101 Lesson 10: Japanese Sentence Structures: Helpful Rules to Make it Easy to Speak Japanese
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- Опубликовано: 16 сен 2024
- This lesson will guide you through the fundamental principles of constructing clear and concise sentences in Japanese. You'll have a solid understanding of word order and particles, enabling you to speak fluently in Japanese. I hope you will be more comfortable speaking Japanese with this lesson.
A Book by Yoko Sensei: Foundation of Japanese Grammar: A Beginners' Handbook
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The Lesson is so helpful ......please explain with word meaning. Thanks a lot
Thank you so much sensei 🙏 as a Japanese learner that has been self teaching myself since middle school. This really helps me understand how Japanese sentence structure works and how to properly form my thoughts
Arigatou😊 Ganbatte kudasai!
@@JapaneseTutorial101-zf8pu Arigatou Sensei
Thanks for the lesson. You helped me very much with sentence rules. Is there a video about sentences when they have more than one verb? That's another big question I have. Regarding conjunctions too.Thanks sensei
Thank you for your kind words! I'm glad to hear the lesson helped you. I appreciate your suggestion about making a video on sentences with multiple verbs and conjunctions. I’ll be adding more lessons on these topics, so please keep an eye out for them!
Thank you for your clear explanation, sensei. I love and support your channel. Please upload more videos ❤
Thank you for your support 💕 Yes I’ll keep uploading lessons so that you can learn more.😊
🇧🇷🇯🇵👏good lesson.
Arigatou😊
As for adverbs of time, is it better to put them at the beginning before the subject (I'm referring to kinou, kyou and ashita)? Because from what I understand, that's correct. In fact, as for adverbs in general, should they come after the subject?
Thank you for your question! In Japanese, adverbs can appear anywhere in the sentence without changing the meaning, as long as the predicate comes at the end. So, both positions before or after the subject are grammatically correct. Placing them before the subject does give a slight emphasis to the time aspect. I hope this helps. Happy learning!