japanese

7 notes

  • 2026·06·14

    九 kyuu vs ku

    きゅう vs く

    きゅう is the safe default (counting, age) while く is a specialized variant used for month (September: kugatsu くがつ), time (9 o’clock: くじ), and certain counter words (The 9th of a month is kokonoka ここのか).

  • 2026·06·11

    Sentence structure

    While English uses a Subject-Verb-Object (SVO) structure, Japanese uses a Subject-Object-Verb (SOV) structure.

    English: I ate an apple. Japanese: 私はリンゴを食べました。 (watashi wa ringo o tabemashita)

    Breakdown:

    • Watashi (私) - I (subject)
    • Ringo (リンゴ) - Apple (object)
    • Tabemashita (食べました) - Ate (verb)

    Sometimes, the subject is omitted if it's clear from the context. So, リンゴを食べました (ringo o tabemashita).

    The Japanese language also uses small grammatical markers called particles to indicate the role of a noun in a sentence.

    • は (wa) - topic marker
    • を (o) - direct object marker
    • が (ga) - subject marker
    • に (ni) - location, time, direction marker
    • で (de) - location of action marker
  • 2026·06·06

    "ー" symbol

    The "ー" symbol is called a chōonpu (long vowel mark). It is a symbol used to stretch the preceding sound.

    In デパート (depāto / department store), you extend the "de" and the "pa" sound, pronouncing it like "de-paa-to".

  • 2026·06·06

    Dakuten transformation

    Adding a " (dakuten/double quote)

    1. Turns "s" to "z":
    • す (su) → ず (zu)
    • せ (se) → ぜ (ze)
    • さ (sa) → ざ (za)
    • そ (so) → ぞ (zo)
    1. Turns "h" to "b":
    • は (ha) → ば (ba)
    • へ (he) → べ (be)
    • ほ (ho) → ぼ (bo)
    • ひ (hi) → び (bi)
    1. Turns "k" to "g":
    • か (ka) → が (ga)
    • く (ku) → ぐ (gu)
    • こ (ko) → ご (go)
    • き (ki) → ぎ (gi)
    1. Turns "t" to "d":
    • た (ta) → だ (da)
    • と (to) → ど (do)
    • て (te) → で (de)
  • 2026·06·06

    が vs に vs で vs な vs の

    が (ga) - subject marker, "the (thing/person) that..."
    に (ni) - location, time, direction, "to/at/in"
    で (de) - location of action, "at/in/by"
    な (na) - connects adjectives to nouns, example: 元気な人 (genki na hito) "An energetic person."
    の (no) - possessive, "of"

  • 2026·06·06

    suru vs shita vs mashou vs masen

    する (su-ru) is "to do" (present tense)
    した (shi-ta) is "did" (past tense, completed action)
    しましょう (shi-ma-sho-u) is "let's do" (suggestion)
    しません (shi-ma-se-n) is "will not do" (negative present/future)

    More examples:

    わかります (wa-ka-ri-ma-su) - I understand
    わかりません (wa-ka-ri-ma-se-n) - I don't understand
    わかりました (wa-ka-ri-ma-shi-ta) - I understood
    わかりましょう (wa-ka-ri-ma-sho-u) - Let's understand

    食べます (ta-be-ma-su) - I eat
    食べません (ta-be-ma-se-n) - I don't eat
    食べました (ta-be-ma-shi-ta) - I ate
    食べましょう (ta-be-ma-sho-u) - Let's eat

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