Monday, September 21, 2009

Is it possible to live in Japan without being able to read or write kanji

Is it possible to live in Japan without being able to read or write kanji?
I am planning to move to Japan for a few years after I am finished university. I am having great difficultly learning to read and write kanji. I have already learned hiragana and katakana but, I do not have the patience, the time or the memory to learn the thousands of symbols for kanji. And if it is nessescary where can I find a FREE website that will teach me BASIC kanji that is used frequently.
Japan - 10 Answers
Random Answers, Critics, Comments, Opinions :
1 :
I don't know if it is an absolute necessity. I can only say that I went there for just under 2 weeks by myself knowing no Japanese whatsoever and everything went fine. I'm sure you'll pick up at least some of the language since you'll be immersed in all things Japanese. Best of luck and have a blast...its awesome over there.
2 :
Well first you need a Visa to move to Japan which can be very problematic unless you a are sponsored on a working Visa, your married to a Japanese, or you are going on a student visa. Other than that the longest you can stay is 90 days. That aside... Yes, it is possible to live there without being able to read or write kanji but not easy. Legal documents and leases are most frequently in kanji so you either need to be able to translate it or you need someone who can help you. Also if you are senstive about food ingredients and nutrional data.
3 :
I think you will be all right if you live in Tokyo or thereabouts (Yokohama and the Chiba, Saitama, Gunma areas close to Tokyo). I'm just now exploring the Kansai area (Osaka, Kyoto, Kobe plus Nagoya) and I see there are signs in English, Korean, Chinese and Brazilian Portuguese). You'll be able to navigate yourself around the public transit. If you do run into trouble, you can practice your Japanese! Or you may be fortunate enough to run into someone who can help you. When you eat out, the menu will most probably have photos so you can point to what you want. You'll probably absorb some kanji just because you'll see them in daily life and when you are living here, you may find you do have the patience, time and memory to learn tens, hundreds and thousands of kanji. Yup, you can always find a website for learning kanji.
4 :
Yes, it's easily possible. Unfortunately, it's even possible to live there without knowing how to speak anymore than a few basic Japanese phrases.. which is why there are so many lazy, dumb-ass, foreigners there. Believe me, I've met more than a few of them. It doesn't sound like you're really interested in learning Japanese at all and it's just a chore that you want to spend as little time as possible doing? If that is your attitude then I am not surprised that when you come on to something like kanji, that is not piss-easy like hiragana and katakana, that you are having some difficulty. If you felt it important to learn the language and script of the country you wish to work and live in, then wouldn't you find time? But like I said, it's easy enough to get by as thousands of others do. Just stand open mouthed and nod slowly when people talk to you and they'll leave you alone so you can get back to the safety of the gaijin bars... after all when people who don't speak or read English come over to your country to work they are well respected and appreciated, right?
5 :
Possible? Sure, but your life will be extremely limited, especially if you don't have people around you who can translate things for you. I can read and write a few hundred kanji and I still can't read most of the things around me, like most foods in the grocery store that don't have kana names or memos that get passed around my office. If you plan on moving here for good, you will eventually have to read and write kanji and the words made with them. I don't use websites to learn kanji. I do it the old-fashioned way with books and lots and lots of repetition, because that's what works for me, so I can't help you there.
6 :
I don't think it will be necessary to learn Kanji completely before you come to Japan. You're doing very well by learning katakana and hiragana. I've been here 12 years and have only learned to read katakana and hiragana. I can recognize a few kanji on sight, but not a lot. It really depends what it is that you want to do here. If you want to be a translator, then you'll need it, if you want to teach English or another language, it probably isn't necessary. I am married to a Japanese man, so I do have a translator of my own, but I lived here for 3 years before I married him. If you are in relatively good health and you have a job, you probably don't need to learn a lot of kanji if your visit will only be for a few years. I've heard that 600 basic kanji is a good start. Sorry no website, just wanted to send a more positive message than what you were getting.
7 :
Most people who comes to Japan first time, cannot able to say a word in Japanese and cannot write at all. So sure, it is possible. Many of them remain in this state for years (which is especially ironic in case of language teachers). My experience is that if you need it, you will pick it up here. If you already speak some Japanese, and you read the kana, it is a good start for your stay. Being here can boost your motivation to learn more, and also it helps to learn and reinforce if you see the kanjis every day.
8 :
It is possible if you don't intend to do much other than teach English, but obviously you're seriously handicapping yourself.
9 :
You can survive, absolutely, and you probably wont have a hard time doing things you need to do most of the time, but good luck having any kind of real interaction with the culture and local people (aside from those with a western fetish). Trying to learn to speak Japanese without knowing kanji is a half hearted approach, the people who get far are few and far between, and even if you can, youll still be missing out on a lot. If you dont have the patience to learn it, I think you should reconsider coming to Japan. If you cant communicate clearly and naturally, people will treat you as an outsider (very polite but theyre actions will always remain a mystery to you and you will basically be a cut and paste stereotype to them) and worse, they will treat me as an outsider because your stregnthening a stereotype that is finally starting to break down a bit. Just think of all those mexicans etc. who dont bother to learn english and how much people complain about them. Hating all mexicans is racist and wrong but being annoyed that they dont speak the language of the country they are in is reasonable! Japanese are more polite so they wont complain but you cant blame them for treating you like an outsider then. And for your own benefit, learning the language will multiply your enjoyment of Japan. Not only will people open up to you a lot more, you can build a normal life here. Culture and language are so deeply intwined in each other. And not being able to read a menu certainly makes people think you cant speak japanese and once they think you cant speak japanese, you are never going to be treated as an equal, youll be a baby to them. If your coming for a month or two, do as you will but if you plan to stay for longer, I strongly suggest learning kanji (I tried to learn as much of a language as I can before I go ANYWHERE, even for a week). Kanji are NOT that hard. It's not like you study them and learn 2000 and finally you can understand everything, you learn 30 and already things start to make more sense so its good your willing to learn at least a few. They say 2000 but after about 400, you can skim through things and understand the point and most kanji are built on simpler kanji so once you know the easiest 50, they start to fit together like a puzzle with all kind of tricks to make them easier to memorize. www.learn-japanese.info really got me less intimidated and gave me a smooth transition into a textbook for self study. It will NOT teach you much, but itll give you bit sized intro lessons to make Japanese a lot less scary. After that I reccomend the Genki textbooks, and any suppliments you can get your hands on for free (internet, conversation, media etc.) If you want to learn the most common kanji, start with: numbers body parts/face colors every day verbs (eat, sleep, drink, read, write, etc.) time words (month, day, year, hour, morning, night, daytime) and days of the week (these are the kanji for water, fire, gold, tree, dirt, month and day...so a nice way to learn 7 with a lot of repetition) I think you should learn any stand-alone kanji you come across, then once you know 100 or so work on compounds, just learn them when you learn the word. Dont worry about the correct way to write them if your intimidated. Its good to know but reading them is much more important. That will give you about 50 and you can learn those extremely quick, almost as quick as hiragana and katakana. After that, itll get harder for 20 or 30 and then they start to build on each other and it gets easier, and MUCH easier if your in japan and constantly exposed.
10 :
Of course you can. The more Japanese you know, the better off you will be. http://webhome.idirect.com/~jinsaku/Nihongo.html Basic Japanese http://www.bitboost.com/tiletag/about-the-kana.html Basic kana charts http://www.manythings.org/japanese/ Japanese study material







