Showing posts with label nihongo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label nihongo. Show all posts

Saturday, October 22, 2016

Remembering Japanese onomatopoeia through FOOD

1. Gari-gari (crunching into something very HARD, like a very frozen popsicle)

Thursday, October 20, 2016

Maybe next time you'll listen to your sensei about the dangers of sloppy handwriting. Would you be able to read the katakana without the English version beside it?

Monday, October 10, 2016

Try to read the katakana before checking the English to see if you're right.

How different is the menu in your country? They don't serve shrimp burgers in mine.

Thursday, September 29, 2016

Guess what's inside.

Thursday, August 6, 2009

The "te form" part 1 ku/kimasu

Converting japanese verbs into their progressive form (or the so-called "te form") is probably the most difficult verb conjugation could get. Difficult because eventhough japanese verbs fall neatly into 3 groups (the ichidan, the godan and the irregular), the rule for the godan group is further divided into 5 groups (hence the term "go" for 5). Today we take up the first godan group.

For verbs ending in ku, or the more formal kimasu, the end is dropped and "ite" is added to form their te form.

Thus:
To write
kaku (dictionary form)
kakimasu (formal form)
kaite(te form)

To listen
kiku (dictionary form)
kikimasu (formal form)
kiite (te form)

To work
hataraku (dictionary form)
hatarakimasu (formal form)
hataraite (te form)

Adding "iru" or the more formal "imasu" to the te form turns it into the present progressive tense.

Thus:
writing
kaite iru (casual)
kaite imasu (formal)

listening
kiite iru (casual)
kiite imasu (formal)

working
hataraite iru (casual)
hataraite imasu (formal)

Let's Practice!

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Kanojo wa nani wo shite imasu ka?
(What is she doing?)
Kanojo wa tegami wo kaite imasu.
(She is writing a letter.)


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Kanojo wa nani wo shite imasu ka?
(What is she doing?)
Kanojo wa IPhone wo kiite imasu.
(She is listening to an IPhone.)

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Kare wa nani wo shite imasu ka?
(What is he doing?)
Kare wa kaisha de hataraite imasu.
(He is working in a company.)

What other japanese godan verbs do you know that end in ku/kimasu? What is their te form? Could you give me a sample sentence?