Transcript: hi there, steve kaufmann here. i was asked to do a video, today in fact, about the differences between learning japanese and chinese.. Learning mandarin chinese (traditional, not simplified) for at least three years would be best to start with, followed by japanese (the grammar will be a pain but every japanese learner’s fear— kanji— will be more intuitive to you), and then lastly korean (with their easy alphabet and similar grammar to japanese, it will be a breeze to. - the relation of chinese, japanese and korean (cjk) part 3/5 if you’re interested in learning all three languages, chinese characters are the key. you can opt not (or delay) to learn chinese.
Korean hangul, japanese hiragana or kanji, or chinese mandarin pinyin made easy! lingodeer is made for learners from outside of asia and new to its mysterious and beautiful languages. learning your favorite asian language with one app is now a dream came true.. From the pure learning effort learning korean should be a bit easier, since korean uses the phonetic hangul system of 19 symbols, as opposed to the japanese syllable alphabeths hiragana and katakana, each having 50 characters, plus the roughly 2000 kanji characters, you have to learn.. Having said that, grammar in korean and japanese are extremely similar–in fact i think you can safely consider them the same. however, japanese is a simple language to learn for a korean speaker, but korean is a challenging language to learn for a japanese speaker..
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