Quick View ๐
Reading Time: 12 minutes
Level: Beginner to Advanced (all tadoku practitioners)
What You’ll Learn:
- The golden rules of handling unknown vocabulary in extensive reading ๐
- When to look up words vs. when to keep reading ๐ค
- Practical strategies that maintain flow and build confidence ๐
- How to choose the right difficulty level for maximum growth ๐
Perfect for: Japanese learners in Vancouver, Canada, and the US who want to read Japanese naturally, build fluency through tadoku (extensive reading), and stop feeling stuck every few sentences! ๐
- Quick View ๐
- What Is Tadoku and Why Does It Work? ๐ค
- The #1 Challenge Every Tadoku Reader Faces ๐
- โ Strategy 1: Follow the Golden Rule of Tadoku
- ๐ Strategy 2: Master the Art of Context Clues
- ๐งฉ Strategy 3: The Three-Category Method
- ๐ฑ Strategy 4: Set Dictionary Rules (Critical!) โ ๏ธ
- ๐ Strategy 5: Choose Books at the Right Level
- ๐ง Strategy 6: Trust the Process
- โ๏ธ Strategy 7: Strategic Post-Reading Review
- ๐ฏ Putting It All Together: Your Tadoku Action Plan
- ๐ Final Thoughts: Embrace the Tadoku Mindset
- ๐ Your Next Steps: Tadoku Action Checklist
- ๐ Recommended Resources
- ๐ A Personal Note from NihongoKnow.com
What Is Tadoku and Why Does It Work? ๐ค
Understanding ๅค่ชญ (Tadoku) ๐
ๅค่ชญ (ใใฉใ / tadoku) literally means “extensive reading” or “reading a lot.” It’s a revolutionary approach to language learning that flips traditional methods on their head!
Traditional reading approach: โ Read one difficult text very slowly
โ Look up every unknown word
โ Analyze every grammar point
โ Focus on perfection over volume
โ Result: Exhaustion and frustration ๐ฐ
Tadoku approach: โ
Read LOTS of easy, enjoyable content
โ
Skip most unknown words
โ
Prioritize understanding the story
โ
Focus on fluency over accuracy
โ
Result: Natural acquisition and confidence! ๐
The Science Behind Tadoku ๐ง
Why does reading without dictionaries work?
- Pattern Recognition: Your brain learns grammar and vocabulary patterns through repeated exposure, just like children do
- Reduced Cognitive Load: When you’re not constantly stopping, your brain can focus on meaning and flow
- Natural Acquisition: Language becomes intuitive rather than memorized
- Increased Volume: You read 5-10x more content than with intensive study
- Motivation: Enjoyable reading creates positive associations with Japanese
Research shows: Learners who do extensive reading progress faster in overall comprehension than those who only do intensive study! ๐
Tadoku in Vancouver & North America ๐
Perfect for busy learners who:
- Commute on SkyTrain/bus (Vancouver) ๐
- Have 15-30 minutes of free time daily โฐ
- Want to improve without formal classes ๐
- Need low-stress, sustainable practice ๐ฑ
- Love stories, manga, or Japanese culture ๐
The #1 Challenge Every Tadoku Reader Faces ๐
The Unknown Word Dilemma ๐ค
The scenario every learner knows:
You’re reading a Japanese story. Everything’s going well. Then suddenly:
ๅฝผๅฅณใฏๅบญใงใ่ฌใฎๆผขๅญใใ่ฆใคใใใ
Your brain: “Wait, what’s that word? Should I look it up? Will I understand the story without it? Am I being lazy if I skip it? Will I ever learn if I keep skipping?”
Result: You spend 5 minutes debating, lose your flow, feel frustrated, and sometimes give up reading altogether. ๐ฐ
Why This Happens ๐ญ
Psychological factors:
- Fear of missing important information
- Perfectionist tendencies from traditional education
- Anxiety about “proper” learning
- Cultural emphasis on knowing everything
- Pressure to use dictionaries “productively”
The truth: In tadoku, strategically skipping words is actually GOOD learning! ๐ฏ
โ Strategy 1: Follow the Golden Rule of Tadoku
The Non-Negotiable Principle ๐
If the word is not essential to basic story comprehension โ SKIP IT and keep reading.
