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Anki Kaishi 15k

Once you hit 1,500 words, stop the pre-made decks and start creating your own cards from the shows you're actually watching. Download the deck here: Kaishi 1.5k on AnkiWeb

Words do not exist in a vacuum. Every card in the Kaishi 15K deck includes a natural sample sentence. This helps you grasp the nuances of how a word is used grammatically and culturally, preventing the common mistake of using a word in the wrong context. 4. Clean, Modern Layout

. Do not rush. Learning 10 cards a day means finishing the deck in 5 months with a very manageable daily review load. Keep Reviews at 9999: anki kaishi 15k

Kaishi was built by a collaborative team of advanced learners (including famous YouTubers like The Doth and GameGengo ) with a modern philosophy:

The Core 2k and 6k decks are fantastic for beginners, but they leave a massive gap between upper-intermediate and native fluency. The Core 10k bridges some of this, but it is notoriously unoptimized and contains outdated vocabulary. Kaishi 15k provides an extra 5,000 modern words, capturing the nuances of contemporary media and slang that older decks miss. 2. Sentence Quality Once you hit 1,500 words, stop the pre-made

Anki’s algorithm calculates exactly when you are about to forget a word and tests you at that precise moment. This pushes the vocabulary from your short-term memory into your long-term memory with minimal effort, eliminating time wasted reviewing words you already know well. 2. Sentence Mining Efficiency without the Overhead

The Japanese learning community widely recommends Kaishi 1.5k over older vocabulary decks for several structural and technical reasons: Kaishi 1.5k - Basic Japanese Vocabulary - AnkiWeb This helps you grasp the nuances of how

Anki is a supplement, not the main event. 15,000 cards in a vacuum won't make you fluent. Pairing with Media: Use the deck alongside reading (manga/novels) listening (anime/podcasts)

Ensure cards are set to "Random" or "Ordered" based on difficulty. Usually, learning the most common 2,000 words first is better than alphabetical order. 3. The "Leech" Policy