When I first listened to this, I could barely understand anything, but after listening to it on loop for a few hours, the words just seem to jump out at me! Don't be discouraged if you can't understand on the first listen through. Even if it doesn't feel like it, your brain is working to understand. 先生、ありがとうございます!
@hadilal-sewaiee76764 жыл бұрын
Thank you ... I needed this motivation 🌹
@jqizh93594 жыл бұрын
Thanks I really appreciate it. Really made me look forward to the future❤️ Stay safe! Much love
@Leo-eh4su3 жыл бұрын
thank you for bing supportive... even to strangers. im learning Japanese bc i would like to verbally communicate with my family. thank you for the kind message!! 🙏💜💜
@pazu22223 жыл бұрын
Trust me, what this guy said is real. It really did happened to me, thank dude!!
@jackneals55852 жыл бұрын
AJATTERS UNITE!!! HAHA
@MidosujiSen4 жыл бұрын
I understand and don't understand at the same time, this is such a weird feeling lol.
@lillakrasznai39404 жыл бұрын
You are not alone ;-).
@sigmareaver6804 жыл бұрын
Kinda like a vague fuzzy intuition of the topic huh
@King-Latte4 жыл бұрын
I feel like I understand the sentence while it is being spoken. Though as soon as the sentence comes to an end, I forget what was said and lose the understanding... I wonder if practice can even fix this issue.
@meisteryassine96544 жыл бұрын
same here
@lukesnow82644 жыл бұрын
Matt vs. Japan, MIA.
@zerozee77185 жыл бұрын
Though i don't understand, i'll just keep listening. Just to make my ears get used to japanese. Thank you for making this and look forward for another.
@cunjoz5 жыл бұрын
AJATT?
@spartan998764 жыл бұрын
@@cunjoz MIA massimmersionapproach.com/
@yolomolo54724 жыл бұрын
Have you learned Japanese yet?
@Xx0Mystic0xX4 жыл бұрын
Same, it's a process. We just have to be patient. We'll get it in time no doubt.
@sha.aesthetic4 жыл бұрын
same :)
@linam.96755 жыл бұрын
You dont give off a robotic attitude at all! I find your way of speech calm and warm. Please do more of these videos! I think that it would be helpful to find a subject or a theme for your podcast, like speaking about life in japan and japanese cultural things. It would also be convenient to have someone to interview or talk to.. Thanks for this! ! !
@melissaaaltonen82705 жыл бұрын
Thank you. You are a joy to listen to. I hope more people find this podcast. I have no experience in making podcasts / videos, and I'm sorry I can't offer any practical advice. If it's any consolation, I thought this podcast was perfect and didn't need any improving on ^_^ Even if you don't have all the newest equipment, your manner is very pleasant and your articulation is crystal clear. Even a beginner level Japanese learner can distinguish all the words, even when you're speaking relatively freely. Thank you for taking the time to record this.
@wakitakiwakitaki3 жыл бұрын
This is super helpful for intermediate students of Japanese. Very natural, spontaneous, and NOT annoying. Also, because your diction is very clear, the auto-generated Japanese captions are pretty accurate. Thanks!
I'm at the level where I understand like every fifth word of this. I can't wait to come back some time in the future and be able to understand it all.
@sevreyes26533 жыл бұрын
how you doin now?
@mariamarciatj5 жыл бұрын
Thank you very much for making time to make videos for us. The way you explain is always very easy to understand. I hope you continue making videos for us. Please don't worry about tools/editing skills/special effects in your videos, as I think your content is so good I personally don't even realize these until you mention it here. Looking forward to your next video/instagram post! 🤗
@OwenKufta4 жыл бұрын
Im using your podcasts to learn japanese through the M.I.A (Mass Immersion Approach) and they're helping! ありがとうございます!
