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Paperback How to Sound Intelligent in Japanese: A Vocabulary Builder Book

ISBN: 4770017472

ISBN13: 9784770017475

How to Sound Intelligent in Japanese: A Vocabulary Builder

(Part of the Power Japanese Series)

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good

$8.09
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Book Overview

For every student, a time eventually comes when basic grammar is no longer the problem. You can say a few words about the weather, or the fact that, yes, you are feeling hungry, or explain that you... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Warning: For ADVANCED students

If you're looking to go from talking about the weather and what your favorite food is to more complicated topics, then this IS NOT the book for you. This book is geared for students who already have a very good grasp of the language, i.e. are at about a can-read-the-newspaper level and are looking to move to a can-attend-Japanese-college level. Some sample sentences are something in my wildest imagination I would never use unless I was in a graduate seminar. But, for its intended purpose, it's a very good book. It breaks up the topics into subjects such as philosophy, religion, politics, economics...and then gives key words that are used in these arenas. In this way I find it useful. (I'm at about a JLPT 2 level.)

mistitled, phenomenal book

A more accurate (though decidedly less catchy) title for this book would be "Introduction to Talking About Issues of Importance to Scholars, Critics, Philosophers, Pundits, Journalists, Politicians, and Intellectuals." If the phrase "sound intelligent" makes it seem like a way to deceive people into thinking you're intelligent when in fact you are not--think again. "Sounding intelligent" refers to a communication strategy for making your conversation partner feel confident that they can speak with you about any topic without baffling you or risking a one-sided conversation. I find that when you use words like "yuigaron" (solipsism) or "dokyo" (Taoism) just reassures people that it's okay to go beyond the typical "How long have you studied Japanese?" and "Can you eat Japanese food?" rigamarole. If you're genuinely interested in talking about this stuff, this is the book for you. If not, don't expect that it will be some kind of self-help book designed to help you achieve any kind of intellectual image-makeover. Perfect for graduate students, long-time residents of Japan, researchers going to do archival work in Japan, those seeking to build academic/critical/intellectual relationships with native Japanese speakers, and lovers of complex debate in cross-cultural context...

Sounding Intelligent

This is a great book for the dedicated Japanese student. Many, many useful words and phrases for someone tired of the same old "introductions and asking for directions" kind of Japanese book. Pros: -Categorized well -Tons of great vocab -Kanji with furigana Cons: -Too advanced for beginners. Dedicated third year college students, or fourth year college students should definitely consider this as a supplementary text to their assigned readings.

Surprised at some comment...

I am a little surprised at some of the other reviews of this book. It's title I feel can be a little misleading and there is no way this book will make you sound "pedantic or insincere". It really is a Vocabulary Builder and is meant to be a quick and concise way to build specialist vocabulary across many topics. I am quick to add though, that this is not specialist vocabulary in your native language, in fact if you could not speak on the topics and using the words described in English in this book you would most probably be considered ignorant. Too many people live in Japan, learn a little Japanese and then think that the Japanese don't talk about politics, business, science, religon etc in everyday ilfe. The sad fact may be they don't talk to you about it because they don't think you could talk about it. This book is a great way to learn a lot of vocab. Chapters are split into topics with an excellent background and etymology for most chapters and also excellent examples in both romaji and kanji, so you can increase your kana and spoken comprehension at the same time. If you are already a fairly strong reader and speaker of japanese this book can help you reach into new topics.

For professional users of Japanese

As a longtime student and translator of the Japanese language, I would like to see more books like this on the market, in contrast to the sea of books that focus on Japanese slang, foreign loanwords, and profanity. Japanese academics and professionals who operate in an English-speaking environment don't expect to get a free pass on difficult English vocabulary. "How to Sound Intelligent in Japanese" seems to be based on the premise that foreign speakers of Japanese should also be able to handle advanced terminology.Historically, native Japanese speakers have been amazed at a foreigner who can manage even a passable sentence or two in their language. Ten years ago, it was not uncommon for Japanese to heap praise on an American visitor to Tokyo for correctly ordering lunch without resorting to English. Americans were even complimented for knowing how to say "konnichiwa" and "ohayoo gozaimasu."Today, the bar has been raised substantially, and a reasonable comprehension of professional and academic terminology is needed in order to be taken seriously as a foreign speaker of Japanese. This is especially true if you intend to rely on your Japanese skills in a professional context. "How to Sound Intelligent in Japanese" can help the intermediate student to polish her skills to the point where Japanese speakers will regard her as an adult speaker of their language.The book is laid out in a convenient thematic format, so you can focus on the areas which are most relevant to your own needs and interests (science, law, etc.) There are enough example sentences to give you a sense of the context in which the specialized vocabulary items are used. Nonetheless, this book does assume an intermediate to advanced grasp of Japanese, so it may be a bit too much for first-year students; and the book doesn't offer much in the way of grammatical instruction.However, this is an extremely valuable resource for intermediate students who want to ease into more complex subject matters in Japanese. After working diligently through this book, the student will have the appetite and confidence necessary to tackle the publications that Japanese professionals themselves read.
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