GameGogakuen's Japanese Production Flashcards

Language/Japanese

Thanks for trying my production flashcards for learning Japanese. Included are the iKnow Core sentences, example sentences from the Dictionaries of Japanese Grammar (Basic, Intermediate, and Advanced), and sentences mined from video games. For more information on what makes production cards beneficial, please see this page: https://sites.google.com/view/gamegogakuen-flashcards/home

If you somehow found this deck outside of ankiweb.net and you'd like updates for it, you can find them here: https://ankiweb.net/shared/info/1898331135

To explain the cloze hints:

A period "." represents one character, whether it be kana, kanji, or otherwise. My definition of a character is anything that would be deleted by pressing backspace once, so both "シュー" and "学習者" would count as 3 characters.

Example: [...] represents a three-character answer.

A hyphen "-" represents 5 characters, because it's easier to see than counting 5 periods in a row.

Example: [-.] represents a six-character answer.

A not-equals sign "≠" represents one character that is NOT the following character, nor any of the characters comma-separated inside a following set of parentheses.

Examples: 
[..≠と.] represents a four-character answer in which the third character is NOT と.
[..≠(の,に)..] represents a five-character answer in which the third character is NEITHER の NOR に.

If there's a character in the hint WITHOUT a not-equals sign (≠) in front of it, it means the character in that position IS that character, which helps with phrases that include particles.

Example: [.の.] represents a three-character answer in which the second character IS の, such as in the phrase "気の毒".

A question mark "?" means there MIGHT be a character in that position, but revealing the number of characters would give away the answer by eliminating all other relevant possibilities.

Example: "八十[?.]" as a hint for either "八十年代" or "八十代", which could either mean "the 80s (as a time period)" or "someone in their 80s", but revealing the exact number of characters wouldn't test the learner's grasp of the difference.

If there are multiple question marks in a row, the answer has either exactly that many extra characters or none of those extra characters, but not any amount in-between.

Example: [...??] represents either a three-character answer or a five-character answer, but not any amount in-between (i.e. it's not a four-character answer). This might be due to a necessary conjugation such as "嬉しい" vs "嬉しかった".

Sometimes there are multiple acceptable ways to write an answer using the same number of characters, for example 気を遣う vs 気を使う. In such cases, I've tried to include such possibilities in the "alternate answers" field, which is formatted in a way that our Discord quiz bot can accept them, but unfortunately Anki cannot check for multiple acceptable answers when comparing input to a cloze deletion, so you'll have to check that field manually unless someone writes an add-on. If I've missed any alternate answers, please let me know on our Discord server, linked below.

If you'd like to study more than 20 new cards per day and/or more than 200 reviews per day per deck, click the "Options" button at the bottom of the Anki window and adjust the values under "Daily Limits", then click the arrow at the top right next to "Save", and click "Save to All Subdecks", then click "Save".

If you'd like to try my FSRS-6 parameters, which have been calculated based on my production card review history of 361,603 reviews, they currently are the following, set to a desired retention of 92%: 1.2549, 5.5789, 23.7174, 50.7305, 8.5407, 0.7802, 3.7597, 0.0010, 1.5262, 0.0262, 0.9548, 1.7949, 0.0044, 0.4822, 1.7951, 0.0779, 3.2783, 0.6171, 1.0674, 0.1323, 0.1753

If you have any questions or feedback, or you'd like to try the cards in a multiplayer quiz format without any SRS features, feel free to stop by our Discord server: https://discord.gg/ufUCbmKj29

Sample Data

Expression 日本では、{{c1::大晦日::...}}にそばを食べます。
Kana にっぽんではおおみそかにそばをたべます
EngMeaning In Japan we eat buckwheat noodles on New Year's Eve.
AlternateAnswers
Audio
Image
Notes
Pronunciation ニッポꜜン, オーミꜜソカ, ソꜜバ, タベꜜル
WebLookup
Pronunciation
AlternateAnswers
Expression これ{{c1::をもって::....}}本大会を{{c2::閉会::..}}します。
Reading これをもって 本[ほん] 大会[たいかい]を 閉会[へいかい]します。
JpMeaning
EngMeaning With this, we will close this conference.
OfficialEng
QuestionImage
Audio
Notes pg665
AnswerImage
PreviousLineImage
PreviousLineText
OtherVisibleContext
WebLookup
Pronunciation
AlternateAnswers
Expression 彼は{{c1::たった::...}}一人でやってきた。
Reading 彼[かれ]はたった一 人[にん]でやってきた。
JpMeaning
EngMeaning He came over just by himself.
OfficialEng
QuestionImage
Audio
Notes pg448
AnswerImage
PreviousLineImage
PreviousLineText
OtherVisibleContext
0 Cards
0 Likes
5 Ratings
0 Downloads