@ConnorChambers-x7u3 жыл бұрын
@BatJoker Start watching Matt vs Japan videos and other youtubers its too much for a comment to explain
@stefanortlip2 жыл бұрын
is that like the AJATT method? (all japanese all the time)
@critcore7364 жыл бұрын
one day I'll be able to understand this
@tessnut5975 жыл бұрын
あっき先生!Podcastを初めて、おめでとうございます! It was great listening to your podcast. Please continue making them. 作ってくれて どうもありがとうございます。
@mialee34625 жыл бұрын
You’re not just one of the best teachers EVER, but a super duper good JAPANESE teacher as well! 👍👍👍 I always appreciate your help and support. 🤗
@MitsiOwOce2 жыл бұрын
Your voice is just easy to listen to tbh, I'm gonna be putting this on when I'm not actively studying, its perfect cause you're using japanese like you're talking to someone learning japanese but its just natural and its just amazing. I can't really explain it but all i wanna say is thank you.
@maximparker4624 жыл бұрын
I'm still trying to interpret the language but you have a very cheerful tone and wonderful voice that is pleasant to listen to! Thank you.
@Ironmaiden6544 жыл бұрын
I've been home from Japan for a year, and listening to you speak has motivated me to continue doing my best in Japanese after working there for a year!
@styledjosh4 жыл бұрын
This is exactly what I have been looking for! Thank you for making these :)
I cannot understand all because my level is not enought but I can sort sounds and His pronunciation is so clear helps a lot for listening
@vanburrard22735 жыл бұрын
I didn't think this would work very well. It did! Interesting, smooth, engaging. I was surprised at how much I understood. Took me many small bits, as I would zone out and need to take a break, but excellent practice. This kind of unscripted, normal language is much better than movies, anime, speeches that are rehearsed. This is more natural and useful. And I totally agree about ことわざ。面白いけどあんまり役に立たない。Not sure why some students and teachers think it's worth class time. とにかく、相変わらずアッキー先生は。。。Well done!!! andありがとうございます!
wow. I remember listening to this last year and not understanding most of the things he is saying. Now I understand probably around 60%-70%. And it wasn't like I study throughout the year, since I had a really important exam which probably consumed around 3 months of my time. In fact, I had a really long pause until July, which was when I started doing Anki decks again and stuffs.
@anhthuls984 жыл бұрын
Thank you for making this video. I have been finding this kind of video for a long time.
@aspirineye34124 жыл бұрын
Literally first result when you search ポッドキャスト
@ryanoheron53544 жыл бұрын
I literally listen to this while I read and fall asleep, it's so easy to understand and relax. 毎晩このプレイリスト を聞きながら本を読みます。 リラックス最高の方法思います。ありがとうございます先生
Ni puta idea de lo k dise, pero me ha ayudado mucho a la hora de identificar el idioma, justo lo k necesitaba. Gracias Sambon Juku
@kingj68914 жыл бұрын
Love the energy
@Milark5 жыл бұрын
This was so helpful! Looking forward to more episodes. It’s amazing listening practice. Watching anime is also great practice, but I understand this. So it’s much nicer.
34:00 英語でこれ似ている表現がある *"No news is good news"* '何の知らせがないとすべては順調'みたいな意味
@olenaboyko19355 жыл бұрын
This is great! ありがとうございます。
@r0zzey4 жыл бұрын
先生、そのポッドキャストシリーズで、先生の心というか、個人的なところが少しわかるようになって、私にはとても楽しいです。 確かに、文法・ひらがなの動画では、先生がとても真面目に見えると思いますが、話題と状況に合う態度ですし、先生の分かりやすい説明とコメント欄を読んでいるところで、親切さがちゃんと通じると思います。そして、先生が他のユーチューバーとのビデオで登場するとき、もっとリラックスな話し方をしてるところも見れます。ですから、いろんな場面でいろんな話し方お見せていただいてるのは、私にとってreal-life Japanese の勉強になりますし、とてもいいと思います。いつも素敵な動画を投稿してくださって、ありがとうございます。 あと、"No news is good news" と言うことわざが英語でもあります!
@KenKaneki-mk3py4 жыл бұрын
めっちゃ面白くて、役立つ、そのようなポッドキャスト!ありがとうございます!!
