Best kyoto travel guides according to redditors

We found 2 Reddit comments discussing the best kyoto travel guides. We ranked the 2 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the top 20.

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Top Reddit comments about Kyoto Travel Guides:

u/Curelli · 3 pointsr/LearnJapanese

Write down the English words for every object around you that you regularly encounter, then put their Japanese equivalents into a vocabulary deck. Then lookup the names of places and stations around the area you're going to and add them as well so that you won't have a problem reading the signs. Genki I and II should have taught you basic enough sentence constructs that you can use along with your newfound day-to-day vocabulary to survive.

If you still really feel you're not up to it, just pickup a phrase book.

u/vivianvixxxen · 2 pointsr/LearnJapanese

Katakana above all else. If you decide you hate everything and don't want to learn any more, or you've gotten distracted and run out of time to study, at the very very least, learn katakana.

Yes, you should learn hiragana as well, and a few of the most important kanji, and basic survival phrases, but.... If all else fails, cram those katakana in on the flight.

Beyond that, the First Grade Joyo Kanji (of which there's only 100 really simple ones) are probably the most essential.

I'd grab Lonely Planet's Japanese Phrasebook. Even if you're planning on learning the language with a textbook (go with Genki, imo), the LP phrasebook is invaluable for your first few months in the country.