recite words instead of grammar. I am a lazy student, and I wander in class. The teacher talks about grammar in class. I read the cartoon below and memorized the words before the exam, but I still got an average score. I took the exam in 2008 and got 13 1. It slipped my mind. But the Japanese can't do it. Try to remember grammar and do a lot of reading and practice in Japanese. If you don't remember and don't do it, you won't do well in the exam. . .
Alas, there is a lot of nonsense when I am old, but I just want to tell the landlord that I must study hard, otherwise it is really a waste of youth and money. . . . I have a classmate, Digg, who is fluent in spoken English. His listening is also excellent, and we all admire him, but he didn't learn it in Grade One, because he is not serious at ordinary times, except playing games, but Grade One is really difficult. Please, but you have to have a first-class certificate to find a good job in China. . . Hey, don't bother.