Is Japanese Hard to Learn? An Honest Guide for English Speakers
If you are an English speaker staring at Japanese for the first time — seeing three writing systems, unfamiliar sentence order, tiny grammatical particles, levels of politeness, and kanji characters that seem to carry entire worlds inside them — it is completely understandable to wonder whether learning Japanese is a beautiful adventure, a lifelong puzzle, or a slightly unreasonable decision you made after watching one too many travel videos, anime episodes, or Tokyo street interviews.
So let’s answer the question honestly: yes, Japanese is hard to learn for English speakers.
But that answer is incomplete.
Japanese is hard in a very specific way. It is not hard because it is chaotic. It is not hard because it makes no sense. It is not hard because only people with “language talent” can learn it. Japanese is hard because it is structurally different from English. It uses a different writing system. It organizes sentences differently. It relies heavily on context. It asks you to become comfortable with indirectness, politeness, and patterns that do not map neatly onto English.
At the same time, Japanese is also much more learnable than many beginners expect. The pronunciation is fairly consistent. There is no grammatical gender. Verbs do not change depending on whether the subject is “I,” “you,” “he,” “she,” or “they.” Hiragana and katakana can be learned in weeks, not years. Basic sentence patterns are logical. And even complete beginners can start speaking simple Japanese early if they focus on useful phrases, pronunciation, and realistic goals.
The problem is that many people approach Japanese with the wrong expectations. Some expect it to be easy because they love Japanese culture. Others expect it to be nearly impossible because they have heard that Japanese is one of the hardest languages for English speakers. Both views can become discouraging. If you expect Japanese to be easy, you may feel defeated when kanji or listening comprehension becomes difficult. If you expect it to be impossible, you may never give yourself permission to begin.
The truth is better than both extremes.
Japanese is challenging, but not mysterious. Demanding, but not impossible. Slow to master, but rewarding from the very beginning. You can learn greetings, introduce yourself, order food, read basic signs, recognize words in songs or shows, and understand simple conversations long before you become fluent.
This guide will give you an honest look at what makes Japanese difficult for English speakers, what is easier than people think, how long it really takes to learn, and how beginners can make steady progress without burning out.
Is Japanese Really Hard to Learn?
For English speakers, Japanese is usually considered one of the more difficult major world languages to learn. The reason is simple: Japanese and English are not closely related. They do not share the same writing system, sentence structure, grammar patterns, or cultural communication style.
An English speaker learning Spanish, French, or Italian can rely on many familiar things. The alphabet is mostly the same. Many words look familiar. Some grammar concepts overlap. Even when the language is challenging, the learner can often recognize parts of it.
Japanese gives English speakers fewer shortcuts.
A sentence may feel backwards. A familiar-looking word may not exist. A simple phrase may require you to think about your relationship to the person you are speaking to. A written sentence may combine hiragana, katakana, and kanji all at once. A word you know from a textbook may sound different in casual conversation.
That is why Japanese requires patience.
But “hard” does not mean “unlearnable.” It means you need a realistic strategy. You need to know which parts take time, which parts are manageable, and which skills should be developed gradually.
It also depends on your goal.
If your goal is to learn a few phrases before traveling to Japan, Japanese is very manageable. If your goal is to hold beginner conversations, introduce yourself, ask questions, order food, and understand simple answers, that is absolutely possible within months of consistent study. If your goal is to read novels, work in Japanese, pass advanced JLPT levels, or use honorific business language naturally, then you are looking at a multi-year commitment.
Those are very different goals.
So instead of asking only, “Is Japanese hard?” a better question is:
Hard for what purpose?
Different Goals Require Different Timelines
Not everyone learns Japanese for the same reason. Some people want to travel. Some want to watch Japanese media without subtitles. Some want to speak with family or friends. Some want to work in Japan. Some simply love the language and culture.
Here is a realistic way to think about levels of learning:
Casual Japanese
This means you know some greetings, basic phrases, maybe hiragana and katakana, and a handful of words from anime, food, music, or travel. You are not trying to become fluent yet. You are exploring.
This level can be fun and low-pressure.
Travel Survival Japanese
This means you can say hello, thank you, excuse me, order food, ask where something is, read some signs, understand basic directions, and behave politely in common situations.
With focused study, many learners can reach this level in a few months.