Why this works:
Your brain is smarter than you think! Even when you consciously skip words, your subconscious:
- Notices patterns โจ
- Builds associations ๐งฉ
- Stores information for later ๐พ
- Develops intuition ๐ฏ
What “Essential” Actually Means ๐ฏ
Essential words:
- Main verbs describing key actions
- Subject nouns (who is doing what)
- Negations (ใใ vs. ใใชใ changes everything!)
- Question words (ไฝใ่ชฐใใฉใใใใค)
Non-essential words:
- Specific flower names ๐ธ
- Rare descriptive adjectives
- Complex onomatopoeia
- Technical terminology
- Fancy literary expressions
Real Example ๐
Sentence:
ๆฅใซใชใใจใๅ ฌๅใซใฏ่ฒใจใใฉใใฎใ้ฃใใ่ฑใฎๅๅใใๅฒใๅงใใใ
What you need to understand: “In spring, various flowers start blooming in the park.”
What you DON’T need: The specific botanical name of each flower species!
Keep reading! The story isn’t about flower taxonomy. ๐ท
The 95% Comprehension Rule ๐
Ideal tadoku material should be:
- 95-98% comprehensible without a dictionary
- If you understand less than 90% โ material is too hard
- If you understand 100% โ material is too easy (no growth!)
Sweet spot: You grasp the story easily but encounter 2-5% new language naturally. This is where magic happens! โจ
๐ Strategy 2: Master the Art of Context Clues
Before Reaching for the Dictionary… ๐ค
Ask yourself these detective questions:
1. What’s happening in the scene? ๐ฌ
ๅคช้ใฏ่ฉฆ้จใฎ็ตๆใ่ฆใฆใใunknown wordใใใใ
Context clues:
- ่ฉฆ้จ = test
- ็ตๆ = result
- ใ่ฆใฆ = looked at
Likely meaning: Some emotion/reaction to test results (happy? sad? surprised?)
Do you need the exact word? Probably not to follow the story!
2. What type of word is it? ๐ท๏ธ
Look at the grammar patterns:
| Pattern | Likely Word Type | Example |
| ใ?ใใช + noun | Na-adjective | ้ใใชใใใใใช |
| ใ?ใใ + noun | I-adjective | ๅคงใใใๆฅฝใใ |
| ใ?ใใใ/ใ | Noun or verb | ๅๅผทใใใๆฌใ |
| ใ?ใใ/ใซ | Adverb | ๆฉใใ้ใใซ |
This helps you guess the word’s function even without knowing it!
3. Does the illustration help? ๐จ
For manga, picture books, graded readers:
- Facial expressions show emotions ๐๐ข๐
- Background shows location ๐ ๐ซ๐ณ
- Actions are often visible ๐โโ๏ธ๐ค๐ฝ๏ธ
Example: Character’s face is red and steam is coming out = probably angry or embarrassed!
4. What usually appears in this pattern? ๐งฉ
Grammar pattern recognition:
If you see:
…ใฎใงใใ?ใ
You know: Something happened (reason), SO (result).
Even without knowing the exact word after ใฎใง, you know it’s a consequence!
The Power of “Good Enough” Understanding ๐ช
Perfectionism kills tadoku. “Good enough” builds fluency.
Example:
ๅฝผๅฅณใฏใglittering thingใใๆพใฃใใ
You don’t know the word for “glittering thing” but you understand:
- She (subject)
- Picked up (verb)
- Something shiny (object)
Good enough! Keep reading to see what happens with the shiny thing! โจ
๐งฉ Strategy 3: The Three-Category Method
Categorize Unknown Words Instantly โก
When you encounter an unknown word, mentally categorize it in under 3 seconds:
Category 1: Words You Don’t Need ๐๏ธ
Skip without guilt!
Examples:
- ๐ธ Specific plant species (ๆก vs. ๆข vs. ่ค – if context is just “flower”)
- ๐ต Complex onomatopoeia (ใใใใใใใใใใใ)
- ๐ Rare literary expressions
- ๐ฆ Specific animal breeds
- ๐๏ธ Historical terminology (unless reading history specifically)
Vancouver context: Like reading English and seeing “Tsuga heterophylla” (Western Hemlock). You know it’s a treeโthat’s enough! ๐ฒ
Category 2: Words You Can Guess from Context ๐ค
Skip but stay awareโmight become clear soon!
