Yuki smiled. She knew the truth: no PDF can replace years of exposure. But for a learner stuck at 70% comprehension, the right 3,000 words are a bridge. And a bridge, even a digital one, is a beautiful thing.
That night, she called her data analyst, Kenji. “Run a frequency analysis on the last ten years of N1 reading passages,” she said. “Not just the answers—the distractors too. And include the listening scripts for business and news segments.” 3000 essential vocabulary for the jlpt n1 pdf
In the quiet, fluorescent-lit office of the Tokyo-based publisher Nihongo Nexus , senior editor Yuki Tanaka stared at a spreadsheet with 15,000 rows. It was January, and the JLPT N1 exam results had just been released. The company’s forum was flooded with the same complaint: “I knew 1,500 words, but the reading section felt like a foreign language.” Yuki smiled
The PDF is now in its 8th edition, still free, still updated annually. A user once asked Yuki on Twitter: “Is 3,000 really enough for N1?” She replied: “Enough to pass? Yes. Enough to be fluent? No—but it gives you the ladder. Fluency is what you build after you climb it.” And a bridge, even a digital one, is a beautiful thing