In the beginning, it doesn't help much. my chinese friends struggled with japanese as much as i did. in the long run, once you reach a certain proficiency level, then yes, knowing chinese gives you an advantage edge over other learners.. Hello mke48, being a korean, i admit that the japanese pronunciation is much easier, but you have to know that the japanese pronunciation is totally different from korean language.. (4) is it easier to learn chinese after learning japanese or vice versa? i learned chinese after japanese, which i think was the best way for me personally simply because i had a stronger interest in japanese, so for me it was the best “gateway” into asian languages..
Knowledge of thai language make learning chinese a bit easier with tones. (thai has 5 tones, mandarin has 4). additionally, it seemed easier to learn chinese from thai’s mindset than in english. some words in chinese has no direct translation in english but there is in thai.. So for english speakers, chinese is easier than japanese from this aspect. chinese grammar is generally considered a lot easier to learn than japanese. chinese is an isolating language, even more so than english, with no verb conjugations, noun cases or grammatical gender.. Japanese is far easier to speak and read than any dialect of chinese. chinese and japanese share written kanji to a certain extent, but there are differences, especially in pronunciation. chinese will be much harder to learn than japanese for a natural english speaker, bottom line. so if you want to learn chinese, learn chinese..
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