Textfugu pdf download
This will be your first Sentences deck. If you need a quick reminder of how to do this, continue with the following instructions, if you got this, skip down to the Formatted List: section. To add this to Anki, download the zip file to your Anki folder, unzip it, and open it while Anki is running as explained in previous sections. This is a sentences deck, so you will be adding it to the TextFugu 2 — Sentences Master Deck, to do this, simply drag it to its Master Deck, as explained previously.
I will use the following format to guide you in renaming and assigning your sub-decks to your Master Decks. I have included the one you just did as the first example, so you can see how it lines up Note: It is suggested that you wait until you naturally encounter these sub-decks within TF and come back here to determine how to format them. No skippin round now ya hear?!? Location: Season 1, Chapter 6, Practice Page. Location: Season 2, Chapter 1, Practice Page.
Location: Season 2, Chapter 2, Practice Page. Location: Season 2, Chapter 4, Page 2. Location: Season 2, Chapter 4, Page 3. Location: Season 2, Chapter 4, Practice Page. Location: Season 2, Chapter 5, Page 2. Location: Season 2, Chapter 5, Page 3. From this point, you should be able to continue this pattern on your own until you are introduced to Katakana in Season 3.
If you have continued the previous pattern until you were introduced to Katakana, and your Deck Menu looks like the images above you are ready to add Katakana:. Location: Season 3, Chapter 2, Page 2. Location: Season 3, Chapter 2, Page 5. Now for this last one, TF tells you to add it to your normal vocab deck. I separated it into its own Master Deck as I found that it really clogs up the main vocab deck when added to it, and becomes really frustrating when you add some of the features in the intermediate section.
This concludes the Beginners section. And thus should be ready for the intermediate section. Now Anki warns that having too many decks they count Master Decks and sub-decks as decks can slow down its functionality. This might be the case, but I saw no evidence of that when I had about 6 more decks added than what we have covered so far, but it may get to the point where you notice it.
If you have an old computer you might even notice the program slowing or crashing even earlier. So in theory, as long as you see no change in functionality, you could continue to the end of TF adding the sub-decks in the same manner you have done so far, and this will be all the instruction you need. Otherwise you will need to continue to the intermediate section to find out how to get rid of all these blasted sub-decks! Intermediate Section:. Note: You should be comfortable with everything in the Beginners section before you proceed here.
Which takes you: here. Decks are designed to divide your content up into broad categories that you wish to study separately. You may be tempted to create lots of little decks to keep your content organized, but this is not recommended, for the following reason:. A few extra decks is not going to make a noticeable difference, but if you have many decks the delays will start to add up.
Each card can have multiple tags, which means you can do things like search for all verbs, or all food-related vocabulary, or all verbs that are related to food. As I stated at the end of the beginners section, you may not actually need to do this. But if you do, or just want to, here you go.
Luckily even though Koichi has set up TextFugu to give us a massive number of separate decks which is bad for Anki 2 , he has tagged each of the separate decks differently, and the tags are actually uniform unlike the deck names.
So we already have our tags. Now all we need to do is consolidate our sub-decks into our Master decks. Co nsolidating your sub-decks into your Master Decks. I used extremely basic terminology and was crazy specific with where menus are and how to click things, etc.
That said if you feel I am being too vague about something please feel free to point that out here or ask any questions about it on this thread.
This should give you a backup called collection. For I have foreseen this eventuality and have already come to your aid! Before it even happened! Here you will see some options for controlling automatic backups, which happen every time you close Anki! This will open your backup folder, and you simply open up the latest file or however many back you need.
However all of those little sub-decks will still be within the Master Decks. But hidden… Like ninja. In this Browse window you will see a list on the left side. This should highlight all the cards in the deck If you are having problems with this, you can also hold down the Ctrl key and click them each individually or drag the cursor down. The new window will have a list of all of your decks. This will now have moved all the cards from the first deck you selected into the second deck you selected.
When you are finished moving them, re-click on each of the sub-decks and the viewer on the right should be blank for them. When they are all blank, you can move on to the next Master Deck and move all its sub-decks into it as well.
Once you have double checked that all the sub-decks are now blank in the viewer, and that the Master Decks include all of their sub-decks, close the Browser window. You can now delete the empty sub-decks from the main window by clicking on the drop-menu to the right of each sub-deck and select delete. Be careful not to delete your Master Decks or the Kana sub-decks! Once you are done with this, you should be left with your Master Decks, which now contain all of the cards from your sub-decks.
As for the Kana decks. This means that once they are moved into your TextFugu 3 — Kana Master Deck there is no way to separate the Hiragana and Katakana cards. Adding Tags to Your Cards. I will use the Kana cards to demonstrate how tags can be added to Anki cards. You are first going to add tags to these cards, then you can absorb them into your Master Deck. Go back to the Browse window and click on your Hiragana sub-deck. The cards contained within it should once again pop up on the right.
Then select Add Tags from the top center. In the window that pops up type: Hiragana and click ok. This should have added the tag Hiragana to all the cards in that deck. To check, click on any individual card and on the bottom of the screen it should display Hiragana in the Tags field.
You can also add any Tags you wish to any of the other cards you have. This will allow you to study all of the cards with those specific tags at the same time. For instance if you wanted to specifically study words that you would need on a trip to Japan, you could add the Tag: Trip to any relevant cards you come across and do a specific study session that includes all of those words, without moving them from their current decks. How to do this will be added here in the future, but for now, if you think of any groups of cards you would wish to study in this manner, you can go ahead and start adding your tags to the appropriate cards.
Recommended for: Very beginning Japanese students who are starting with hiragana and would like to revise or use this as a cheat sheet. All the files are made in PDF format and printable in A4 size. Check the designs and download your favorite season!
You may struggle with Kanji , Grammar , Listening, reading and fail again and again. I know how you feel when you see "Not Pass" I want to share what I learnt in this past through this website. Hope you enjoy. When learning Japanese, it is important that you master hiragana, katakana, and kanji. Hiragana is used to represent sounds, while Katakanas are used for words borrowed from other languages or There are millions of users of the Japanese language around the world.
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