Beginner Conversational Japanese
This means you can introduce yourself, talk about your daily routine, describe likes and dislikes, ask simple questions, and understand slow, clear speech.
This often takes six months to a year of regular study, depending on intensity and consistency.
Lower-Intermediate Japanese
This means you can hold longer conversations, understand more grammar, read simple texts, and express opinions with some effort. You still make mistakes, but you are no longer just surviving.
This often takes one to two years.
Advanced or Professional Japanese
This means reading newspapers, understanding natural speech, participating in complex conversations, using polite and honorific language appropriately, and functioning in academic or professional settings.
This usually takes several years.
The biggest mistake is comparing your three-month beginner Japanese to someone else’s five-year Japanese. Japanese rewards consistency over time.
What Makes Japanese Difficult for English Speakers?
Japanese is difficult not because every part is hard, but because several major parts are unfamiliar at the same time. A beginner is not just learning new words. You are learning a new writing system, a new sentence structure, a new cultural style, and a new way of listening.
Let’s break down the main challenges.
Challenge 1: Japanese Has Three Writing Systems
One of the first things that intimidates English speakers is the Japanese writing system. Japanese uses three scripts:
Hiragana
Katakana
Kanji
And yes, all three matter.
Hiragana
Hiragana is a phonetic syllabary. It is used for native Japanese words, grammatical endings, particles, and words that do not use kanji. Beginners usually learn hiragana first because it is foundational.
There are 46 basic hiragana characters. That sounds like a lot compared with the English alphabet, but it is very manageable. Many learners can learn hiragana in a few weeks with daily practice.
For example:
あ = a
か = ka
さ = sa
た = ta
な = na
Once you learn hiragana, you can begin reading basic Japanese words and sentences.
Katakana
Katakana is also a phonetic syllabary with 46 basic characters. It is used mainly for foreign loanwords, foreign names, sound effects, emphasis, and many modern words.
For English speakers, katakana can be surprisingly fun because many words come from English or other foreign languages.
For example:
コーヒー = coffee
テレビ = television
バス = bus
ホテル = hotel
コンピューター = computer
The tricky part is that these words are adapted to Japanese pronunciation, so they may not sound exactly like English. But once you learn katakana, you start recognizing many borrowed words.
Kanji
Kanji is the long-term challenge.
Kanji are characters originally borrowed from Chinese. Each character carries meaning, and many have multiple readings. For example, one kanji may be pronounced one way in one word and another way in another word. This is difficult for English speakers because English does not use a character-based writing system.
Kanji takes years to master. There are over 2,000 commonly used characters for general literacy in Japan. Beginners do not need to know all of them immediately, but they do need to start gradually.
This is where many learners panic.
But kanji should not be treated as a mountain you must climb in one day. Think of it as a long-term garden. You plant a few characters at a time. You see them again and again. Slowly, they become familiar.
A beginner might start with kanji like:
日 day / sun
月 month / moon
人 person
山 mountain
川 river
本 book / origin
日本 Japan
At first, kanji feels impossible. Later, it becomes one of the most fascinating parts of Japanese.
Challenge 2: Japanese Word Order Feels Backwards
English usually follows subject–verb–object order:
I eat sushi.
Japanese usually follows subject–object–verb order:
I sushi eat.
In Japanese:
私は寿司を食べます。
Watashi wa sushi o tabemasu.
I eat sushi.
The verb comes at the end.
For English speakers, this takes adjustment because the most important action often comes last. You have to wait for the verb to know what happened.
For example:
私は日本語を勉強しています。
Watashi wa nihongo o benkyō shiteimasu.
I am studying Japanese.
Literally, the structure is closer to:
I Japanese studying am.
This can feel strange at first. But the good news is that Japanese sentence order is fairly consistent. Once you accept that the verb likes to live at the end, sentences become easier to process.
In some ways, Japanese grammar is like learning a new rhythm. At first you are counting every beat. Later, you feel the pattern.
Challenge 3: Particles Are Small but Powerful
Japanese uses particles — small grammatical markers that show the function of words in a sentence. These include:
は topic marker
が subject marker
を object marker
に time, destination, indirect object
で location of action, method
へ direction
と with / and / quotation marker
Particles are difficult because English does not use them in the same way.
Take this sentence:
私はコーヒーを飲みます。
Watashi wa kōhī o nomimasu.
