There are vocabulary lists (with English translations) of key words for each topic. In particular, it has a lot of articles on traditional Japanese culture, such as calligraphy, tea ceremony and martial arts. It has short texts and videos on lots of different topics. Hirogaru is a cute site for Japanese learners. We have just the thing for you! Here are some sites for Japanese reading practice for intermediate students: You need some reading resources that introduce these features of the language, but you still need a bit of help understanding new words. Intermediate Japanese reading practiceĪt the intermediate level, you will be able to understand longer sentences and more difficult works. You can increase the text size from the homepage. One problem with this site is that the writing is an image file, so you can’t copy and paste words to look in a dictionary. Use the yellow buttons at the top to navigate. The E-hon site for Japanese children’s stories. Then click the yellow ‘next’ button at the top to turn the pages. Just click on an image to go to the book. This site is not so user-friendly, but I included it as an extra resource in case you have problems with the above sites. Thank you Matthew for sharing!Īnother source for Japanese children’s picture books online. Each story comes with a vocab list, a sound recording and a downloadable pdf. The stories contain some kanji with furigana (pronunciation guide in hiragana). There are some made up stories and also some traditional Japanese children’s stories, rewritten in simple Japanese. The author of this site is a high school Japanese teacher who writes simple stories as Japanese reading practice for their students. You can also pay for membership to read the archives. ![]() The ‘Japan News and World News’ section has slightly longer articles. Only the most recent article in each section is available for free. The ‘Tenki Yohoo’ (weather forecast) and ‘Short News’ sections contain very short articles for beginners. Key vocabulary is listed in English below. You can also download a pdf of the article if you want to write notes. Use the highlighted buttons at the top right to change script. The CosCom site has very short news articles in Japanese. You can click the buttons at the top to switch between romaji, hiragana, and full Japanese (with kanji). It’s unusual to find reading materials for beginners that aren’t children’s books, but I managed it! This site publishes very short news articles in simple Japanese. Here you can find fantastic instructions with screenshots to help you get set up. The whole site is in Japanese, so it’s a bit difficult for beginners. The only downside is that you have to register. Yes, there are even books for babies with just one of two words per page, making this a great resource even for complete beginners! You can browse books by age, from 0 up to 12. There is the option to show or hide romaji and English translation line by line.ĮhonNavi is an amazing site that lets you read hundreds of different Japanese children’s picture books, all for free! Unlike the above sites, there are lots of modern books (not just traditional tales). Scroll to the bottom of the linked page and you will find links to several Japanese fairy tales, written in very simple Japanese. Here’s a very simple site for Japanese reading practice in hiragana only. Many of the stories also have audio or video tracks. Start with 1ねんせい (1 st grade, which uses hiragana only) and work up to 6 th grade as you learn more kanji! This page lists the stories by Japanese school year. Most of them don’t have English translations, but they are written in very simple Japanese so you can have a go at translating them yourself! ![]() ![]() Once you’ve read those, you can explore the rest of the stories here. I recommend that beginners start with this page which has four stories written in hiragana with English translations. It’s is an absolutely huge site and it is written for Japanese children (not language students), so it can be a bit confusing to navigate. Hukumusume is a site full of traditional Japanese children’s stories. Some of the free L0 (beginner) Japanese books to read online at Tadoku.
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