I’ve finished all the ones from the main N5-N1 decks, the Kansai-ben ones, and the ones listed under Non-JLPT on the grammar page (or “on-JLPT級” if you have your language set to Japanese ), are there any other ones on the site not contained in one of these places? I’m not aware of a way to see what grammar points are on the site besides the main list which doesn’t include the Kansai ones, so I wasn’t sure if there were other “hidden” ones.
That’s the page I was referring to as the main grammar list in my post.
Yeah, this site has weird UX issues that needs to be addressed.
There is that Onomatopoeia deck, if you consider that grammar, but I checked up and down and I couldn’t find anything. Also spelling onomatopoeia was a pain in the butt.
@Asher , are there any hidden grammar points or are they listed in the Grammar Points link?
I see, then I don’t know. That page literally has a filter for all grammar points, so it’s a bit odd that this page does not contain all grammar points. Maybe it’s a bug
Yep the main grammar page has everything listed that we currently have. There is the possibility that some items that may traditionally be considered as grammar are mixed amongst the vocab decks, but you’d need to search for them manually.
The only reason the kansai stuff isn’t on that page is that the kansai stuff is not JLPT grammar, but that’s a good point about it not appearing even though it says all grammar.
Sidetrack but what does the little 硬 beside some of the grammar points mean?
If Its about curiosity, here are a few recommendations:
First of all, of course there are a bunch of grammar points that arent mentioned here which are floating around in novels. You just have to mine them and add them to your deck. (Thats what I recommend)
On the other hand, if you just want to know more about grammar, there are a variety of resources that explain the grammar points more in depth than here on Bunpro (Cure Dolly for example. I dont recommend Tae Kim though since his explanations are more empirical than rational, which is good for some but I dont like it.)
I also recommend ChatGPTs Deep-Research function if you care about the Etymology of words.
It is to indicate it’s usage in formal language. 硬い = formal.
It does say all grammar and not JLPT grammar, though. Plus, there’s already a section for non-JLPT grammar on the all grammar page, which could include the Kansai grammar. This is a bit confusing.
Agreed.