Human Japanese [3.1.1] by Nihon - posted in Cracked APK Release: Name: Human Japanese Price: €8.04 Description: Learn Japanese with this completely refreshed edition of the beloved Human Japanese app!Human Japanese presents the Japanese language from square one in a warm, engaging tone. Ultimate Vocabulary 2015 Download Crack x86 x64 Ultimate Vocabulary 2015 Key Ultimate Vocabulary 2015 Serial Ultimate Vocabulary 2015 Activation Ultimate Vocabulary 2015 Torrent [] Read More. NuSphere PhpED 16.0 Professional Build16063 Download Full Cracked x86 x64 NuSphere PhpED.
Learn Japanese with the long-awaited sequel to Human Japanese! Almost three years in the making, Human Japanese Intermediate is packed with content and features that will take your Japanese language skills to the next level.
If you liked the first HJ, you'll love Intermediate. (And if you're new to Human Japanese, welcome aboard! A great follow-up to the previous app. I'd very much like to see a continuation at some point, perhaps with a bit more focus on learning more Kanji as, towards the end, progress felt a bit slow in that regard. However, I can still confidently say that this is one of the best - if not THE best - apps for learning Japanese on on here. It is certainly the best I've come across, which is why the Beginner and Intermediate apps were truly worth paying for. If you're still in doubt, try the demo versions.
They'll give you a great idea of what to expect from both of the apps. I have a suggestion. Please use kanji for the words in Vocab test. Assuming that the kanji was already learned for that specific chapter, it would be much better to present them that way. I'm kind of surprised because some words in the vocab tests were already taken in HJ1.
It would make sense to represent them in their kanji forms in HJ2 vocab test. I haven't finished the app yet. I'm still at chapter 14, but I find the app really helpful.
I was able to build a solid foundation in a short amount of time. I hope I'd be able to see my suggestion as an update before I finish the app. It's good but overall app rating: OK (3 stars) I like every feature of this app, except that it's slow. For example, switching pages is slow, showing the next question in a question is slow, basically everything is. Also, can a syncing feature be implemented? I reset my phone every now and then, and on the first time I reset it having this app, I found that all of my notes are gone - I am already at chapter 10 when that happened, so having a syncing feature (or at least a backup feature) would be helpful.
This app is quite expensive (overpriced for overall app quality), so maybe try to listen to user feedback. やった! I've started learning Japanese 10 years + ago, including 3 years at school, which did help immensely, but I kind of. Got stuck with the basic. The problem was mainly the difficulty of finding Japanese people online to talk to. I've picked it up a week or 2 ago and after finishing Duolingo first, I was not satisfied at all. I then bought this app, and I can say it is the best 12 euros I've spent in a long, long time.
My level of Japanese is skyrocketing and I can impossibly not study for at least 3 or 4 hours a day. I've reached chapter 20 now, and learning Japanese is getting more and more exciting, especially since I found a Japanese friend online recently with whom I can practice what I've learned. If you are even only a little serious about learning Japanese, and you already have a basic understanding of grammar, and can read ひらがな and カタカナ, do yourself a favor and buy this app. If you have never learned Japanese before: I can imagine that the beginner app of Human Japanese is equally good.
The only thing missing to me is a way of practicing kanji writing in the app itself (apart from the stroke order quizes), but the sheer amount of clearly explained and often funny information more than makes up for this. Thank you, Human Japanese. You're the best learning Japanese app there is.
Although the above picture might look like something out of a nightmare, these crackers are very real and on sale in Nagano Prefecture, Japan. It’s a senbei, which is a Japanese style of rice cracker, that in this instance, has had a bunch of wasps added to it for flavor orhealth or something.
We don’t know why exactly but we recently had the pleasure of sitting down with a bag of wasp crackers, only to find that they actually weren’t nearly as horrifying as you might expect. They were only partially horrifying. ■ Assignment It was a sunny yet chilly day in Osaka when I arrived at my office to find a package waiting. It was from the RocketNews24 editorial department, and upon opening there was a note from the editors. Intrigued, I dug further into the box’s contents. Inside were two bags of crackers with a hearty portion of little black wasps embedded throughout. ■ “Popular in Japan” These crackers recently surfaced on the website 9GAG when someone posted a picture of one with the heading “So apparently this is quite popular in japan I give you the nope-cake!” Image: The image triggered feelings of disgust and fear from all who saw it, either from the plentiful wasps inside the snack or filthy fingernail holding it.
“Dudebeecareful” “Oh fak, there’s a cookie among my bees.” “Those are some big chocolate chips (I hope).” “Enough food for today.” “Japanese pplf#@ked up.” “I thought that was Pikachu roadkill.” It also elicited several of the commenters finest “nope” animated gifs. As many other comments pointed out, these really were not at all famous in Japan. However, there are some pockets here and there around the country that have a custom of eating insect foods. The wasps used in these crackers ( Vespula flaviceps or Kurosuzume bachi) are farmed in certain parts of central Japan for human consumption. Their larvae in particular is said to be eaten with rice. ■ Best served with a bucket Thankfully, the wasps in my crackers didn’t look nearly as big as the ones in the 9GAG photo and my fingernails weren’t nearly as dirty.
However, those were the only two silver linings in this assignment. I decided to set my table with what I felt were the necessary tools. First, I made sure to have a bucket to puke in. Then I put out a plate and napkin, because I’m not a savage after all. Finally, I got a bottle of whiskey to make my brain stop yelling at me not to go through with this. Normally I don’t encourage drinking at work, but when your job is eating wasps, it’s always Miller time.
The wasp crackers were sold in packs of two, which I think is almost obnoxiously presumptuous of the makers. Upon opening them up there was an unusual odor. It wasn’t really disgusting, but it wasn’t terribly appetizing either.
The smell reminded me of the food I used to feed my pet tropical fish as a kid. I stared at the crackers for a good few minutes just to make sure they weren’t going to suddenly reanimate like I kept envisioning they would. Then, I went in for a bite. The sweet and slightly savory taste of the senbei cracker was firmly present and to be honest I could barely taste the wasps at all. Feeling more confident, I went in to a second bite, this time from a spot more densely packed with wasps.
This time I could get a better sense of their taste and texture. They were very much like raisins but had a slightly acidic and bitter taste to them. In other words, they tasted burnt, which I guess made sense since they were baked in a cracker. However, I can’t say it was a bad taste. It certainly was a disgusting sensation to bite down on something round and squishy and know that it must have been either a head or an abdomen, and when a wing or a leg got stuck between my cheek and gums it wasn’t the best feeling in the world. But in the end, those were more just figments of my own squeamishness rather than anything truly disgusting about the wasps themselves. ■ Conclusion Crackers filled with wasps aren’t that bad at all, but they aren’t very good either.
Personally, I will probably never eat them again. However, I could absolutely see them as an acquired taste that some people could get into after eating a bag or ten.
They’re probably really healthy, too, and full of protein and whatnot, but I’m in fairly good shape so I’ll pass. And so I give wasp-filled crackers from Nagano Prefecture 19 stars out of 44 which means you can probably forgo the puke bucket and whiskey but it also probably won’t be love at first taste. If you want to try some you can order them from the Amazon link below where two bags of 12 sell for about 2,000 yen (US$17).
Wasp Crackers from: (Amazon) Source: (English) via (Japanese), (English) Photos: RocketNews24 unless otherwise noted ▼ Each two-pack of cookies comes with its own silica gel pack to keep it fresh. Be sure not to eat it though! That would be gross.