If you have never studied Japanese before and you are wondering where on earth to begin, this guide is written for exactly you.
Not “I know a little bit of Japanese.” Not “I watched anime and picked up some words.” Zero. You are starting from the very beginning — and that is actually a great place to be.
This guide will show you what to do today, what to do this week, and how to avoid the mistakes that slow most beginners down. No fluff, no theory overload. Just a clear path forward.
| Step | What You Learn | Time Needed |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Japanese sounds and vowels | 1–2 days |
| 2 | Hiragana (46 characters) | 5–7 days |
| 3 | Katakana (46 characters) | 5–7 days |
| 4 | Survival phrases | 1 week |
| 5 | First sentence patterns | 1–2 weeks |
| 6 | Core vocabulary in context | Ongoing |
| 7 | First kanji (gently) | From week 3 |
| 8 | Listening practice | From day 1 |
| 9 | Speaking with tiny sentences | From week 2 |
I started from zero too. The key is following the steps in the right order — and not skipping ahead to the fun stuff before the basics are solid.
If You Know Absolutely No Japanese, Start Here
You do not need to “be good at languages”
One of the most common things people say before starting Japanese is: “I’m not a language person.” Set that thought aside. Japanese is learnable by ordinary people with ordinary schedules. Thousands of English speakers reach conversational fluency every year without any special language talent. What they have is a clear study method and consistent practice — both of which this guide gives you.
Japanese does have a reputation for being difficult, and it is fair to say it takes more time than Spanish or French for an English speaker. But “hard” does not mean “impossible.” It means you need a smarter plan. That is what this guide is.
What you actually need to start
- 15–30 minutes per day (even 10 minutes is a start)
- A notebook or flashcard app (Anki is free and excellent)
- A willingness to be confused sometimes — confusion is part of learning
- This guide (you already have it)
You do not need a tutor yet. You do not need to buy a textbook on day one. And you absolutely do not need to move to Japan. Everything in Steps 1 through 5 can be learned at home with free resources.
The single biggest mistake beginners make
The biggest mistake is learning Japanese in romaji (the Roman alphabet) for too long. Romaji is a crutch. It slows your reading speed, it hides the real structure of Japanese words, and it prevents you from reading real Japanese content. Many beginners spend weeks studying romaji-based vocabulary lists — and then feel helpless when they see actual Japanese text. The solution is to learn hiragana first, and to transition away from romaji within your first two weeks. This guide will show you exactly when and how.
Step 1 — Learn the Sounds Before the Scripts
Why pronunciation matters before you learn to read
Most beginners rush straight into learning hiragana characters. That is understandable — the characters look fascinating. But there is a real advantage to spending one or two sessions on Japanese pronunciation before you start memorizing symbols. If you know how each sound is supposed to sound, you will pronounce hiragana correctly from the start instead of locking in English habits that are very hard to undo later.
The five Japanese vowel sounds
Japanese has five pure vowel sounds. They do not shift or blend the way English vowels do. Learn these five, and you can pronounce almost any Japanese word:
| Vowel | Sound | English approximation | Example word |
|---|---|---|---|
| あ (a) | /a/ | Like “a” in “father” | あさ (asa) – morning |
| い (i) | /i/ | Like “ee” in “see” | いぬ (inu) – dog |
| う (u) | /ɯ/ | Shorter than “oo” in “food” | うみ (umi) – sea |
| え (e) | /e/ | Like “e” in “bed” | えき (eki) – station |
| お (o) | /o/ | Like “o” in “go” | おかね (okane) – money |
Where English speakers mishear
English speakers tend to add extra vowel sounds. The word すし (sushi) is often mispronounced “soo-shee” in English — but the Japanese う (u) here is a short, unrounded sound, almost whispered. Similarly, the word です (desu, “is/am/are”) sounds like “des” in natural speech, not “deh-soo.” The final う is devoiced (nearly silent) in many contexts. Do not panic about this now — just be aware that Japanese vowels are cleaner and shorter than English ones.
The Japanese R sound
The Japanese ら行 (ra-ri-ru-re-ro) is not the English R. It is closer to a quick flap — your tongue briefly touches the ridge behind your upper teeth, similar to the “d” in the American English word “butter.” Practice it by saying “ladder” fast and then isolating that flap. The word ありがとう (arigatou, “thank you”) will sound much more natural once you get this right.
