
Learn everyday Japanese with Fun to Learn Japanese at Sendagaya by watching dialogues, practicing aloud with the teacher, and mastering key expressions and grammar through guided exercises.
How to study Japanese using -Fun to Learn Japanese at Sendagaya-
Learn how to greet someone for the first time in Japanese, introduce yourself with name and occupation, and use proper closing phrases to set a good relationship.
Practice role-play to ask whether Ellen is a company employee, using the topic particle は and a Japanese honorific, and learn how to turn a declarative sentence into a question.
Explore hiragana and katakana, the 46-character phonetic scripts. Learn how diacritics and vowel length modify sounds, and how small versions connect characters for pronunciation.
Learn practical japanese for restaurant interactions, including greetings, making requests, and ordering oyakodon and a beer. Practice phrases like 'I'd like oyakodon and a beer, please' and confirming understanding.
Master basic japanese questions to identify unknown items in shops and restaurants, practice the dialogue with staff, and learn how to ask 'what is this' using core question words.
Study the numbers from one to ten in Japanese, guided by a song and interactive counting practice.
Learn to read Japanese numbers from 11 upward, including hundred, thousand, 10000, and hundred million. Read from the largest digit left to right, with examples like 27 and 102.
Learn how to ask for prices in Japanese by practicing the how much is the coffee pattern, using yen, with an example of 350 yen, and role-play dialogue.
Learn to start a conversation and ask about belongings using the Japanese possessive particle no, as in 'is this your pen?', with practice answering in Japanese.
Learn how to ask where the Japanese sweets department is, using location expressions for near, far, and intermediate distance, through a role-play dialogue.
Learn counting in Japanese, practice polite requests like 'I want three, please,' and phrases for buying Sakura Monte.
Learn to express distance and describe places in Japanese in lesson 12 at Sendagaya. Apply Kamakura and Tokyo with adjectives like convenient and quiet.
Learn to ask if something is expensive in Japanese using takai and kunai, converting declaratives into questions through car and watch role-plays with the teacher.
Learn to form declarative, interrogative, and negative sentences in Japanese, using the lesson's examples like asking whether this town is quiet and repeating after the teacher.
Learn practical Japanese phrases for asking where someone lives, noting how to describe a place as good, and practice listening and repeating with example locations like Kamakura and Nakano.
Learn to express existence and location in Japanese using the location particle, including being in the copy room. Practice asking where someone is and using yo to share information.
Learn to ask and answer 'where is it' in Japanese using location particles, with examples like the envelope in the drawer, on the shelf, or under the desk.
Practice Japanese particles for object and destination with simple sentences like I clean my room and I go to a department store, exploring weekend questions.
Learn Japanese conversation patterns for negative and affirmative responses, including 'do you' questions and 'you mustn't' forms, with examples like 'no, I do not'.
Learn essential Japanese for amusement park scenes, describing roller coasters, ferris wheels, aquariums, and fish, and practice asking what's there with guided repetition.
Learn to ask about class start and end times in Japanese using time expressions and start/end time particles, with examples like nine to twelve forty.
Students practice past tense sentences such as 'I played soccer yesterday' and repeat after the teacher to reinforce Japanese conversation patterns.
Practice forming negative past tense in Japanese by answering 'did you travel last year?' and turning verbs into negative forms, with guided repetition of expressions from the dialogue.
Practice Japanese time expressions and conversation patterns for asking and answering what time you got home, using exact time and approximate time phrases like around seven.
Learn how to invite someone to a meal in Japanese, using phrases to confirm availability and express agreement, with practical dialogue examples for going out together.
Learn polite Japanese responses to invitations, practicing phrases like 'it sounds good, but tomorrow might be a little difficult.' Understand how to decline without direct refusal in social situations.
Explore the quirky caption full of names and brands, from Hong Kong and Tokyo references to MasterCard and Japanese accent, as you learn Japanese at Sendagaya level 1.
“Fun to Learn Japanese at Sendagaya - Level1” is the best fit for the people all around the world, who are learning Japanese as beginners or whose level is elementary Level.
If you want to learn not only Japanese conversations and expressions , but also pronunciation as well, then this course is definitely the one you are looking for !
This course is developed by “Sendagaya Japanese Institute”, a Tokyo-based Japanese language school with over 45 years history.
This course is designed for Japanese beginners to easily acquire the essence of the language; structure, characters, and pronunciation, by learning familiar everyday expressions. All of the narration and words contain English subtitles, so that beginners can freely study Japanese in this course.
In each section, you will learn conversations in daily scenes with common expressions and words. By learning them in context with specific scenes, you will be able to remember them effectively.
You will have a lot of “Listen and Repeat” exercises in each section. If you persist with these exercises, you will embed each expression with natural pronunciation and intonation, and open the door to boost your spoken fluency.
If you complete this course, you will reach the A1 level on the Japanese CEFR.
Today is the best time to start. Let’s get started !