Example:
ๅฝผๅฅณใฏใณใฃใใใใฆใ็ฎใใ?ใใใใ
Context clues:
- ใณใฃใใ = surprised
- ็ฎ = eyes
- ใ…ใใ = did something with eyes
Reasonable guess: Widened? Opened wide? Blinked?
Do you need the exact word? No! You understand she was surprised and did something with her eyes. Keep reading! ๐
Category 3: Words That Block Understanding ๐ซ
THESE are the ones worth looking up!
When to stop and check:
- Key verb appears 3+ times and story doesn’t make sense
- Main character’s name/role is unclear
- Critical plot point hinges on this word
- Negation vs. affirmation is unclear
- Question word you don’t know (ไฝใ่ชฐใใฉใ, etc.)
Example that DOES need looking up:
ๅคช้ใฏๆฏๆฅใunknown verbใใใฆใใใใใใๅฝผใฎไปไบใ ใ
If you don’t know the verb and it’s literally his job, you probably should check! Otherwise the whole story might not make sense. ๐ผ
The Category Decision Tree ๐ณ
Unknown word appears
โ
Can I follow the story without it?
โ
YES โ Category 1 or 2 โ Keep reading! โ
โ
NO โ Is it blocking major comprehension?
โ
YES โ Category 3 โ Look it up! ๐
๐ฑ Strategy 4: Set Dictionary Rules (Critical!) โ ๏ธ
Why You Need Rules ๐ฏ
Without rules: You’ll look up every word, break flow constantly, get exhausted, and quit.
With rules: You read sustainably, build fluency, and actually enjoy the process! ๐
Effective Dictionary Rules ๐
Rule Option 1: The “After Chapter” Method ๐
“I will only look up words AFTER finishing the chapter.”
Pros:
- โ Maintains flow completely
- โ Shows which words you actually remember (important ones!)
- โ Prevents dictionary addiction
- โ Lets you see if context clarifies later
Cons:
- โ Might miss key details if early word was critical
- โ Requires discipline to not peek!
Best for: Intermediate+ readers with good context-guessing skills
Rule Option 2: The “Three Strike” Method โพ
“I only look up a word if it appears 3+ times in the text.”
Pros:
- โ Focuses on high-frequency vocabulary
- โ Shows word is actually important to this text
- โ You’ve seen it in multiple contexts (better learning!)
- โ Efficient use of study time
Cons:
- โ Might miss one-time critical words
- โ Requires tracking repetitions mentally
Best for: All levels! Great balanced approach ๐ฏ
Rule Option 3: The “Five Word Limit” ๐ฏ
“Maximum 5 word lookups per reading session.”
Pros:
- โ Allows checking truly confusing words
- โ Keeps dictionary use reasonable
- โ Forces prioritization
- โ Measurable and clear limit
Cons:
- โ Might feel restrictive if text is slightly too hard
- โ Creates pressure about “wasting” lookups
Best for: Beginners building tadoku habits
Rule Option 4: The “Time-Based” Method โฐ
“I can look up words only during the last 5 minutes of my session.”
Pros:
- โ Encourages full reading sessions first
- โ Dedicated review time
- โ Clear boundary
- โ Combines reading + study smoothly
Cons:
- โ Might forget which words you wanted to check
- โ Requires timer/discipline
Best for: Structured learners who like routines
Vancouver Commuter Tip ๐
If you read on SkyTrain/bus:
- Reading phase: Gastown to Waterfront station = pure reading, no dictionary
- Review phase: Waterfront to your destination = can check 3 words max
This geographical boundary makes rules easy to follow! ๐บ๏ธ
Digital Tool Rules ๐ฒ
If using apps like Satori Reader, Todai, or Kindle:
โ Good use:
- Quick pop-up hover (1 second glance)
- Built-in furigana that doesn’t interrupt flow
- Checking after finishing a section
โ Bad use:
- Tapping every word to see definition
- Reading translations instead of Japanese
- Using it like a crutch instead of training wheels
๐ Strategy 5: Choose Books at the Right Level
The Goldilocks Principle ๐ป
Too easy: No growth, boredom
Too hard: Frustration, giving up
Just right: Flow state, natural acquisition โจ
How to Know If a Book Is “Right” ๐
Try the “First Page Test:”
Read the first page without a dictionary.
Count unknown words:
- 0-2 unknown words: Might be too easy (but okay if enjoying!)
