JP1000 Lecture 2
Structures:
1. X is N : X wa N desu Watashi wa Kanada-jin desu.
2. X is not N :X wa N de wa arimasen Kore wa daigaku de wa arimasen.
ja ja
3. X is A : X wa A (desu) Nihongo wa omoshiroi (desu).
4. X is not A :X wa Ast-ku arimasen Kyoo wa samuku arimasen.
5. A + N : A N takai kamera
Adjectives:
Dictionary [ or citation] Form: -i [-ai/-ii/-ui/-oi]
takai, ookii, atsui, koi
KU [or adverbial] Form : -ku
chiisaku, muzukashiku, yasuku, tanoshiku
[N.B.]
ii ---> yoku *iku
As Japanese adjectives contain the meaning of BE, they can be predicates
by themselves, that is, without DESU, but nouns cannot.
Compare: Kyoo wa atatakai. *Are wa daigaku.
Thus,
N + DESU : copula + politeness
A + DESU : politeness [of MASU : polite form for verbs]
Adjectives have their own conjugation.
|
Affirmative |
Negative |
| Present |
takai desu |
takaku arimasen |
| Past |
takakatta desu |
takaku arimasen deshita |
Nouns:
Singular/Plural distinctions are rarely marked.
Plural Markers: kare-ra 'they', kore-ra 'these', sensee-gata 'teachers',
kodomo-tachi 'children', hito-bito 'people'
Definite/Indefinite distinctions are sometimes marked by demonstratives, WA,
...
Topic : definite
[N.B.] soo 'so', onaji 'same', dame 'no good', ... are nouns.
Chigaimasu 'is different' is a verb.
Demonstratives: kore 'this' sore 'that' are 'that over there' dore 'which'
Sentence particles:
Modality: speaker's attitude toward proposition
KA : interrogative Wakarimasu ka?
YO : assertive Chigaimasu yo.
NE : confirmative Suzuki-san desu ne.
NEE : agreement-seeking/giving Atsui desu nee./ Soo desu nee.
Introduction to Japanese writing:
Two Kana syllabaries: katakana
hiragana
history and origin
uses
punctuation and wakachigaki
typeface: katsuji
minchoo-tai 'Ming Dynasty style'
goshikku-tai 'Gothic style'
kyookasho-tai 'Textbook style'
handwriting
Romanization: Roomaji
Hebon-shiki 'Hepburn system'
Nippon-shiki 'Japan system'
Kunree-shiki 'Kunrei system'
ref. Some Notes on Rômaji by M. Unger
Introduction to Japanese writing: KATAKANA
use
rules
learn to write names
identify each katakana
read and write loan words
innovative writing
© Norio Ota 2000