Long vowels and double consonants
Japanese distinguishes between short and long vowels. おばさん (obasan) means “aunt” but おばあさん (obaasan) means “grandmother.” The length of the vowel changes the meaning. Similarly, a double consonant (っ before a consonant) represents a brief pause: きて (kite) means “come,” but きって (kitte) means “postage stamp.” These distinctions matter — take a moment to hear them before moving on.
Mini pronunciation checklist
- I can say all five vowels cleanly without blending
- I know the Japanese R is a flap, not an English R
- I can hear the difference between a short and long vowel
- I know that っ creates a pause (double consonant effect)
- I know that final う in words like です is often devoiced
Step 2 — Learn Hiragana Without Overcomplicating It
What hiragana is
Hiragana(ひらがな) is the first of three Japanese writing systems you need to learn. It is a syllabary — each character represents a sound (a syllable), not a letter. Think of it as Japanese’s own alphabet, but where each symbol stands for a full syllable like “ka,” “mi,” or “te” rather than a single consonant or vowel. Hiragana is used to write native Japanese words, verb endings, particles, and any word that does not have a kanji assigned to it at beginner level.
Good news: hiragana is completely systematic. Once you learn the base 46 characters, you can read anything written in hiragana.


How many characters you need to recognize
The core hiragana set is 46 characters. With voiced and combination sounds added, the total approaches 104 patterns — but you do not need to learn all of those on day one. Start with the core 46. Most beginner resources group them into rows of five (the “gojuuon” table): a-i-u-e-o, ka-ki-ku-ke-ko, and so on. Learn one row per day, and you will have the full set in about ten days.
Reading before handwriting
You do not need to handwrite hiragana perfectly before moving on. Your first goal is recognition — seeing the character and knowing the sound immediately, without hesitation. Writing practice is valuable, but do not let it block your progress. Once you can read a character without pausing, you have learned it well enough to continue.
How to test whether you actually know hiragana
The real test is whether you can read actual Japanese text, not whether you can recall each character from a chart you memorized. Find a simple Japanese sentence (children’s book level, an NHK Web Easy article, or an app like Duolingo’s Japanese course) and try to read it. If you can sound out every hiragana character — even slowly — you know hiragana. If you hesitate or guess, go back and review the characters you are unsure about.


I tested my hiragana by reading menus at Japanese restaurants. It felt slow at first, but after a week I could read every hiragana character without thinking about it.
Step 3 — Learn Katakana After Hiragana
What katakana is used for
Katakana(カタカナ) represents the same 46 syllable sounds as hiragana, but in a different visual style — more angular. It is used primarily for foreign loanwords (words borrowed into Japanese from other languages), foreign names, onomatopoeia, and technical or scientific terms. When you see コーヒー (koohii, “coffee”) or テレビ (terebi, “television”) written on a Japanese menu or sign, that is katakana.


Why katakana words are not always obvious to English speakers
At first glance, katakana loanwords seem like they should be easy for English speakers — they came from English, after all. But Japanese pronunciation rules reshape these words significantly. “Apartment” becomes アパート (apaato), “ice cream” becomes アイスクリーム (aisu kuriimu), and “McDonald’s” becomes マクドナルド (Makudonarudo). The vowels are added where Japanese does not allow consonant clusters, and the stress pattern changes completely. Treat katakana words as new vocabulary, not as free knowledge from English.
First katakana words to recognize
| Katakana | Reading | Original word |
|---|---|---|
| コーヒー | koohii | coffee |
| テレビ | terebi | television |
| アイスクリーム | aisu kuriimu | ice cream |
| レストラン | resutoran | restaurant |
| スーパー | suupaa | supermarket |
| ホテル | hoteru | hotel |
| バス | basu | bus |
| タクシー | takushii | taxi |
When to move on
Move on from katakana study when you can read the 46 base characters without hesitation, even if you are not yet fast. You will continue encountering katakana every day in your reading practice, and your speed will naturally increase. Do not wait until katakana feels effortless before starting vocabulary and grammar — that could delay your progress by weeks.
