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Posted: Wed Apr 20, 2005 9:24 am
Ok, since I'm not too good myself yet, I'll just post here a few lessons for the complete beginners, who haven't started learning Japanese yet. I'll take this step by step, not all in one day, so please don't post all to much here so it's easy to find what people are looking for.
Navigation:
First page: Lesson 1 and 2 and country names. Second page: Lesson 3
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Posted: Wed Apr 20, 2005 9:40 am
Lesson 1
First you have to learn this basic sentence structure:
Noun wa noun desu
which means that noun is noun.
Example: Watashi wa Saaku desu = I am Saaku Watashi wa otomodachi desu = I am friend
Now, that's not so hard. ------------------------------------- Lets try another sentence structure. It's almost the same, exept we change the particle "wa" to the particle "mo"
Noun mo noun desu
which means "noun is also noun"
Example:
Anata mo otomodachi desu = you are also a friend
"ka" can be added at the end of a sentence to change it into a question.
anata wa otomodachi desu ka? = are you a friend? anata wa Yuki san desu ka? =are you mr. Yuki? ---------------------------------------
Vocabulary tomodachi = friend Watashi = I/me Anata = you Desu = to be (am, is, are)
it's possible to add "o" in front of some words to make them more honorable/respectful, i.e. tomodachi -> otomodachi
adding "san" behind a name changes it to mr. , mrs., miss or ms. Saaku san: miss Saaku.
End of lesson 1
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Posted: Thu Apr 21, 2005 7:17 am
Tomodachi with the O added makes it more formal. Applies to a few words.
Like tanjoubi omedetou gozaimasu can become more formal when saying otanjoubi omedetou gozaimasu. Means Happy Birthday.
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Posted: Fri Apr 22, 2005 8:34 am
[ Message temporarily off-line ]
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Posted: Sun Apr 24, 2005 5:18 am
Extra for lesson 2 - Country names
Australia - Oosutoraria
America - Amerika
China - Chugoku
Doitsu - German
England - Igirisu
Greece - Girisha
Italy - Itaria
Japan - Nihon
Korea - Kankoku
Mongolia - Mongoru
Russia - Roshia
Switzerland - Suisu
If you know any country names I haven't listed here, please let me know and I'll add them, or if you don?t see your country up there, I?ll see what I can do ^^
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Posted: Sun May 01, 2005 10:17 pm
Saaku s0b4k4su If the question was supposed to be "Am I Hitomi's friend?", I think it might be "watashi wa hitomi no tomodachi desu ka." But if the question is "Is Hitomi my friend?", then maybe it's "Hitomi wa watashi no tomodachi desu ka." Or maybe I just can't speak English, either. xd Hai, I think that's right ^^ ^____^ Yatta!
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Posted: Wed May 04, 2005 6:27 am
Lesson 3
Here you will learn a new sentence pattern:
"noun" wa nan desu ka?
Which is translated as : What is noun?
Now let's look at the words kore, sore and are (also covered in lesson and info sticky)
Kore = this Sore = that Are = that over there Dore = which
Are wa konpyuutaa desu = that thing over there is a computer. Sore wa nan desu ka? = What is that? Kore wa kamera desu = This is a camera Dore wa kamera desu ka?= which is a camera (is it this, or is it the other)
When it stand with a noun, you change the 're' ending into a 'no'
Are mo konpyuuta desu = this is also a computer Ano konpyuuta wa ... desu = this computer is... Kore wa tomodachi no desu = this is my friend's (it belongs to my friend) Kono kamera wa tomodachi no desu = this camera is my friend's Dono kamera wa watashi no desu ka= which camera is mine? Are wa watashi no kamera desu = this is your camera.
Ano inu no namae wa nan desu ka? = This dog over there, what is it's name?
If you wan't to ask who owns something, you simply use the ''dare'' which means ''who''.
Dare no zasshi desu ka? Who's magazine is it?
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Vocabulary
Kore - that over there Sore - that Are - that over there Dore - which Konpyuutaa - computer Kamera - camera Zasshi - magazine Nan - what Dare - who (beware, do not confuse this with dore) onamae - name (formal) namae - name (informal)
End of lesson 3
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Posted: Sat May 14, 2005 11:11 pm
i tink i understand so far...quite complicating xp
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Posted: Wed May 25, 2005 6:20 am
you don't use o- (prefix) on yourself. Only for other people.
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Posted: Sun May 29, 2005 9:10 pm
Ashvemn you don't use o- (prefix) on yourself. Only for other people. Very important! Using it on yourself makes you seem very high on yourself and it is very very rude!
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Posted: Mon May 30, 2005 8:37 am
Grevlin Ashvemn you don't use o- (prefix) on yourself. Only for other people. Very important! Using it on yourself makes you seem very high on yourself and it is very very rude! And now, it is also used to explain a noun of someone elses.
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Posted: Mon Jul 04, 2005 8:01 pm
I hope its okay if I post on this but in the sentence
anata wa otomodachi desu ka? = are you a friend?
Anata is you Otomodachi is friend Desu is are
Where do the "wa" and "ka" come from? sweatdrop
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Posted: Mon Jul 04, 2005 8:10 pm
Wa is a particle which indicates the subject. So, in this case, anata or you are the subject. For more info on this, you can see the thread I made entitled 'common mistakes'. Ka is another kind of particle. It makes the entire sentence a question. For example:
Anata wa otomodachi desu. You are a friend.
Anata wa otomodachi desu ka. Are you a friend?
The ? at the end of a sentence is unneccesary in most Japanese sentences since the 'ka' already indicates a question. But some Japanese use the ? anyways, just to make the sentence more clear. Western influences also contribute to this ^^
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Posted: Tue Jul 05, 2005 8:21 am
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Posted: Sat Jul 16, 2005 1:05 pm
for the extras in lesson two Kanada - is Canada of course ^.^
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