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Monday, September 14, 2009

Can someone live in Japan without obtaining a Japanese citizenship

Can someone live in Japan without obtaining a Japanese citizenship?
Live as in House owning, marrying, etc. Basically nearly everything you would do just without a citizenship? As long as you speak the language, of course.
Japan - 3 Answers
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1 :
They probably have a "permanent resident" status like the U.S. does. Marrying a citizen would almost certainly give you the ability to live there indefinitely without having to take Japanese citizenship.
2 :
You usually need working or student visa to live in Japan. For working visa, you have to get a job offer from a Japanese company. But you can't look for a job in Japan without a visa. So you need it before you enter Japan. For student visa, you have to be admitted to a Japanese college. You need to pay tuition and living cost for 4 years. It could be about $80,000. If you want to become a Japanese citizen, you have to keep living in Japan for more than 5 years without a pause. Then, you will be eligible to apply for citizenship. But you need more like stable income, sufficient reason, Japanese language skill and so on if you want your application to be accepted. You can apply for Permanent Residence of Japan under the same condition. And this is relatively easier than citizenship.
3 :
If you're an American you can only stay 90 days as a visitor.This visitor visa can only be renewed once in a 12 month period. The Japanese government requires you have a reason to be there.You would need a work or student visa, or one of the other visas available.You just can't move there and set up house.A house is very expensive there.Even if you had that kind of money,you can only stay as long as your visa is good for. If you happened to marry a Japanese person,you wouldn't have to worry about a visa. Actually citizenship is very hard to obtain.