I drink coffee.
Here:
私 = I
は = topic marker
コーヒー = coffee
を = object marker
飲みます = drink
The particle を tells us that coffee is the thing being drunk.
Beginners often want to skip particles because they seem tiny and confusing. But particles are essential. They are like road signs inside the sentence. Without them, meaning becomes unclear.
The hardest early distinction is often は versus が. Both can seem like they mark the subject, but they work differently. This takes time, and that is normal. You do not need to master every nuance at the beginning. You need to learn the most common patterns and gradually refine your understanding.
Challenge 4: Politeness Levels Matter
Japanese is famous for politeness, and politeness is built into the language.
Beginners usually learn polite forms first, such as:
です
desu
is / am / are
ます
masu
polite verb ending
For example:
私は学生です。
Watashi wa gakusei desu.
I am a student.
日本語を勉強します。
Nihongo o benkyō shimasu.
I study Japanese.
This polite style is safe and useful. You can use it with teachers, strangers, shop staff, and people you do not know well.
But real Japanese also includes casual forms used with friends, family, and close relationships. Then there is keigo, honorific and humble language, used in business and formal settings.
For example, the verb “to go” can appear differently depending on politeness and social context:
行く
iku
to go, casual/plain
行きます
ikimasu
to go, polite
いらっしゃる
irassharu
to go/come/be, honorific
参る
mairu
to go/come, humble
That can feel overwhelming.
The good news? Beginners do not need to master keigo immediately. Start with polite Japanese. It is safe, respectful, and widely useful. Casual forms and honorific forms can come later.
Challenge 5: Japanese Often Omits the Subject
English speakers usually expect every sentence to have a clear subject:
I am going.
She likes sushi.
We are studying.
They are coming tomorrow.
Japanese often omits the subject when it is understood from context.
For example:
行きます。
Ikimasu.
Going. / I’m going. / He’s going. / She’s going. / We’re going.
The subject depends on context.
This can be confusing for English speakers because we want everything stated clearly. Japanese often assumes shared understanding. If everyone knows who is being discussed, there is no need to keep repeating the subject.
Beginners sometimes overuse 私 (watashi, I) because they translate directly from English.
For example:
私は学生です。私は日本語を勉強しています。私はコーヒーが好きです。
This is grammatically possible, but it sounds repetitive. In natural Japanese, the subject is often dropped after it is clear.
This is not just grammar. It reflects a broader communication style where context matters.
Challenge 6: Real Japanese Listening Is Hard
Many learners experience this frustrating moment:
They understand their textbook audio.
They understand their teacher speaking slowly.
Then they watch a Japanese show, video, or conversation and understand almost nothing.
This is normal.
Real spoken Japanese is fast. Sounds blend together. Casual forms appear. Subjects disappear. People use slang, contractions, filler words, and context. Anime may use exaggerated speech. Dramas may use emotional or informal speech. YouTube videos may include slang, humor, dialect, or rapid casual conversation.
For example, textbook Japanese may teach:
何をしているのですか。
Nani o shiteiru no desu ka.
What are you doing?
In casual speech, this might become:
何してるの?
Nani shiteru no?
Or even shorter in fast speech.
This is why listening takes time. It is not enough to know words on paper. You need repeated exposure to how Japanese actually sounds.
Beginners should start with slow, graded listening, then gradually add more natural materials. Jumping straight into native media can be fun, but it can also be discouraging if you expect to understand everything.
What Is Easier Than People Expect?
Now for the encouraging part: Japanese has several features that are genuinely easier than many English speakers expect.
Japanese Pronunciation Is Relatively Consistent
Japanese pronunciation is much more regular than English pronunciation. In English, spelling and pronunciation are often unpredictable. Think of words like through, though, tough, and thought. Japanese kana, by contrast, are highly phonetic.
Once you learn how a kana character is pronounced, it usually stays consistent.
Japanese also has a relatively small set of sounds. There are no difficult rolled R sounds like in Spanish, no French-style nasal vowels, and no tones like Mandarin Chinese.
There is pitch accent, which affects naturalness and sometimes meaning, but beginners can still be understood without mastering it immediately.
The basic sound system is manageable.
Japanese Has No Grammatical Gender
If you have studied Spanish, French, Italian, German, or Russian, you know that nouns may have gender. A table might be masculine. A house might be feminine. An adjective may change depending on the noun.
