| I know you want to get started on the kanji but WHOA there! You really ought to start with hiragana and katakana first. There are only a few dozen of each, and you can't read Japanese without them. Plus, they're much simpler than kanji - typically only two or three strokes each, as opposed to twenty or more strokes for the more complicated kanji. So they're a great way to ease your way in to the written language. どうぞ! | ||
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| Let's Learn Hiragana: First Book of Japanes...
by Yasuko Kosaka Mitamura £5.79 This was the first book I bought to help me with hiragana, and it worked a treat. Good pacing, helpful examples and plentiful ... | Let's Learn Katakana: Second Book of Basic ...
by Yasuko Kosaka Mitamura £5.69 The sister volume to Let's Learn Hiragana, this again is an extremely useful book with plenty of examples and writing practice... | Kana Pict-o-Graphix: Mnemonics for Japanese...
by Michael Rowley £4.17 |
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| Kanji and Kana: A Handbook and Dictionary o...
by Wolfgang Hadamitzky £11.54 Probably most useful as a syllabus of sorts, this book takes you through the 2,000 most common kanji, giving you a solid frame... | Easy Kana Workbook: Basic Practice in Hirag...
by Rita Lampkin £4.36 | Jimi's Workbook of Japanese: A Motivating M...
by Peter X. Takahashi |
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| Remembering the Kana: Hiragana and Katakana
by James W. Heisig | Beginner's Kana Workbook
by Fujihiko Kaneda £6.29 | Easy Hiragana: First Steps to Reading and W...
by Fujihiko Kaneda £5.68 |
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