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What do I need to prepare for the Japanese postgraduate entrance examination?

There are two situations when taking the postgraduate entrance examination to take the Japanese language test. One is taking the Japanese language test for a public diploma, which is a unified proposition across the country; the other is taking the Japanese language test for English or other foreign language majors.

The situations are explained below.

(1) Public *** Japanese.

This level is relatively high and requires level 4 or above from a domestic university in China.

In 1995, it required proficiency in 3,000 words and a reading ability of 150 words per minute.

However, the level now far exceeds this number.

In 1998, proficiency in 3,600 words was required, and reading ability remained unchanged.

This is the minimum requirement, as well as composition and translation abilities. It is said that there will be a listening component starting next year.

According to the above requirements, you must: 1. Master about 4,000 words proficiently.

I can read and write. I can read kana and write kanji, and I can read kanji and write kana.

Proficient in mutual translation skills.

You can recognize it wherever you put it.

It’s best to know 1,000 words as a backup.

Pay special attention to Japanese words whose meaning cannot be guessed by looking at the Chinese characters, polyphonic words, and master foreign words.

Nowadays, there are fewer and fewer Chinese characters in exam questions, so we need to pay special attention to the pronunciation of the words so that we can understand the meaning just by reading the kana sentences.

2. Be proficient in basic grammar.

Particles, auxiliary verbs, methods and usage of verb classification and conjugation, honorifics, sentence patterns, usage of numerals, continuation words, etc.

The key is to be proficient, a little knowledge will not suffice.

The concept must be clear and the use must be skillful.

Only in this way can the test be done quickly and accurately.

3. Practice more.

There are not too many problem sets now.

Keep writing questions.

Do various types of questions.

And it must be understood.

Improve your grammar by doing questions.

If you do something wrong, study grammar again and figure out where you went wrong.

4. Try past exam questions.

See where the difference is.

5. Practice listening.

Familiarize yourself with the sample questions of the listening test so that you don’t panic in preparation for the test.

6. Don’t take chances.

If you say to yourself that this may not happen, that may not happen, and you narrow down the scope of your study, you should think that anything may happen.

Note: Since the postgraduate examination level is close to Japan Proficiency Test Level 1-2, you can also choose some exercises in this area to practice.

Reference books I know: 1. Renmin University Postgraduate Entrance Examination Series 2001 Japanese Language Test Guide compiled by Yi Youren, China People's Publishing House 2. National Postgraduate Entrance Examination Japanese Language Examination Syllabus formulated by the People's Republic of China and the Ministry of Education of the People's Republic of China, Higher Education Press 3

, Japanese test-taking guide - written test, edited by Hou Renfeng, Xi'an Jiaotong University Press 4, Japanese test-taking guide - listening comprehension, edited by Hou Renfeng, Xi'an Jiaotong University Press 5, Japanese language proficiency test simulation questions level 1 level 2, edited by Nakagawa Yoshio, Shanghai Foreign Language Education Publishing House

Society 6, Japanese Language Proficiency Test Question Tendency Countermeasures Level 1 Grammar Matsuoka Ryuumi, translated by Pan Shoujun Foreign Language Teaching and Research Press 7, 1990-1994 Master's Unified Examination Japanese Test Questions Collection (2) Japanese as a Second Foreign Language This kind of test paper is provided by each

The questions are asked by the university and the content is relatively simple.

Must achieve: 1. Master about 3,000 words proficiently.

I can read and write. I can read kana and write kanji, and I can read kanji and write kana.

Proficient in mutual translation skills.

You can recognize it wherever you put it.

It’s best to know 1,000 words as a backup.

Pay special attention to Japanese words whose meaning cannot be guessed by looking at the Chinese characters, polyphonic words, and master foreign words.

2. Be proficient in basic grammar.

Particles, auxiliary verbs, methods and usage of verb classification and conjugation, honorifics, sentence patterns, usage of numerals, continuation words, etc.

The key is to be proficient, a little knowledge will not suffice.

The concept must be clear and the use must be skillful.

Only in this way can the test be done quickly and accurately.

3. Since each school sets its own questions, you should understand the requirements of the school you want to apply for and choose the designated textbooks and study scope.

4. Practice more.

Make questions based on school requirements.

Do various types of questions.

And it must be understood.

Improve your grammar by doing questions.

If you do something wrong, study grammar again and figure out where you went wrong.

5. Collect past test questions from the school for trial practice and research to understand the level and characteristics of the test questions.

See where the difference is.