① Those who can read hiragana and katakana but cannot speak well yet
This is the short version of the free app, Quizlet.
We will distribute the full version for free to all students who contact us.
Hiragana list (Only from "あ(a)" ~ "こ(ko)" *sample*)
https://quizlet.com/th/956374210/ひらがな-flash-cards
[Password: 9191]
②Students who have finished up to lesson 19 and want to start from here.
You are more than welcome!
On the previous platform, I met many students who said, "I've studied up to lesson 50, but I want to study it again."
Everyone's knowledge starts to become quite vague around lesson 20.
For example, do you know what particles can and cannot be omitted in casual speech in lesson 20? How do you say "please take it" informally? Most students could not answer right away. Let's start studying again from around here.
In Japanese, "tora" means tiger and "zou" means elephant.
In fact, "Torazou" is also the name of the principal's grandfather.
"◯◯zou" was often added to the end of a man's name in the past, and it did not mean elephant, but we made it the mascot of an animal called an elephant so that everyone can relate to it 😀
We only employ experienced and passionate teachers. They must have at least three years of experience as a Japanese teacher, and we only hire teachers who have continued to improve their lesson plans over those three years and who also explain adverbs and conjunctions (very important).
"""Torazou"" does not have a school somewhere.
We are always working on cost reductions online, so we can offer lessons at this price.