- 3-7 unknown words: PERFECT! This is your level! โ
- 8-15 unknown words: Challenging but doable (need strong motivation)
- 15+ unknown words: Too hard right now (save for later!)
Recommended Tadoku Materials by Level ๐
Absolute Beginner (JLPT N5-N4) ๐ฑ
Book series:
- Japanese Graded Readers (Level 0-1)
- Tadoku series by NPO Tadoku Supporters
- ใใใใๆๅบซ
- ใซใปใใใใใใๆๅบซ
Digital resources:
- Satori Reader (Beginner stories)
- NHK News Web Easy (with audio!)
- Hiragana Times magazine
Manga with furigana:
- ใใคใฐใจ๏ผ(Yotsuba&!)
- ใกใณใพใๅญใกใใ (Chibi Maruko-chan)
- ใใฉใใใ (Doraemon)
Where to find in Vancouver:
- Daiso (some manga)
- Kinokuniya Seattle (worth the trip!)
- Online: Amazon.jp, Book Depository, digital apps
Intermediate (JLPT N3-N2) ๐
Light novels:
- ใณใณใใไบบ้ (Convenience Store Woman)
- ๅใฎๅใฏ (Your Name – novel version)
- ้ญๅฅณใฎๅฎ ๆฅไพฟ (Kiki’s Delivery Service)
Young adult literature:
- ใใใฟใฎๅญคๅ (Lonely Castle in the Mirror)
- ๅคใฎใใฏใใใฏ (Night Picnic)
Digital:
- Kindle Japanese books
- Aozora Bunko (free classics)
- Satori Reader (Intermediate)
Vancouver resources:
- Vancouver Public Library (some Japanese books!)
- UBC Asian Library (if you have access)
- Digital subscriptions (read anywhere!)
Advanced (JLPT N1+) ๐
Modern literature:
- ๆไธๆฅๆจน (Haruki Murakami)
- ๆฑ้ๅญๅพ (Keigo Higashino – mysteries)
- ๅๆฌใฐใชใช (Banana Yoshimoto)
Non-fiction:
- Japanese newspapers (Asahi, Mainichi)
- Business books
- Academic papers
Signs You Picked the Wrong Level โ ๏ธ
Too easy if:
- You’re bored ๐ด
- No mental engagement required
- You could read it in your sleep
- No new vocabulary after 10 pages
โ Level up!
Too hard if:
- Stopping every sentence ๐ซ
- Need dictionary for 20+ words per page
- Can’t follow basic plot
- Feeling frustrated instead of challenged
- Reading feels like torture
โ Level downโno shame!
Just right if:
- Engaged and curious ๐ค
- Occasional challenge but manageable
- Understanding 90-95% naturally
- Can read for 20+ minutes without exhaustion
- Want to know what happens next! ๐
๐ง Strategy 6: Trust the Process
The Uncomfortable Truth About Language Acquisition ๐ฏ
What traditional education taught you: “You must understand every word to really learn!”
What science actually shows: “Your brain acquires language through meaningful exposure, not conscious memorization!”
How Your Brain Learns Without You Knowing ๐งฉ
Even when you skip words, your brain:
- Builds implicit knowledge ๐ก
- Recognizes patterns subconsciously
- Associates sounds with meanings
- Develops “feeling” for correct usage
- Strengthens neural pathways ๐ง
- Repeated exposure reinforces connections
- Context helps create memory hooks
- Stories create emotional associations
- Develops reading fluency ๐
- Eye movement patterns improve
- Processing speed increases
- Automatic recognition develops
- Creates positive associations โค๏ธ
- Reading feels enjoyable, not stressful
- Confidence builds naturally
- Motivation sustains long-term
The Vocabulary Spiral Effect ๐
Here’s what happens with repeated reading:
First encounter: “I have no idea what this word means.” ๐คท
Second encounter (different book): “Oh, that word again… maybe it means something like this?” ๐ค
Third encounter: “I’m pretty sure this means [rough idea]!” ๐ก
Fourth encounter: “I know this word!” โจ
You never looked it up, but you learned it anyway!This is natural acquisitionโthe way children learn their first language! ๐ถ
โ๏ธ Strategy 7: Strategic Post-Reading Review
After Reading: The Smart Way to Build Vocabulary ๐
NOT this: โ Write down every unknown word
โ Make flashcards for everything
โ Stress about what you didn’t know
Instead this: โ
Pick 3-5 words that felt important
โ
Choose words you’re genuinely curious about
โ
Create meaningful, personal connections
The “3-5 Word Rule” ๐ฏ
After each reading session (chapter, 20 minutes, whatever unit you choose):
Step 1: Reflect ๐ค “Which words appeared multiple times?” “Which words made me curious?” “Which would be useful in real life?”