Step 4 — Learn Your First Survival Phrases
Before grammar, before vocabulary lists, before anything else: learn a handful of phrases that you will use in real life. These give you your first taste of speaking Japanese and build the confidence that keeps you going when the study feels hard.
Greetings
| Japanese | Reading | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| おはようございます | ohayou gozaimasu | Good morning (formal) |
| こんにちは | konnichiwa | Hello / Good afternoon |
| こんばんは | konbanwa | Good evening |
| おやすみなさい | oyasuminasai | Good night |
| はじめまして | hajimemashite | Nice to meet you (first meeting) |
| よろしくおねがいします | yoroshiku onegaishimasu | Please be kind to me / I’m in your care |


Thank you and sorry
| Japanese | Reading | Meaning / Use |
|---|---|---|
| ありがとうございます | arigatou gozaimasu | Thank you (formal) |
| ありがとう | arigatou | Thanks (casual) |
| すみません | sumimasen | Excuse me / Sorry (everyday) |
| ごめんなさい | gomen nasai | I’m sorry (for something you did) |
| どういたしまして | dou itashimashite | You’re welcome |
I do not understand
This phrase will save you many awkward moments:
わかりません。 (Wakarimasen.) — I don’t understand.
にほんごはまだすこししかわかりません。 (Nihongo wa mada sukoshi shika wakarimasen.) — I only understand a little Japanese yet.
Please say that again
もう一度(いちど)おねがいします。 (Mou ichido onegaishimasu.) — Please say that again.
ゆっくりおねがいします。 (Yukkuri onegaishimasu.) — Please speak slowly.
Can you speak English?
英語(えいご)はなせますか? (Eigo, hanasemasu ka?) — Can you speak English?
Step 5 — Learn Your First Sentence Patterns
Japanese grammar is built on reusable patterns. Once you know a pattern, you plug in vocabulary and you can make dozens of new sentences. Here are the five patterns that will carry you through your first weeks of study.


A は B です
Pattern: [Topic] は [Description/Identity] です。
This is the most fundamental Japanese sentence. は (wa) is the topic marker particle. です (desu) means “is / am / are.”
Example: わたしはがくせいです。 (Watashi wa gakusei desu.) — I am a student.
Example: これはほんです。 (Kore wa hon desu.) — This is a book.
A は B じゃないです
Pattern: [Topic] は [Description] じゃないです。
This is the negative of the above pattern. じゃないです (ja nai desu) means “is not.”
Example: わたしはせんせいじゃないです。 (Watashi wa sensei ja nai desu.) — I am not a teacher.
A を Vます
Pattern: [Subject] は [Object] を [Verb-masu form]。
を (wo/o) is the object marker particle. The verb ending ます (masu) marks a polite present or future action.
Example: わたしはコーヒーをのみます。 (Watashi wa koohii wo nomimasu.) — I drink coffee.


Place で Vます
Pattern: [Place] で [Verb-masu form]。
で (de) marks where an action takes place.
Example: としょかんでほんをよみます。 (Toshokan de hon wo yomimasu.) — I read books at the library.
Time に Vます
Pattern: [Time] に [Verb-masu form]。
に (ni) marks a specific point in time when an action occurs.
Example: しちじにおきます。 (Shichi-ji ni okimasu.) — I wake up at seven o’clock.
Step 6 — Learn Vocabulary in Sentence Groups
Why word lists alone are not enough
Studying vocabulary from isolated word lists — Japanese on one side, English on the other — is inefficient for one key reason: you remember words in context far better than words in isolation. When you first encounter the word たべる (taberu, “to eat”) in the sentence ひるごはんをたべます (I eat lunch), you also absorb the particle を and the masu verb form at the same time. You learn three things at once instead of one.
Below are core vocabulary sets to build your first active vocabulary. Learn them in sentence context wherever possible.
