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allthingsastrology: Iroh & The Four Elements ♈ ♌ ♐“Fire is the element of power. The people of the Fire Nation have desire and will, and the energy and drive to achieve what they want.” ♉ ♍ ♑”Earth is the element of substance. The people of the Earth Kingdom are diverse and strong. They are persistent and enduring.” ♊ ♎ ♒”Air […]

For the point about writing about characters that never show up, it’s the fact that they don’t have much there that gives something great to build off of. And the fact that they’re interesting even though they have so little real importance to the story makes it even more fun to both read and write. So yha at least one f your followers would be like “Cool omg I can’t wait to read this!! So lucky to have found this rper to follow.” ^^

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AHAAAA <3333 THANK YOU. That totally makes my day. 

SET SAILS FOR AYANOKOJI TOWN

Hey, I can imagine you get this question often, but I might as well ask. Where exactly did you learn to speak Japanese? I know everyone has different learning styles, but I figure I might as well ask.

cubewatermelon:

Heya, I thought I’d give a bit of an updated response to this as my skills are progressing!

For those unaware, I had VERY little Japanese knowledge when I got here. I could recognize different hiragana and katakana okay, and knew all the giant nerd words, but that was about it.

Since then, I’ve used a variety of resources to varying degrees.

Google Translate on my phone has been super helpful, especially since it lets me write in and check kanji that I’m unfamiliar with.

I’ve also been studying the Genki textbooks, which are a bit difficult for self-study but are super helpful in checking my understanding of grammar and such.

For Kanji, I’ve actually just been using some workbooks I got in Daisou that are intended for first and second grader study XD It’s slow going but there’s no easy way to learn kanji.

Now that my level’s improved a bit, I’ll occasionally read through easier manga like Yotsuba!. It spells out all the kanji for you, so it’s really easy to recognize words you know (but don’t know the kanji for) and to look up other kanji that was important enough to be included in something of that level. (If you try to learn kanji from more advanced manga/other material, you’ll end up learning a LOT of kanji that isn’t exactly essential to daily life. Not that that’s a bad thing, but you gotta prioritize when you’re living here!)

I also get a lot of help from various coworkers who know English and other ALTs who are better at Japanese than me.

So yeah, obviously studying any new language is a long and complicated process =3=;; But everyone is right when they say that being thrown into that language’s culture is a huge help. There’s no way I would have gotten this far if I wasn’t living in Japan, and I’m still kinda proud of how far I’ve come since getting here! But I have so very far to go, and there’s no way I’ll be truly fluent by the time I head home.

But imma do my best! >:0

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skyedream75: A-1 Pictures: “I have a great idea! Let’s introduce Hakuba early!” Fans: “Sure! Sounds great!” A-1 Pictures: “And then let’s just completely ignore the fact that we did and pretend he doesn’t exist!” Fans: “Su—-wait, what?”

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marclearninglanguages: nisha-no-nihongo: Learn Kanji by radicals instead of by strokes Kanji is made up of parts called radicals. If you learn by strokes you will sometimes have over 15 strokes. But if you learn the radicals, kanji becomes much more simple. Radicals are like building blocks and you only need 2-4 to put together a […]