Step 2: Choose wisely ๐ Pick only 3-5 words MAX!
Quality over quantity!
Step 3: Engage meaningfully ๐ Don’t just write “ๅฌใใ = happy”
Instead:
- Write a personal sentence: “ใใณใฏใผใใผใฎๅคใฏๅฌใใ๏ผ”
- Draw the kanji with parts labeled
- Make a silly mnemonic
- Connect to a memory: “I felt ๅฌใใ when I passed N3!”
The SRS Integration Method ๐
If you use Anki or similar:
Good approach:
- Add 3-5 words per reading session
- Include context sentence from the book
- Add book title as a tag
- Review next day
Bad approach:
- Add 50 words after one session
- Generic dictionary definitions
- No context
- Never review because overwhelmed
The Reading Journal ๐
Many successful Vancouver learners keep a “tadoku journal:”
What to track:
| Date | Book Title | Pages Read | New Words (3-5) | Confidence (1-10) | Notes |
| Nov 1 | Yotsuba 1 | 10-20 | ใใใใๅคงๅฅฝใใๆใ | 7 | Fun! Understood most! |
| Nov 2 | Yotsuba 1 | 21-30 | ๅฐใใๅฉใใใๅชใใ | 8 | Getting easier! |
Benefits:
- ๐ See progress visually
- ๐ฏ Track what’s working
- ๐ช Build motivation
- ๐ง Reinforce learning through writing
๐ฏ Putting It All Together: Your Tadoku Action Plan
Week 1: Setup Phase ๐ ๏ธ
Day 1-2: Choose your material
- Use the “First Page Test”
- Pick something you’re genuinely interested in
- Vancouver tip: Visit VPL, browse Satori Reader, or check digital libraries
Day 3-4: Set your dictionary rules
- Choose ONE rule system (start with “Three Strike Method”)
- Write it down
- Commit to following it for 2 weeks before adjusting
Day 5-7: Start reading!
- 15-20 minutes daily
- Apply the Three-Category Method
- Don’t stress perfection!
Week 2-4: Building Habits ๐ช
Daily routine:
- ๐ Morning: 15 min reading (pure flow, no dictionary)
- ๐ Evening: 5 min review (pick 3-5 words, add to journal)
Track your progress:
- Pages read
- Confidence level (1-10)
- Enjoyment level (1-10)
Vancouver commuter schedule:
- ๐ Morning commute: Reading
- ๐ Evening: Quick review while dinner cooks
Month 2-3: Acceleration Phase ๐
Increase volume:
- 20-30 minutes daily
- Or 2-3 reading sessions weekly (45 min each)
Branch out:
- Try different genres
- Mix manga + novels + articles
- Join online book clubs (or start one in Vancouver!)
Measure growth:
- Re-read something from Week 1โnotice how much easier it is! ๐
Month 4+: Sustainable Practice ๐ฑ
Make it lifestyle:
- Reading before bed (Japanese instead of phone scrolling!)