First 50 nouns
| Japanese | Reading | English |
|---|---|---|
| ひと | hito | person |
| おとこ | otoko | man |
| おんな | onna | woman |
| こども | kodomo | child |
| ともだち | tomodachi | friend |
| せんせい | sensei | teacher |
| がくせい | gakusei | student |
| かいしゃ | kaisha | company |
| いえ / うち | ie / uchi | house / home |
| がっこう | gakkou | school |
| えき | eki | train station |
| みせ | mise | shop / store |
| レストラン | resutoran | restaurant |
| としょかん | toshokan | library |
| びょういん | byouin | hospital |
| くに | kuni | country |
| まち | machi | town |
| みず | mizu | water |
| ごはん | gohan | rice / meal |
| パン | pan | bread |
| にく | niku | meat |
| さかな | sakana | fish |
| やさい | yasai | vegetables |
| くだもの | kudamono | fruit |
| おちゃ | ocha | green tea |
| コーヒー | koohii | coffee |
| ほん | hon | book |
| しんぶん | shinbun | newspaper |
| でんわ | denwa | telephone |
| スマホ | sumaho | smartphone |
| かね / おかね | kane / okane | money |
| しごと | shigoto | work / job |
| じかん | jikan | time |
| ひ / にち | hi / nichi | day |
| あさ | asa | morning |
| ひる | hiru | noon / daytime |
| よる / ばん | yoru / ban | night / evening |
| きのう | kinou | yesterday |
| きょう | kyou | today |
| あした | ashita | tomorrow |
| いぬ | inu | dog |
| ねこ | neko | cat |
| くるま | kuruma | car |
| でんしゃ | densha | train |
| みち | michi | road / way |
| そら | sora | sky |
| うみ | umi | sea / ocean |
| やま | yama | mountain |
| はな | hana | flower |
| かぜ | kaze | wind / cold (illness) |


First 20 verbs
| Dictionary form | Masu form | Reading | English |
|---|---|---|---|
| たべる | たべます | taberu / tabemasu | eat |
| のむ | のみます | nomu / nomimasu | drink |
| みる | みます | miru / mimasu | see / watch |
| きく | ききます | kiku / kikimasu | listen / hear |
| はなす | はなします | hanasu / hanashimasu | speak / talk |
| よむ | よみます | yomu / yomimasu | read |
| かく | かきます | kaku / kakimasu | write |
| いく | いきます | iku / ikimasu | go |
| くる | きます | kuru / kimasu | come |
| かえる | かえります | kaeru / kaerimasu | return / go home |
| おきる | おきます | okiru / okimasu | wake up / get up |
| ねる | ねます | neru / nemasu | sleep / go to bed |
| かう | かいます | kau / kaimasu | buy |
| はたらく | はたらきます | hataraku / hatarakimasu | work |
| べんきょうする | べんきょうします | benkyou suru / shimasu | study |
| わかる | わかります | wakaru / wakarimasu | understand |
| ある | あります | aru / arimasu | exist (inanimate) |
| いる | います | iru / imasu | exist (animate) |
| する | します | suru / shimasu | do |
| おもう | おもいます | omou / omoimasu | think / feel |
First 20 adjectives
| Japanese | Reading | English | Type |
|---|---|---|---|
| おおきい | ookii | big | i-adj |
| ちいさい | chiisai | small | i-adj |
| あたらしい | atarashii | new | i-adj |
| ふるい | furui | old (objects) | i-adj |
| たかい | takai | expensive / tall | i-adj |
| やすい | yasui | cheap / inexpensive | i-adj |
| おいしい | oishii | delicious | i-adj |
| まずい | mazui | bad-tasting | i-adj |
| たのしい | tanoshii | fun / enjoyable | i-adj |
| むずかしい | muzukashii | difficult | i-adj |
| やさしい | yasashii | easy / kind | i-adj |
| いい / よい | ii / yoi | good | i-adj |
| わるい | warui | bad | i-adj |
| いそがしい | isogashii | busy | i-adj |
| すき(な) | suki (na) | liked / favorite | na-adj |
| きらい(な) | kirai (na) | disliked | na-adj |
| しずか(な) | shizuka (na) | quiet | na-adj |
| にぎやか(な) | nigiyaka (na) | lively / busy | na-adj |
| べんり(な) | benri (na) | convenient | na-adj |
| きれい(な) | kirei (na) | beautiful / clean | na-adj |
First 10 question words
| Japanese | Reading | English |
|---|---|---|
| なに / なん | nani / nan | what |
| だれ | dare | who |
| どこ | doko | where |
| いつ | itsu | when |
| どうして / なぜ | doushite / naze | why |
| どう / どんな | dou / donna | how / what kind |
| どのくらい | dono kurai | how much / how long |
| いくら | ikura | how much (price) |
| いくつ | ikutsu | how many |
| どれ | dore | which one |


Step 7 — Introduce Kanji Early, But Gently
Why kanji should not be delayed forever
Many beginners avoid kanji for months — sometimes for years — because the idea of memorizing thousands of characters feels overwhelming. This is a mistake. Real Japanese text uses kanji constantly. If you delay kanji study, you delay your ability to read anything outside of beginner textbooks. More importantly: the first 100–200 kanji are not as hard as you think. They are patterns you will see every single day, and early exposure builds recognition over time without much extra effort.
