Aozora (青空文庫)

インターネットの電子図書館.

This site is completely in Japanese and is above my level, but I think it is an online library of Japanese writings that are no longer covered by copyright. There is no listing by level of difficulty but I guess all of the entries are for more advanced students. A downloadable ruby .zip version or an HTML version of each entry is available. … [ Read more ]

Hiragana no Megane

This site lets you input a URL and then it will display it with furigana.

Editor’s Note: with the development of tools like rikaichan I don’t see a strong need for this site, but it may suit some people’s tastes so I am adding it…

Japanese Text Initiative

The University of Virginia Library Electronic Text Center and the University of Pittsburgh East Asian Library are pleased to sponsor the Japanese Text Initiative, a collaborative effort to make texts of classical Japanese literature available on the World Wide Web. I haven’t read through the site yet, but it appears appropriate only for intermediate to advanced levels. There appear to be some really good … [ Read more ]

BOTさんのおはなし

Here is a collection of simple short reading stories about a character named BOTさん. The grammar and vocab appears appropriate for lower to intermediate level students.

日本語阜サ文型辞典

A compilation of Japanese grammatical expressions – completely in Japanese.

Nihongo Notes

Some grammar notes posted back in 1996. The first three items are useful and easily comprehended but the last three items are more appropriate to a linqguistic conversation/study only.

Old Stories of Japan (日本昔ばなし)

This site is fantastic. Masahiro Kudo posts famous old Japanese stories in both Japanese and English about once a month (there are more than 170 as of this writing). He has also posted some famous Japanese songs.

JLPT Level 4 Vocabulary Quiz

The quiz is based on 727 words of vocab from the JLPT Level 4 Vocabulary List put together by Peter van der Woude (though keep in mind that there are no official JLPT lists of vocabulary). [hat tip to Nihongojouzu.com]

Gyao

Japanese TV on demand has been around for a while, at least in a limited sense with downloadable bulletins from NHK. All that changed last April with the launch of Gyao, a new free internet TV service which has everything from TV dramas to J-pop to cooking shows and anime. This is great for anyone curious about modern Japanese culture and of course students of … [ Read more ]

Nagoya University CMJ Grammar Online!

This online tool/program is designed to help you practice and review basic Japanese grammar. It covers many of the grammar points taught in the book A Course in Modern Japanese (CMJ). [hat tip to Nihongojouzu.com]

Why Japanese reading comprehension matters

Adamu at MutantFrog Travelogue has written an excellent piece on the importance of developing good Japanese reading comprehension skills. Adamu points out a number of great resources for practicing reading and the discussions carried on in the comments sections make some good points too. [courtesy of Nihongojouzu.com]

Mayumi K’s Osaka dialect 大阪弁 Japanese Podcast

Don’t let the full title fool you: “Osaka dialect 大阪弁 Japanese lesson in English” – Mayumi K’s podcast is fully bilingual, with Mayumi speaking in Osaka-ben and then repeating the words in English. Along the way she also throws in vocab explanations and speaking tips. At 5 minutes a serve the podcast is a good length for repeated listens. The level is intermediate and it … [ Read more ]

Harry Potter and reading for vocabulary

Will at Nihongojouzu.com details his method for learning new vocabulary in context. Maybe it will work for you as well…

261 Commonly-Used Japanese Adjectives

Online resource guru Charles Kelly has just uploaded a Flash-based quiz on the ii-adjectives marked as commonly used in EDICT as of 2006-07-14. Straightforward stuff – you are given an adjective in kanji/kana and you have to pick the correct meaning from 4 or 5 options (depends on which quiz you pick). I gave it a whirl, did 100 questions and got paddled – only … [ Read more ]

The Super Dictionary

Peter Rivard has written an article about setting up a PDA to be a super dictionary.

Nintendo DS, kanji dictionary

This article discusses dictionary software for Nintendo DS, specifically Kanji Sono Mama Rakubiki Jiten (漢字そのまま楽引辞典).

JLPT Communication Square

The Japan Foundation has put together this site for those interested in the JLPT. Includes general information about the test and statisitcal numbers for past exams (including how many people took it, how many passed, numbers by location, etc.). It also offers downloadable .pdf files with sample questions (by level).