- Weekend reading sessions at cafes (Vancouver has great ones! โ)
- Join NihongoKnow.com’s book club
- Recommend books to other learners
Celebrate milestones:
- โจ First book completed
- ๐ 100 pages read
- ๐ฏ 500 pages read
- ๐ First adult novel finished
๐ Final Thoughts: Embrace the Tadoku Mindset
The Paradigm Shift ๐
Traditional mindset:
- “I must understand every word to be learning”
- “Looking things up shows I’m a serious student”
- “Skipping words is lazy”
- “I should be able to read harder books by now”
Tadoku mindset:
- โ “Understanding the story is enough”
- โ “Reading flow builds fluency”
- โ “Strategic skipping is smart learning”
- โ “Easy books build confidence that enables harder books later”
The Magic Formula โจ
Tadoku success = Volume ร Enjoyment ร Consistency
NOT:
- How many words you look up
- How difficult your books are
- How fast you read
- How many books you “should” have finished
Focus on:
- ๐ Reading as much as possible at YOUR level
- ๐ Choosing content you genuinely enjoy
- ๐ Making it a daily habit you can sustain
Your Japanese Reading Journey ๐บ๏ธ
Where you are now:
- Maybe struggling with unknown words
- Questioning if you’re learning “right”
- Frustrated with pace
- Worried about skipping words
Where you’ll be in 6 months with consistent tadoku:
- Reading 5-10x more volume โก
- Naturally understanding context
- Instinctively knowing what to skip vs. check
- Excited to pick up your book each day
- Noticing words you “never studied” but somehow know
- Feeling CONFIDENT in your reading ability! ๐ช
Where you’ll be in 1 year:
- Reading Japanese feels natural, not stressful
- Can enjoy authentic materials (manga, novels, articles)
- Vocabulary has grown organically through exposure
- Grammar patterns feel intuitive
- Reading is FUN againโlike reading in English! ๐
The Vancouver Tadoku Community ๐
You’re not alone in this journey! Vancouver has a growing community of Japanese learners doing tadoku:
- ๐ฅ Meetup groups for reading discussions
- ๐ Library swap circles for Japanese books
- ๐ฌ Online Discord servers for accountability
- โ Cafe study sessions around the city
- ๐ NihongoKnow.com’s structured programs
Join us! Language learning is better together! ๐ค
๐ Your Next Steps: Tadoku Action Checklist
This Week: โ
- [ ] Choose ONE book at your level (use First Page Test)
- [ ] Select ONE dictionary rule to follow
- [ ] Set a realistic reading goal (15+ minutes daily)
- [ ] Read your first chapter without stopping!
- [ ] Pick 3-5 interesting words to review
This Month: ๐
- [ ] Read 100+ pages (any combination of books)
- [ ] Track your reading in a journal
- [ ] Try at least 2 different genres/formats
- [ ] Join or start a reading group (online or local)
- [ ] Celebrate your first completed book! ๐
This Year: ๐
- [ ] Read 1,000+ pages in Japanese
- [ ] Progress to one level higher material
- [ ] Make tadoku a non-negotiable daily habit
- [ ] Share your experience to inspire others
- [ ] Fall in love with reading Japanese! โค๏ธ
๐ Recommended Resources
Digital Platforms ๐ป
- Satori Reader (graded content with adjustable difficulty)
- Tadoku.org (free graded readers)
- NHK News Web Easy (current events in simple Japanese)
- Todai (Easy Japanese) app (news articles)
- Kindle Japanese Store (thousands of books)
- BookWalker (Japanese digital bookstore)
Physical Books in Vancouver ๐๏ธ
- Vancouver Public Library (some Japanese books)
- Daiso (occasional manga/books)
- Online orders: Amazon.jp, CDJapan, YesAsia
- Digital options: No shipping needed!
Learning Communities ๐ฅ
- NihongoKnow.com (Vancouver-based Japanese learning)
๐ A Personal Note from NihongoKnow.com
Dear Japanese learner,
If you’re reading this, you’ve already taken an important stepโseeking to understand HOW to read effectively, not just reading blindly. That’s wisdom. ๐ง
Tadoku isn’t easyโnot because it’s complicated, but because it requires trust.
Trust that your brain is working even when you skip words.
Trust that volume matters more than perfection.
Trust that easy books lead to hard books eventually.
Trust the process. ๐ช
We’ve seen hundreds of learners transform through tadoku:
- From “I can’t read anything” โ “I finished my first novel!” ๐
- From “I need to check every word” โ “I read for pleasure now!” ๐
- From “Japanese is so hard” โ “I love reading Japanese!” โค๏ธ
You can do this too.
Start small. Be patient with yourself. Celebrate tiny wins. Keep showing up.
And remember: every page you read is progress, regardless of how many words you understood.
Here’s to your reading journey! ๐
With encouragement,
The NihongoKnow.com Team
Vancouver, BC ๐
๐ Based in Vancouver, BC | Serving Japanese Learners Across Canada, the US, and Worldwide ๐
๐ NihongoKnow.com – Your Partner in Joyful Japanese ReadingFrom first graded readers to light novels to literary classicsโwe support your entire tadoku journey. Whether you’re in Vancouver, Toronto, Seattle, New York, or anywhere elseโlet’s make reading Japanese your favorite habit! ๐๐



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