You do not need to learn 2,000 kanji before you can read a sentence. You need to start recognizing the most common ones as early as week three or four.
Learn kanji through words, not isolated symbols
The most efficient way to learn kanji is inside real words. When you learn 食べる (taberu, “to eat”), you learn the kanji 食 (shoku/ta, “food/eat”) in context. You do not need to memorize the kanji’s 15 different readings — you just need to recognize it in the words you already know. This word-first approach is far more practical than studying kanji isolated on flashcards with no context.
First 10 kanji to learn
| Kanji | Reading(s) | Meaning | Example word |
|---|---|---|---|
| 日 | nichi / hi / ka | sun / day | 日本(にほん) Japan |
| 本 | hon / moto | book / origin | 日本(にほん) Japan |
| 人 | hito / jin / nin | person | 日本人(にほんじん) Japanese person |
| 大 | dai / tai / oo | large / big | 大きい(おおきい) big |
| 山 | yama / san | mountain | 富士山(ふじさん) Mt. Fuji |
| 川 | kawa / gawa | river | 川(かわ) river |
| 水 | mizu / sui | water | 水(みず) water |
| 火 | hi / ka | fire | 火曜日(かようび) Tuesday |
| 口 | kuchi / kou | mouth / opening | 入口(いりぐち) entrance |
| 一 | ichi / hito | one | 一つ(ひとつ) one thing |
What not to memorize yet
Do not try to memorize all on-yomi (Chinese-derived readings) and kun-yomi (native Japanese readings) for each kanji at this stage. Do not try to learn the stroke order for every character before you can recognize them by sight. Focus on recognition and word-level memory. Deeper study of readings comes naturally as your vocabulary grows.
Step 8 — Start Listening Before You Feel Ready
Why listening feels impossible at first
The most common complaint among Japanese beginners is: “I can read slowly, but when I listen to native speech I can’t understand anything.” This is completely normal. Native Japanese speakers talk at 400–600 mora per minute. Words run together. Sounds change. Particles shrink. Your brain has not yet trained itself to segment the stream into individual words. The answer is not to avoid listening — it is to change what you are listening for.
Listen for known words, not full comprehension
In the early stages, your listening goal is not to understand everything. It is to catch the words you already know floating past in the stream of speech. If you hear すみません (sumimasen) in a conversation, you caught something real. If you hear ありがとう (arigatou), you recognized it. This is how your listening comprehension grows: word by word, slowly, until the familiar island of known words expands to cover more and more of what you hear.
Repeat short phrases out loud
Shadowing — listening to a phrase and immediately repeating it out loud — is one of the most effective early listening and speaking exercises. You do not need to understand everything to shadow. You are training your mouth, ears, and brain to work together on Japanese sounds. Start with short dialogue audio: children’s shows, graded listening content, or the audio tracks from a beginner textbook like Genki.
Beginner listening routine
- 5 minutes per day: Listen to one short Japanese audio clip (60–90 seconds)
- Listen once without trying to understand
- Listen again, note every word you recognize
- Listen a third time and shadow one sentence out loud
- Do not look up every word you missed — focus on what you caught
Step 9 — Start Speaking with Tiny Sentences
Self-introduction
Learn to introduce yourself in Japanese. This is the most practiced beginner topic, and for good reason — it forces you to use real grammar structures out loud from day one.