Japanese does not have grammatical gender.
You do not need to memorize whether a word is masculine, feminine, or neuter. That removes a major burden.
Japanese Does Not Use Plurals the Same Way English Does
In English, we usually distinguish between singular and plural:
book / books
cat / cats
person / people
Japanese often uses the same noun regardless of number, relying on context or counters.
For example:
猫
neko
cat / cats
This can be easier in some ways because you do not constantly change nouns into plural forms. However, Japanese does use counters when counting objects, people, animals, and other categories, which becomes its own challenge later.
Still, the lack of ordinary plural endings is good news for beginners.
Japanese Verbs Do Not Change by Person
In English, we say:
I eat.
He eats.
In Spanish, French, or Italian, verbs change much more depending on the subject.
Japanese verbs do not change based on person.
For example:
食べます
tabemasu
can mean I eat, you eat, he eats, she eats, we eat, or they eat depending on context.
That is a major simplification.
Japanese verbs do change for tense, politeness, negation, and other forms, but you do not have to memorize separate verb endings for every person.
Basic Japanese Sentence Patterns Are Logical
Japanese may feel strange at first, but many beginner sentence patterns are clear and reusable.
For example:
X は Y です。
X wa Y desu.
X is Y.
私は学生です。
Watashi wa gakusei desu.
I am a student.
これは本です。
Kore wa hon desu.
This is a book.
Another pattern:
X を Vます。
X o V-masu.
I do V to X.
コーヒーを飲みます。
Kōhī o nomimasu.
I drink coffee.
日本語を勉強します。
Nihongo o benkyō shimasu.
I study Japanese.
Once you learn patterns, you can plug in new words and create many sentences.
This is why Japanese beginners should not wait until they understand everything before speaking. You can begin with simple structures and grow from there.
Do You Need to Learn Kanji Right Away?
This is one of the biggest beginner questions.
The answer is: not all at once, but do not avoid it forever.
You should start with hiragana first. Then learn katakana. Once you are comfortable with kana, begin kanji gradually.
Some learners try to postpone kanji for a long time because it feels intimidating. That is understandable, but it can create problems later. Japanese texts rely heavily on kanji. Without kanji, reading becomes slow and limited.
However, you do not need to learn hundreds of kanji immediately. Start with useful, common characters. Learn them in words, not just in isolation.
For example, instead of learning 日 only as a character, learn it in words like:
日本
Nihon
Japan
日曜日
nichiyōbi
Sunday
毎日
mainichi
every day
Kanji becomes easier when it appears in real vocabulary.
Should You Use Romaji?
Romaji is Japanese written with the Latin alphabet, like:
arigatō instead of ありがとう
watashi instead of 私
nihongo instead of 日本語
Romaji can help at the very beginning. It lets you start speaking before you know the writing system. It can also help with pronunciation notes.
But you should not rely on romaji for too long.
If you stay with romaji, you delay the moment when you can read real Japanese. You also risk developing pronunciation habits based on English spelling. Japanese is written in kana and kanji, so learners should move toward the real writing system early.
A good approach is:
Use romaji briefly if needed.
Learn hiragana as soon as possible.
Learn katakana next.
Start basic kanji gradually.
Use romaji only as support, not as your main system.
How Long Does It Take to Learn Japanese?
This depends on your goals, schedule, learning methods, and consistency. But here are realistic estimates for adult English speakers.
GoalApproximate TimelineLearn hiragana and katakana2–6 weeksBasic travel Japanese2–3 monthsBeginner conversation6–12 monthsLower-intermediate conversation1–2 yearsRead simple texts1–2 years with steady kanji studyRead newspapers, novels, or professional texts3–5+ yearsProfessional working proficiencySeveral years of intensive study
These are not guarantees. Someone studying daily with a teacher, homework, listening practice, and conversation will progress faster than someone studying casually once a week. But the table gives a realistic sense of scale.
Japanese is not a quick language for English speakers. But you can experience progress quickly if you define progress correctly.
Progress is not only “fluency.”
Progress is being able to read hiragana.
Progress is recognizing your first kanji.
Progress is introducing yourself.
Progress is understanding a sentence in a show.
Progress is ordering food.
Progress is having your first simple conversation.
Those milestones matter.
Is Japanese Grammar Difficult?
