![]() That said, it's got thousands of sentences sorted by frequency and if you wanted an alternative to making one's own 10k sentence deck this might plausibly work. It gives complicated grammar immediately, only has TTS (not natural audio like other decks), and has rough gist user submitted translations from a sentence website so translations aren't always accurate. Not for the faint of the heart, if you wanted you could try Clozemaster Japanese. From what I can tell, Tango covers grammar points in sentences on purpose whereas core 2k/6k tends to not use a big variety of grammar in sentences (hence I appreciate nukemarines llj for including Tae Kim's Grammar Guide sentences for that). Some other good decks people like: Tango 5 and Tango 4 then making your own anki deck from immersion words you look up, core 2k/6k (personally I'd pick any ordered by common words). But for 1 single resource to use, it works pretty good. I don't think it's the best, as I think using multiple resources may allow for better material for you personally. I could just go through it, practice trying to read/watch japanese or play Japanese games and look up words when I want, continue through it, repeat. If using just one resource is easier for you, I've found these very useful because I didn't have to go find something else for studying different things. They have listening and reading practice. Nukemarine's LLJ 1-12 covers Kanji, Tae Kim's Grammar Guide, and the core 2k/6k common words. You may also want to look up some online article that explains how Japanese uses Kanji as words or word roots, hiragana for conjugation and words and particles, and katakana for foreign words and emphasis. And before that look up any free app teaching hiragana and katakana (ideally with mnemonics like "あ a - ahhhh looks like a person spinning and falling"), and look up any article online listing the "Kanji radicals" so you have an idea of the ~200 symbols that are used to make Kanji. You might want to use to help with giving you mnemonic stories to remember Kanji. If you are willing to use memrise, I recommend Nukemarine Let's Learn Japanese (LLJ) courses 1-12.
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