Mirai Sozo is the School of Future Learning at Hokuriku University. The primary focus is on language (English and Chinese) and management (hospital administration, sports, and business).
In this short 10-minute video are all the kanji the Japanese government believes you need to read a newspaper and other documents in Japanese. These are called the joyo kanji (常用漢字). These are the kanji all graduates of high school are supposed to know. In addition to these 1,945 kanji, last year an additional 196 kanji were added so actually there are 2,136 kanji (five were deleted.)
Then, in the second video, are the 1006 kanji all elementary school kids should know. These are arranged by their on-yomi rank. These are called the Educational (Kyoiku) Kanji (教育漢字)
We did a little YouTube surfing to find you the finest in traditional Japanese musical instruments. We looked at koto, shakuhachi, and biwa. We settled on three shamisen videos. Please listen and enjoy.
First, Black Dog by Led Zeppelin
Then Purple Haze by Jimi Hendrix
Finally, a Bob Dylan tune: All Along the Watchtower.
An interview in English with a British woodblock printer who studied Japanese woodblock printing in Japan. Listen, enjoy, and I hope you can understand most everything.(It is not a complete interview but a good start.)
Standard Mandarin, a website that sells software to help you learn Chinese, has a page called
How To Pronounce Chinese: Common Phrases
If you go to this site: Click Here you can see Chinese, the pinying writing, and when you click on the appropriate button, how to pronounce the phrase.Phrases that must be common in Chinese include:
Your shoelaces are untied. (你的鞋带松了 - nǐde xiédài sōng le)
Will you marry me? (嫁给我吧,好吗 - jiàgěi wǒ ba, hǎo ma?)
McDonald's (麦当劳 - màidàngláo)
Naturally, there a a bunch of other phrases that you use everyday like eat, come here, I'm learning Chinese. If you're interested in Chinese or starting to study it at Hokuriku University, check out the site and see what you can learn at: Standard Mandarin
And a beginning Chinese lesson in English:
Hope these two sites were useful in your Chinese studies. And you can learn more Chinese, listen to Chinese songs (and Japanese songs plus learn vocabulary in all three languages - including English) by going to Hokudai/Cast. (Also on iTunes.)
Then, a short movie showing bits and pieces of Hokuriku University:
Finally, another flick showing part of a Japanese speech contest at Hokuriku University. Yes, fun, eh? A speech contest with drums and singing. Great. Please Enjoy.
A quick trip from Kanazawa Station to Hokuriku University. Enjoy.
Through town, past the famous Omicho Market and into the Minami-cho area. Then up toward the famous Kenrokuen, into Kodatsuno, and then out into the countryside to Hokuriku University. Twenty minutes in about 3:46. Enjoy.
We found a YouTube video for you that teaches Chinese. The paid-website is Ask Benny but we're just going to watch his video about verbs: I, want, buy, like, coffee, and tea. Pretty efficient and easy to follow. In English and Chinese, of course, two of Hokudai/Cast's three languages. Enjoy.
___________________________ Take me to Hokudai/Cast
A simple music video with shots of Hokuriku University and music by Seattle Standard Cafe (more videos and music here; drummer is a HU graduate). Music is in Japanese; the words are in Japanese and English. Enjoy.