Learning Japanese
You know three months goes by very, very quickly. Suppose you start a new language, especially a very different language like Japanese. In that case, three months go by very quickly and even suggest that you could be at a B-2 level after three months is in real terms, maybe not in terms of Benny’s objectives, which is to stimulate interest in language learning. Still, from a realistic point of view, it’s not achievable. I don’t want to start a controversy, but I think it is essential to make the point and state my beliefs. My beliefs, therefore, are that language learning is enriching not only because of what we can achieve, i.e., potentially fluency in the language, but the actual process itself. It’s a process of discovery. It’s an enjoyable one. The brain learns, but it learns slowly. Japanese is a language so distinct from most others; Japanese has an air of mystery about it. Though no longer considered a linguistic isolate, Japanese forms a family with only the Ryukyuan languages, and its origin remains uncertain. For English speakers, at least, it is considered one of the most challenging languages to master. The Japanese language is an East Asian language spoken by about 128 million people, primarily in Japan, where it is the national language. Japan is on the bucket list to visit for anyone who loves traveling and it’s an advantage to learn Japanese and be able to speak and communicate in Japanese when you’re in Japan. There are three different alphabets — hiragana, katakana and kanji are used in combination with each other and these are differentiated both by their distinct appearances and by their use.


