Here are the download links to the worksheets Cure Dolly produced covering points from the first six lessons of the Organic Japanese Structure Course. These are pdf files. If you click them, they will appear on your device.| Organic Japanese with Cure Dolly
Learning to speak and write is an important part of learning Japanese. Cure Dolly frequently emphasizes that the mind treats language in a very different way from anything else. Being able to use a language for real communication is the key to getting your mind to prioritize your Japanese.| Organic Japanese with Cure Dolly
This piece arose from an answer to a question on the nominalizing no and perhaps explains this particular aspect a little more clearly than in the video The Japanese nominalizing no particle.| Organic Japanese with Cure Dolly
Self-learning A.I. android Cure Dolly reveals the reason why most foreign learners of Japanese end up non-competent in the language – and what you can do to make sure you aren’t one of them.| Organic Japanese with Cure Dolly
This is the support page for the video Groping in the Darkness (If you haven’t seen it, you can find it at the end of this page).| Organic Japanese with Cure Dolly
This is the support-page for the Japanese self-immersion video “Taking the Plunge” (you can find it further down the page).| Organic Japanese with Cure Dolly
Can you learn to speak Japanese without an accent? Maybe the first question to ask is why you would want to.| Organic Japanese with Cure Dolly
開くAku, 開くhiraku or 開けるakeru? Japanese has three words for "opening", all based on the same kanji. And two of them are written exactly the same. When should you use which one? And why?| Organic Japanese with Cure Dolly
Japanese punctuation is easy, but to understand it we need to know a few things. This guide breaks down the essentials of Japanese grammar.| Organic Japanese with Cure Dolly
A question today concerns 思われる, the receptive form of 思う. It is a good question because I think this is something that can be confusing, partly because of the way the receptive is explained as passive (which works – as a loose translation – part of the time but not all of it and completely messes up the structure) and partly because Japanese just puts things a little differently from English:| Organic Japanese with Cure Dolly