はじめまして。[Name]です。[Country]からきました。よろしくおねがいします。
Hajimemashite. [Name] desu. [Country] kara kimashita. Yoroshiku onegaishimasu.
Nice to meet you. I am [Name]. I came from [Country]. I’m looking forward to getting to know you.
Talking about likes
Pattern: [Topic] が すき です。 — I like [topic].
Example: にほんごがすきです。 (Nihongo ga suki desu.) — I like Japanese.
Example: すしがだいすきです。 (Sushi ga daisuki desu.) — I love sushi.
Talking about daily actions
Example: まいにちにほんごをべんきょうします。 (Mainichi nihongo wo benkyou shimasu.) — I study Japanese every day.
Example: あさごはんをたべます。 (Asagohan wo tabemasu.) — I eat breakfast.
Asking simple questions
In Japanese, forming a question is simple: add か (ka) to the end of a statement.
これはなんですか? (Kore wa nan desu ka?) — What is this?
おなまえはなんですか? (O-namae wa nan desu ka?) — What is your name?
Why mistakes are part of the process
Every mistake you make while speaking is a data point. It tells your brain where the gap is. Do not avoid speaking because you are afraid of making mistakes — making mistakes in a low-stakes environment (speaking to yourself, talking to a language partner, or using an app like italki) is the fastest way to improve. If you wait until your Japanese is “good enough” to speak, you will wait forever.
💬 Looking for a patient, beginner-friendly Japanese tutor? Find a tutor on italki — you can book trial lessons and practice exactly the phrases from this guide.


My first italki lesson was terrifying — I only knew about 20 words. But my tutor was so encouraging, and after 30 minutes I realized I could already hold a tiny conversation. Start earlier than you think you should.
Your First-Day Japanese Study Plan
Here are three versions depending on how much time you have. Pick the one that fits your schedule today and start. You can always do more tomorrow.
10-minute version
| Time | Task |
|---|---|
| 0:00–2:00 | Read the five Japanese vowel sounds aloud (a, i, u, e, o) — 3 repetitions each |
| 2:00–7:00 | Learn the first row of hiragana: あ い う え お. Write each one 5 times. |
| 7:00–10:00 | Learn two survival phrases: こんにちは and ありがとうございます. Say each 10 times out loud. |
30-minute version
| Time | Task |
|---|---|
| 0:00–5:00 | Study the five vowel sounds with audio (YouTube or Forvo) |
| 5:00–15:00 | Learn hiragana rows 1–2: あいうえお and かきくけこ. Write each 5 times. |
| 15:00–22:00 | Learn 5 survival phrases from Step 4 |
| 22:00–30:00 | Listen to 2 minutes of beginner Japanese audio (just listen, do not try to understand everything) |
60-minute version
| Time | Task |
|---|---|
| 0:00–10:00 | Study all five vowels + consonant sounds with audio. Repeat each syllable in the ka-row and sa-row aloud. |
| 10:00–25:00 | Learn hiragana rows 1–3: あいうえお, かきくけこ, さしすせそ. Write each 5 times. |
| 25:00–35:00 | Learn 8 survival phrases from Step 4. Read them in hiragana, not romaji. |
| 35:00–45:00 | Study the A は B です sentence pattern with 5 example sentences |
| 45:00–55:00 | Listen to a beginner Japanese podcast or audio clip. Shadow one sentence. |
| 55:00–60:00 | Review: write out everything you learned today in your notebook. |
Your First-Week Japanese Study Plan
Seven days is enough to build a real foundation. This plan is designed for 20–30 minutes per day. Adjust the pace to fit your schedule — consistency matters more than speed.