Japanese grammar is difficult at first because it feels unfamiliar, not because it is random.
English speakers often struggle with:
Verb-final sentence order
Particles
Omitted subjects
Polite vs casual forms
Different ways of expressing ideas
Context-dependent meaning
But Japanese grammar is often very consistent once you learn the patterns.
For example, polite verbs often end in ます:
食べます — eat
飲みます — drink
行きます — go
見ます — see/watch
勉強します — study
Negative polite verbs often end in ません:
食べません — do not eat
飲みません — do not drink
行きません — do not go
見ません — do not see/watch
勉強しません — do not study
Past polite verbs often end in ました:
食べました — ate
飲みました — drank
行きました — went
見ました — saw/watched
勉強しました — studied
This is quite logical.
The challenge is not that Japanese grammar is messy. The challenge is that it asks English speakers to stop translating word-for-word.
Is Japanese Harder Than Chinese?
Japanese and Mandarin Chinese are both challenging for English speakers, but they are difficult in different ways.
Chinese has tones, which Japanese does not have in the same way. Mandarin pronunciation can be difficult because tone changes meaning. Japanese has pitch accent, but it is usually less of an immediate barrier for beginners.
Chinese grammar is often considered more straightforward in some areas because it does not have verb conjugation in the same way. Japanese grammar, however, has more verb forms, politeness levels, and particles.
Writing is difficult in both languages. Japanese uses kanji, along with hiragana and katakana. Chinese uses characters more consistently, while Japanese combines scripts and gives many kanji multiple readings.
So which is harder? It depends on the learner. For many English speakers, both require a serious long-term commitment.
Is Japanese Harder Than Korean?
Japanese and Korean share some similarities from the perspective of English speakers. Both use subject–object–verb word order. Both use particles. Both have politeness levels. Both are context-heavy.
One major difference is writing.
Korean uses Hangul, an alphabet that is widely considered logical and relatively quick to learn. Japanese uses hiragana, katakana, and kanji, which makes reading and writing more demanding over the long term.
However, Korean pronunciation can be challenging for English speakers, and Korean grammar has its own complexities.
Again, “harder” depends on the learner. But for reading and writing, Japanese is usually more time-consuming because of kanji.
Is Japanese Harder Than Russian?
Russian is also difficult for English speakers, but in a different way.
Russian uses Cyrillic, which looks unfamiliar at first but can be learned much faster than Japanese kanji. Russian grammar includes cases, gender, verb aspect, and complex word endings. For many learners, Russian grammar feels heavy early on.
Japanese has no grammatical gender and no case system like Russian, but it has particles, kanji, politeness levels, and a very different communication style.
So Russian may feel more grammatically intense at the beginning, while Japanese may feel more demanding over the long term because of writing and reading.
Both are serious languages. Both are learnable.
The Best Way to Start Learning Japanese
A beginner should not start by trying to master everything. That is the fastest path to burnout.
Instead, build a balanced foundation.
Month 1: Start with sound, hiragana, and basic phrases
Learn hiragana. Practice pronunciation. Learn greetings and self-introductions.
Useful phrases include:
こんにちは
Konnichiwa
Hello
ありがとうございます
Arigatō gozaimasu
Thank you
すみません
Sumimasen
Excuse me / sorry
はじめまして
Hajimemashite
Nice to meet you
よろしくお願いします
Yoroshiku onegaishimasu
A polite phrase used when meeting someone or asking for cooperation
Month 2: Learn katakana and basic grammar
Start katakana. Learn simple sentence patterns with です, ます, は, を, に, and で.
Practice sentences like:
私は学生です。
I am a student.
コーヒーを飲みます。
I drink coffee.
日本語を勉強します。
I study Japanese.
Month 3: Add basic kanji and conversation practice
Begin learning a few kanji each week. Practice short dialogues. Listen to beginner audio. Start speaking, even if your sentences are simple.
Do not wait until you feel ready. Speaking is how you become ready.
How to Avoid Burnout
Japanese learners often burn out because they try to do too much at once.
They attempt to memorize 50 kanji a week, watch native content for hours, study advanced grammar, and become fluent in six months. That rarely works.
A better approach:
Study a little every day.
Learn kana early.
Add kanji gradually.
Speak from the beginning.
Use beginner-level listening.
Review often.
