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Describing Places Describing Skills and Talents Preferences and Desires

Class Session 13a Chapter 8. Describing Places Describing Skills and Talents Preferences and Desires The Nominalizers no and koto The Suffix – tai Expressing Time with ji and fun. Describing Places. You can use X wa Y ga Z desu to describe countries and cities Examples:

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Describing Places Describing Skills and Talents Preferences and Desires

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  1. Class Session 13a Chapter 8 • Describing Places • Describing Skills and Talents • Preferences and Desires • The Nominalizers no and koto • The Suffix –tai • Expressing Time with ji and fun Japanese 1100-L13a-07-17-2012

  2. Describing Places • You can use X wa Y ga Z desu to describe countries and cities • Examples: • nihon wa sakana ga oishii desu. • As for Japan, fish are delicious. • igirisu wa tatemono ga furui desu. • As for England, the buildings are old. • chūgoku wa jitensha ga ooi desu. • As for China, bicycles are numerous. Japanese 1100-L13a-07-17-2012

  3. Describing Skills and Talents • Useful phrases for describing people’s skills and talents: • jōzu na good at… • tokui na good at … (use for one’s own skills) • umai good at … • heta na bad at … • nigate na bad at … • Examples: • yamada-san wa sukii ga jōzu desu. Mr. Yamada is good at skiing. • watashi wa gorufu ga tokui desu. I’m good at golf. • ani wa uta ga heta desu. My older brother is bad at singing. • otōto wa me ga ii desu. My younger brother has good eyes. • sofu wa mimi ga warui desu. My grandfather has bad ears. • tanaka-san wa atami ga ii desu. Mr. Tanaka has a good head (is smart). Japanese 1100-L13a-07-17-2012

  4. Preferences and Desires • In English, one’s likes and dislikes are typically expressed by verbs (e.g., to like, to love, • to hate, and to want). • In Japanese, likes and dislikes are commonly expressed by adjectives: • suki na to like • daisuki na to like very much • kirai na to hate • hoshii to want • These adjectives can be used in the X wa Y ga Z desu format; examples: • watashi wa momo ga suki desu. I like peaches. • imōto wa aisukuriimu ga daisuki desu. My younger sister likes ice cream. • otōto wa neko ga kirai desu. My younger brother hates cats. • watashi wa atarashii purintā ga hoshii desu. I want a new printer. • hoshii cannot be used with actions; use –tai (discussed later) for this purpose Japanese 1100-L13a-07-17-2012

  5. The Nominalizers no and koto • To express the activity that you are good at using a verb, you must first nominalize the • verb (i.e., make it like a noun) by adding the particle no or by adding the abstract noun • koto • The verb must be in the plain present (dictionary) form in this case • Examples: • watashi wa hashiru no ga suki desu. • watashi wa hashiru koto ga suki desu. • I like running. • chichi wa o-sake o nomu no ga suki desu. • My father likes drinking sake. • haha wa tomodachi to shaberu no ga suki desu. • My mother likes chatting with (her) friends. • ani wa uta o utau koto ga suki desu. • My older brother likes singing songs. • In this case no and koto are interchangeable, but this is not always the case • Note: no seems to be used more often than koto in common speech Japanese 1100-L13a-07-17-2012

  6. The Suffix –tai • To say you want to do something, use the verb stem (the pre-masu form) and add the suffix –tai: taberu  tabe  tabe-tai • The output is an i-adjective that you can use as any other i-type adjective (i.e., it can have a negative form, it can be in past tense, etc.) • The tai suffix should followed by desu to keep the construction in polite form • Examples: • nihon de hataraki-tai desu. I want to work in Japan. • isha ni nari-tai desu. I want to become a doctor. • ookii ie ni sumi-tai desu. I want to live in a big house. • tomodachi to furansu ni iki-tai desu. I want to go to France with (my) friend. • When the verb has a direct object it can be marked with either o or ga: • sakana ga tabe-tai desu. (emphasis on what you want to eat) • sakana o tabe-tai desu. (emphasis on what you want to do) Japanese 1100-L13a-07-17-2012

  7. Expressing Time with ji and fun • To express time, use ji (o’clock) and fun (minutes) • Examples: • ichi-ji desu. 1 o’clock. • ni-ji-san-juu-go-fun 2:35 • yo-ji 4:00 • go-ji jū-go-fun 5:15 • gozen () is AM. and gogo is PM; they are placed at the beginning of the time phrase (when used): • gozen roku-ji jū-go fun 6:15 am • gogo jū-ji ni-jū-ni-fun 10:22 pm • The notion of quarter is not used in Japanese, but half is represented by han: • gogo san-ji han 3:30 pm Japanese 1100-L13a-07-17-2012

  8. Expressing Time with ji and fun • To express “before” and “after” use mae and sugi respectively: • yo-ji juppun mae 10 ‘til (until, before) 4 • yo-ji juppun sugi 10 after (past) 4 • Note: In common speech, if neither mae nor sugi is used, sugi is assumed • The hours from 1 to 12 are regular in pronunciation: ichi-ji, ni-ji, san-ji....jū-ji • There are some pronunciation changes in the minutes: • ip-punrop-punni-jup-pun • ni-fun nana-fun san-jup-pun • san-bunhap-pun yon-jū go fun • yon-pun kyū-fun • go-fun jup-pun Japanese 1100-L13a-07-17-2012

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