@hadilqasem26344 жыл бұрын
Why on earth this languane is soo beautiful 😢❤ konnechiwa from Arab world menna san ❤🌻
@vaded21353 жыл бұрын
Konnichiwa* Minna*
@ligiaberglaescuelainvisible5 жыл бұрын
Gracias siempre :) あっきさんのビデオはいつもとても便利、教えるの方は簡単、日本語だけのビデオもすごいよ。ありがとうこざいます。I’m just in a beginner level but this kind of videos are perfect even if I don’t understand (yet) 100% of the meaning. Gracias Akki!
@addisonrae66964 жыл бұрын
Thank you! You're doing great and we appreciate you doing these videos!
I enjoy listening to Japanese even though I understand nothing except some words ... such a beautiful language that i need to learn ... arigato gozaymas for the absolutely astonishing podcast 🌹
I agree that kotowaza are not useful in most conversations. I think your conversation is fascinating because of how considerate, interesting, and intelligent you are. You are very natural in sharing your stories and thoughts. Not looking into the camera all the time gives me the feeling I am sitting next to you. I recently studied kanji for KanKen 6 and it made my reading better, but it didn't help with communication. Listening to you, I miss a few words, and sometimes I "lose the thread" of your sentence. When you edit, I might suggest, add a context title, like "Story about my Dad" or "What would you like to learn?" "How to subscribe."in the blank space in front of your face on the screen. It would also be a good hint to listeners that you had changed to a new hanashi. Reading the other comments, your listeners think your conversation and personality are charming. If you do this for a long time, you might lose the innocence and spontaneity of your voice and manner. It doesn't much matter what you are talking about (as long as you are interested in the topic.) What we're reacting to is the kind of Japanese guy that you are on camera. Your uncertainty and iiwake are delightful. I'm an 75-year old American, but I study Japanese everyday, and your long monologs are perfect for me to hear! This is my first video and I will go through all of them. Oh, I subscribed!
@BackiNator1234 жыл бұрын
このチャンネル見つけた。サプしてきた。二月28日から日本語勉強して頑張ります。Sandbon Radio は本当に便利なんだ。ありがとう。
@waryful34 жыл бұрын
*_Bruh, for some reason i can understand, but if you ask me what he said, word for word, i dunno, but do know_*
@さんエーブ4 жыл бұрын
Same haha. I’m like wait ik what he said and try too hard to translate it to English. Then I just lose my train of thought lol
I liked your converstation about phone calls. It seems like most young people prefer texting, and I am one of them! I always hated phone calls even before cellphones were a thing. I also get super nervous when I can to call at work... I feel like I have to get mentally ready before I call hahaha. Also thanks for the video! I undestood about 80% of what you said. I also learned how to say "No News is good News" in Japanese :)
This is great!! Please, make more podcast videos! :D
@drduck32454 жыл бұрын
I’m listening to this to attempt immersion to learn Japanese but I’m listening to my mom talk so it’s counter productive
@oflodor045 жыл бұрын
It would be nice if you had Japanese (Kanji/Hiragana/Katakana) subtitles. Having said so, I did enjoy your video - very much! I will be recommending it to friends and family studying the language.
@stefanortlip2 жыл бұрын
Plan: (1 like = 1 Kanji I learn) 1. Finish creating all 3039 flash cards to review for Remembering The Kanji by James W. Heisig (around 950 done currently because I am a student) 2. Return to Hirigana and Katakana and create review cards for them as well 3. Experiment with grammer and vocabulary (giving myself vocab words each week maybe) 4. Watching more and more media and using AJATT to pick up on every day speech and pitch accents (which will be the epitome of cancer) 5. Go to Japan for immersion and for fun 6. Look back on videos and anime/media I used to not understand and then laugh
@MarceloAllan3 жыл бұрын
I'll listen to this as many times as I need until I can understand at least half of it. Right now I understand roughly 10% of the words.