Celebrate small wins.
Do not compare yourself to advanced learners online.
Japanese is a long journey. It should feel challenging, but not punishing.
FAQs About Learning Japanese
Is Japanese really hard to learn?
Yes, Japanese is hard for English speakers because it has a different writing system, sentence structure, grammar, and cultural communication style. However, it is not impossible. Many parts are logical and manageable if you study consistently and use the right approach.
How long does it take to learn Japanese?
For basic travel Japanese, you may need a few months. For beginner conversation, six months to a year is realistic with regular study. Lower-intermediate Japanese often takes one to two years. Advanced reading, professional fluency, and natural conversation can take several years.
Is kanji the hardest part of Japanese?
For many learners, kanji is one of the hardest long-term challenges. It requires learning characters, meanings, readings, and vocabulary in context. However, you do not need to learn all kanji at once. A gradual approach works best.
Can I learn Japanese without kanji?
You can learn basic speaking and some beginner Japanese without much kanji, especially at the beginning. But if you want to read real Japanese, use Japanese websites, understand signs, read books, or reach an intermediate level, you will eventually need kanji.
Should I learn hiragana or katakana first?
Most beginners should learn hiragana first because it is used for grammar, native words, and many beginner materials. After hiragana, learn katakana, which is used for foreign words, names, and many modern terms.
Is Japanese grammar difficult?
Japanese grammar is unfamiliar for English speakers, especially because verbs come at the end and particles mark sentence roles. However, many patterns are consistent. Once you stop translating directly from English, Japanese grammar becomes much more logical.
Is Japanese pronunciation hard?
Japanese pronunciation is usually easier than many beginners expect. The sounds are relatively consistent, and kana spelling is phonetic. Pitch accent takes time to master, but beginners can usually be understood before they perfect it.
Can adults learn Japanese successfully?
Yes. Adults can absolutely learn Japanese. Adult learners often bring discipline, motivation, cultural interest, and study skills. The key is consistency, realistic goals, good instruction, and regular practice.
Is Japanese harder than Spanish or French?
For English speakers, yes, Japanese is generally much harder than Spanish or French. Spanish and French share the Latin alphabet, many cognates, and more familiar grammar concepts. Japanese requires learning new scripts, sentence structure, particles, kanji, and cultural communication patterns.
What is the best way to start learning Japanese?
Start with hiragana, pronunciation, basic phrases, and simple sentence patterns. Add katakana soon after. Begin kanji gradually. Practice listening and speaking from the beginning, even if your Japanese is very simple. A structured class can help you avoid confusion and build good habits early.
So, Is Japanese Hard to Learn?
Japanese is hard — but not in a hopeless way.
It is hard because it is different. It asks English speakers to become comfortable with new scripts, new sentence patterns, new sounds, new cultural expectations, and new ways of organizing meaning. It takes time. It rewards patience. It does not give all its secrets away quickly.
But Japanese is also deeply learnable.
You can learn hiragana. You can learn katakana. You can start speaking polite beginner Japanese. You can understand particles little by little. You can learn kanji gradually. You can begin to hear patterns in real speech. You can move from simple phrases to real conversations.
The most important thing is to begin with realistic expectations.
Do not ask, “Can I become fluent immediately?”
Ask, “Can I learn something useful this week?”
The answer is yes.
You can learn to introduce yourself.
You can learn to order coffee.
You can learn to read your first signs.
You can learn to say thank you politely.
You can learn your first sentence pattern.
You can learn your first kanji.
And step by step, Japanese becomes less intimidating.
Learn Japanese with Polyglottist Language Academy
If you are curious about Japanese but unsure how to begin, structured classes can make the process much easier. Japanese is a language where guidance matters. A good teacher can help you understand pronunciation, writing systems, grammar patterns, cultural context, and real conversation without feeling overwhelmed.
At Polyglottist Language Academy, we offer language classes for adults who want a supportive, practical, and engaging learning experience. Our classes are designed for real learners — people who may be starting from zero, returning after years away, or finally deciding to study a language they have always loved.
If you are interested in learning Japanese, we invite you to explore our current and upcoming language classes at Polyglottist Language Academy. Whether your goal is travel, culture, conversation, or long-term fluency, the best time to begin is before you feel completely ready.
You do not need to master Japanese before joining a class.
You join a class so you can start mastering it.
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