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Monday, September 7, 2009

Suggestions for an American wanting to live in Japan

Suggestions for an American wanting to live in Japan?
My bf wants to live in Japan for a year. We live in Hawaii right now. He loves the Japanese who come over because they are so nice. He is learning Japanese himself. Is it easy for an American couple to live in Japan for a year, speak almost no Japanese, and work and support ourselves?
Japan - 5 Answers
Random Answers, Critics, Comments, Opinions :
1 :
First you can't simply move over to Japan and start living for a year and working without proper visas. Thats the hard part. Just qualifying for a visa. To get a work visa in Japan you BOTH will need bachelors degrees (in any subject field) and a job already lined up (eg someone is ready to hire you). Without Japanese language skills you're really limited to English teaching. English teaching is not as great as it used to be right now, as NOVA, which was the largest employer of English teachers in Japan went backrupt, so now you have thousands of English teachers in Japan out of the job, looking for new jobs, so in that sense it will be harder to find a position, but if you find one, meet the qualifications then you shouldn't have a problem getting a work visa then.
2 :
TokyoE is right. It's not that easy to find work teaching English in Japan. However, there are jobs available. I would recommend you go to the following websites and see if there's something that interests you:
3 :
Bah! I lived there for two years. Other than the girls, who are ready and willing at any time, there's not much else that's enticing about living there. The Japanese are fiercely ethnocentric and really don't like foreigners living there, EVEN THOUGH they have massive 'western envy'. Everything is expensive and even tho the Japanese spend millions on English education, hardly anyone will speak it. Japanese is just a combination of Chinese and English. There are about 20,000 English words in use in the regular Japanese vocabulary, but the funny thing is, the Japanese think they are Japanese words. So, it's pretty easy to pick up the language. My advice, go for a visit, but don't stay.
4 :
To make this short, I don't think it's very easy to get on a plane, land in Japan, and start a new life. 1. Getting a job -- do not look after you arrive. get hired BEFORE going 2. language -- boy, you're gonna have a lot of trouble getting to places in the trains. 3. transportation-- i suggest a taxi if you're rich. about 15 minutes is around 1200 yen (12 dollars) well good luck i'd just go and visit in the summer though
5 :
Japan does not have an open immigration policy. Which means you just can't move there and say "here I am". A tourist visa is only good for 90 days. To get a work visa you need a solid job offer prior to your entry to the country. No,it is NOT easy for a couple to move to Japan, period. You'll need a four year degree just to teach English. This is no longer the dream job it used to be. Due to poor management, schools like NOVA are about to go under. They are being sued by both teachers and students. Unless you have a special skill a Japanese does'nt have, the chances of getting a job are none. The only exception to this is back breaking factory jobs that few Japanese want. There is also a language problem. Most Japanese don't speak English. And many Japanese landlords will not rent to a non-Japanese. Rents are high, and apartments are very small compared to American. A friend of mine ( Japanese ) was paying about $750 a month for his "apato". It's so small you could'nt fall down without hitting a wall.






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Tuesday, September 1, 2009

what kinda of visa and how do i go about getting one to live in japan

what kinda of visa and how do i go about getting one to live in japan?
my bf is in the military and stationed in japan for the next 3 yrs. i want to know what kind of visa to get to be able to live there with him. we have alittle girl together. we have talked about getting married but we arent ready for that yet.
Immigration - 2 Answers
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1 :
Check this Dept. of State Web site... http://travel.state.gov/travel/cis_pa_tw/cis/cis_1148.html You may need to consult the Consular Section of the Embassy of Japan at 2520 Massachusetts Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20008, tel. (202) 238-6800, or the nearest Japanese consulate.
2 :
Without a SOFA stamp in your passport (given to family members stationed in Japan) you will find life totally impossible. Even the child, his dependent, will not get health care from the military unless he/she's command sponsored. You will not be able to work. You will not even be allowed on the base. He will not be allowed to live off base on the local economy and he won't be able to afford that without an Overseas Housing Allowance. To go there with him you need to get married. Then he needs to get you and the kid command sponsored and the both of you put on his orders to Japan.






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