Thank you very much. I like to listen to your videos while doing Anki or as a background noise. Helps a lot! ^~^
@k_Why2 жыл бұрын
このポトキャストは一年前最初に聞いていました。この間何も分かりませんでした。昨日がそれを思い出したそしてもう一度聞いていました。急に最初の五分は全部分かています。その後僕の集中は消えますけど。 I wrote this in japanese to kind of be able to track my progress later on when i get better and laugh at the obvious mistakes i made. Anyway, i think its really amazing that there's barely a word now that i dont understand and if theres something that i dont know i can kinda infer it from context. And if i concentrate a lot i dont even have to pause at all to then understand it in hindsight, but can just kinda understand the sentences in real time. (For context i didnt learn japanese for a full year. I got real motivated twice over the span of a year and learned for about a month each and i guess i am in the 3rd and hopefully final motivation cycle right now, working really hard to make learning a habit so that i dont have to rely on motivation.)
@sitifarizasafira14534 жыл бұрын
I'm sad I want to understand since everyone said this podcast is a joy to listen. I'm learning Japanese these day so I really need word of comfort from those who are in the same page as me😂
@bambi.nisseni4 жыл бұрын
I just recently started learning on my own with a few online sources that are currrently teaching me hiragana, and i'm the kind of person who discourages their-self , but i want to try and stick with learning Japanese. so i feel you, and all i can say by the looks of it is it's going to be a long road.
@zuki94254 жыл бұрын
@@bambi.nisseni discord.gg/japanese me too been on and off for years if you want a community join this server
@rockaura17174 жыл бұрын
Today marks the day that i re pick up Japanese. I had 4 months of practice before i had to move and couldnt go to classes and i forgot everything in that time. I will use this podcast and one day i will understand this 100%
@dwisanmadi20415 жыл бұрын
やっぱり偉い先生です
@eltacocosmico99284 жыл бұрын
Ni entendí nada pero leí que una de las recomendaciones para aprender un idioma es escuchar música y poscats en ese idioma, so aquí estoy :^
The feeling of understand but don’t understand often comes from us trying to translate it in our heads to english, which can take time or cause some confusion. but if we are confident we know what hes saying we can understand and practice pausing and replying in japanese if your at that level. That way you can prove to yourself that you are capable of understanding and replying. Remember there is no need to translate after a certain level. Unless it still helps ofc.
@ポップパンク和訳2 жыл бұрын
I notice that with a lot of monolingual learners (especially in english) they can't help but think of English as the normal language and Japanese as the language to encrypt. If you happen to be fluent in another language, try using that intuition you have with that other language. Do you really translate in your head with that language? That's why bilingual people have an advantage over language learning than monolingual people. I actually wonder what it's like being monolingual tbh.
@bisvic5 жыл бұрын
i've been listening a podcast by name Na Casual Nihongo, they talk about kansai-ben, it is very helpfull, i think, maybe if you see, some ideas appear. I don't have any good sugestions but 楽しみにしています! PS: Akkie-sensei are very handsome with glasses.
@bluebiegrace18283 жыл бұрын
Wakarimasen. But it’s ear training for me. Thank you for sharing your video.
@danielkun914 жыл бұрын
Ki ni natta! Omoshirokute zenbu kikimashita. Zutto mae kara ii podcast wo kiite mitai to omotte, kyou wa mitsukemashita Arigatou gozaimasu :)
@Kreedo11104 жыл бұрын
you have transcripts for this podcast? it would be so much help learning vocabulary!
@Unknown-d6e1y4 жыл бұрын
the words are too fast for me, idk how yall keep up with the words
@jon94284 жыл бұрын
@@Unknown-d6e1y the more words you learn the more they will pop out. You have to study vocab for immersion to pay off
I happen to have met a few Japanese people who have no problem with speaking on the phone, I literally hate speaking on the phone and only do it with family and a few Japanese friends, most of my western friends are like me. However it may be that Japanese who have foreign friends are more open and sociable than usual so have no problem talking on the phone. I found it so weird that the sayings you mentioned both had English equivalents (I think), "no news is good news" and "slow and steady wins the race". I often use a dictionary online to check the meaning of the words I'm using in my own language as I often hear words that I have an idea of what they mean but don't actually really know what they mean. Sometimes I look up words in Japanese or Chinese and I have no idea what the meaning of the English translation is...