Class Session 12b Lecture (7/16/12)

January 9, 2018 | Author: Anonymous | Category: Arts & Humanities, Writing, Grammar
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Class Session 12b Chapter 8 •

Indicating Reasons with the Particle de



Making a Partial List with the Particle ya



Expressing a Past Experience with the Verb aru



Verbs in the Plain Past Form



Describing People/Things More Specifically



Describing People’s Appearances

Japanese 1100-L12b-07-16-2012

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Indicating Reasons with the Particle de • The particle de can express reasons and causes, showing how the given action takes place or how the given state holds • Examples: yuki de basu ga kimasen deshita. The bus did not come because of snow.

kono resutoran wa oishii pan de yuumei desu. This restaurant is famous for delicious bread. ani wa shukudai de isogashii desu. My brother is (kept) busy with homework.

Japanese 1100-L12b-07-16-2012

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Making a Partial List with the Particle ya • Unlike the particle to, which plainly lists items, the particle ya lists some items while implying that there are others which are not listed • Examples:

kinō wa biiru ya wain o nomimashita. I drank, beer, wine, and other drinks yesterday. furansu ya, supein ya, itaria ni ikimashita. I went to France, Spain, Italy, etc. nihon-go ya, chūgoku-go o benkyō shimashita. I studied Japanese, Chinese, etc. • Both to and ya are used only for nouns

Japanese 1100-L12b-07-16-2012

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Expressing a Past Experience with the Verb aru • To tell someone what experience you have had, use the verb aru (to exist, to have) in the present tense with a nominal phrase using a verb in the plain past tense + the abstract noun koto (i.e., noun + particle + plain past verb form + koto + ga arimasu )

• Koto nominalizes the verb so it can be placed where a noun would normally be used • Examples: unagi o tabeta koto ga arimasu. I have had (eaten) eel before.

nihon e itta koto ga arimasu. I have been (gone) to Japan before. kabuki o mita koto ga arimasu. I have seen Kabuki (classical Japanese thearter) before. • If you use a verb in the plain present tense before koto ga arimasu, it changes the meaning to something that you sometimes do: shigoto de honkon ni iku koto ga arimasu. I have occasion to go to Hong Kong on business.

Japanese 1100-L12b-07-16-2012

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Verbs in the Plain Past Form • Forming a verb in the plain past affirmative form for ru-verbs is rather straightforward; it is a bit more complicated for u-verbs • The textbook shows the rules in a single table; we will discuss the ru-verbs and uverbs separately

Japanese 1100-L12b-07-16-2012

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Verbs in the Plain Past Form (ru-verb) • For an ru-verb (most verbs end ing in –eru or –iru) drop the –ru to get the stem, then add the suffix –ta: • Examples: Plain Present (dictionary) Form

Meaning

Stem

Plain Past

taberu

(to eat)

tabe

tabeta

miru

(to see)

mi

mita

shimeru

(to close)

shime

shimeta

akeru

(to open)

ake

aketa

Japanese 1100-L12b-07-16-2012

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Verbs in the Plain Past Form (u-verb) • For a u-verb (most verbs ending in anything except iru or eru) drop the –u to get the stem, then add a suffix according to the following model verbs: Verb ending in:

Model

Meaning

Suffix

Plain Past

-ru

toru

(to take)

tta

totta

-tsu

motsu

(to have)

tta

motta

-u

au

(to meet)

tta

atta

-mu

yomu

(to read)

nda

yonda

-nu

shinu1

(to die)

nda

shinda

-bu

yobu

(to call)

nda

yonda

-ku

tsuku

(to arrive)

ita

tsuita

-gu

yogu

(to swim)

ida

oyoida

-su

osu

(to push) (su → shi) ta

shita

-------------------------------------1

shinu is the only verb in Japanese that ends in nu Japanese 1100-L12b-07-16-2012

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Verbs in the Plain Past Form (Irregular Verbs) • In addition to the two irregular verbs we already know (suru (to do) and kuru (to come), iku (to go) is slightly irregular in the plain past form: suru

shita

kuru

kita

iku

itta (rather than iita)

Japanese 1100-L12b-07-16-2012

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Describing People and Things More Specifically • In Chapter 4 we learned to describe people and things using adjectives: yoko-san wa kirei desu. Yoko is pretty. • You can describe people and things more specifically by adding a noun and the particle ga before the adjective to indicate the part or aspect to which the property applies: X wa Y ga Z desu. X is Z in terms of Y. • Examples: yoko-san wa kami ga kirei desu. (a statement about Yoko)

Yoko has pretty hair

yoko-san no kami wa kirei desu. (a statement about Yoko’s hair)

Yoko’s hair is pretty

Japanese 1100-L12b-07-16-2012

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Describing People’s Appearances • Some useful phrases for describing the appearance of people: se ga takai se ga hikui kami ga nagai kami ga mijikai me ga ookii

tall short have long hair have short hair have big eyes

me ga kirei na kuchi ga chisai yasete iru futotte iru

have pretty eyes have a small mouth skinny fat

• Examples: ani wa se ga takai desu. My older brother is tall.

boku no garufurendo wa me ga kirei desu. My girlfriend has pretty eyes. ane wa kami ga nagai desu. My sister has long hair.

Japanese 1100-L12b-07-16-2012

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