| Day | Focus | Hiragana target | Extra task |
|---|---|---|---|
| Day 1 | Vowels + あ-row, か-row | あいうえお, かきくけこ | Learn 3 greetings |
| Day 2 | さ-row, た-row, な-row | さしすせそ, たちつてと, なにぬねの | Practice A は B です with 3 sentences |
| Day 3 | は-row, ま-row, や-row | はひふへほ, まみむめも, やゆよ | Learn “thank you” and “sorry” phrases |
| Day 4 | ら-row, わ-row, ん | らりるれろ, わをん | Practice A を Vます with 3 sentences |
| Day 5 | Review all hiragana + intro katakana | アイウエオ, カキクケコ | Learn 5 katakana loanwords |
| Day 6 | Vocabulary in context | Reinforce weak hiragana | Study 10 nouns + use them in sentences |
| Day 7 | Review and quiz | Full hiragana recognition test | Self-introduction practice out loud |


What to Avoid When Learning Japanese from Zero


Depending on romaji
Romaji gives you a comfortable shortcut — and that is exactly the problem. When you read Japanese in romaji, your brain processes it as English-like text. You do not build the visual recognition skills that real Japanese reading requires. Worse, romaji reinforces incorrect pronunciation habits (like pronouncing the Japanese R as an English R). Transition away from romaji within your first two weeks. Use hiragana as your default script from the moment you know it.
Trying to learn all kanji readings
A single common kanji like 日 has multiple readings (nichi, jitsu, hi, ka, bi…). Beginners who try to memorize all readings at once end up confused and discouraged. Instead, learn readings as they appear in vocabulary words you actually use. The readings you need will come to you naturally through exposure.
Studying grammar without examples
Grammar rules described in abstract terms are hard to apply in real speech. For every grammar point you study, require at least three natural example sentences. If you cannot find example sentences for a grammar rule, find a better source. Grammar without examples is like learning to cook by reading ingredient lists — necessary but not sufficient.
Waiting too long to listen
Some learners avoid listening practice until they feel “ready.” They study grammar and vocabulary for months but barely expose themselves to spoken Japanese. When they finally try to listen, everything sounds incomprehensible — and it is not because they lack grammar knowledge, it is because their ears have never been trained. Start listening from day one, even if you understand nothing. Your listening comprehension improves through exposure, not through preparation.
Comparing yourself to advanced learners
Social media is full of people who speak fluent Japanese, read novels in the original, and passed N1 on their first attempt. This is survivorship bias — the people who struggled and gave up are not posting. Every advanced speaker was once exactly where you are now: struggling with hiragana, mispronouncing vowels, and building one small sentence at a time. Measure your progress against yourself, not others.
Quick Quiz
Test yourself on what you’ve learned so far. Choose the correct answer for each question.
1. Which particle marks the topic of a sentence in Japanese?
a) を
b) が
c) は ✔
d) で
Answer: c) は (wa) — は marks the sentence topic. For example: わたしはがくせいです (I am a student).
2. What does おばさん (obasan) mean?
a) grandmother
b) aunt ✔
c) older sister
d) mother
Answer: b) aunt — Note: おばあさん (obaasan) with a long vowel means grandmother. The vowel length changes the meaning entirely.
3. Which writing system is used for foreign loanwords in Japanese?
a) Hiragana
b) Kanji
c) Romaji
d) Katakana ✔
Answer: d) Katakana — Words borrowed from foreign languages like コーヒー (koohii, coffee) and テレビ (terebi, TV) are written in katakana.
4. How do you form a question in basic Japanese?
a) Change the verb form
b) Add か (ka) to the end of the sentence ✔
c) Add の to the beginning
d) Reverse the word order
Answer: b) Add か (ka) — For example: これはほんです (This is a book) → これはほんですか? (Is this a book?)
5. What is the correct Japanese for “I wake up at 7 o’clock”?
a) しちじでおきます
b) しちじにおきます ✔
c) しちじをおきます
d) しちじはおきます
Answer: b) しちじにおきます — に marks a specific point in time. For time expressions, に is the correct particle.
How did you do? Share in the comments — tell us which question tripped you up, or let us know what you want to study next!
What to Read Next
Ready to go deeper? These guides continue exactly where this one leaves off:












The most important thing is to start. Pick the 10-minute plan if that is all you have today. Ten minutes of real Japanese practice beats zero minutes of perfect planning every time.
About the Author
Daisuke is the creator of JP YoKoSo — a Japanese learning site for English speakers. Every article is written to explain Japanese clearly, with real examples, grammar notes, and practical tips for learners at every level.
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