【N5】Genki 1 Lesson 8 Japanese Grammar Made Clear

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  • Опубликовано: 10 фев 2025

Комментарии • 174

  • @Cstyle12
    @Cstyle12 5 месяцев назад +20

    Surely I cant be the only one completely overwhelmed by all the information in this lesson

    • @DuhaShreiteh
      @DuhaShreiteh 5 месяцев назад

      Yeaaahhh same here, it took me a whole this week to get a grasp on the lesson

  • @a.abdessamad
    @a.abdessamad 11 месяцев назад +20

    after watching the 7 previous lessons, now I have the habit of liking your videos before watching 😂😂

  • @lachycummings3765
    @lachycummings3765 4 года назад +135

    Just started to read this chapter, it really daunted me and made me wonder if I am wasting my time learning Japanese, making me think I would take for ever to understand it. I am just going to take a break, come back to it tomorrow, and keep plodding through it. Sorry for the venting, hahah.

    • @ToKiniAndy
      @ToKiniAndy  4 года назад +79

      Vent away!
      It can definitely be overwhelming at times. Taking a break, like you did, and coming back with fresh eyes is sometimes the best bet!
      But don't worry! It's not a waste of time. You can do it!

    • @lachycummings3765
      @lachycummings3765 4 года назад +33

      @@ToKiniAndy Thanks Andy, that was just the encouragement I needed!
      I came back the next day and found it much easier. It's funny how we have moments like that! Haha.

    • @TheSwilliams92
      @TheSwilliams92 Год назад +5

      I hope you stayed with it, I had a difficult time with the 1st verb chapter but eventually broke through it. If I quit now in 2 years I could have been farther and would be upset with myself

    • @nothingkdk
      @nothingkdk Год назад

      Wwwwwwwewwww😅wow

    • @phoebe9705
      @phoebe9705 Год назад +3

      It’s been three years since your post. How are you doing on your Japanese now?
      I just started learning Japanese. I need some encouragement.

  • @PuckishAngeI
    @PuckishAngeI 2 года назад +88

    Mary and Takeshi shipping is so cannon

    • @silverbum3960
      @silverbum3960 11 месяцев назад +20

      Story got me on the edge of my seat fr

  • @Elitist
    @Elitist 3 года назад +24

    日本語を勉強するのがすき!ありがとうございました!

  • @nijinokanata111
    @nijinokanata111 11 месяцев назад +2

    Greatest teacher ever! The concepts were clearly explained. Thank you for helping me out with this chapter 🙏🏾

  • @lindakyo
    @lindakyo 3 года назад +13

    You are a live saver! Thank you, Andy and Yuki! ✨

    • @ToKiniAndy
      @ToKiniAndy  3 года назад +2

      You're welcome! Thank you for watching!

  • @Rachel-tu8pq
    @Rachel-tu8pq 2 года назад +18

    I really appreciate the work that you do! Currently taking Japanese 2 in college, and its been a great class, and I have an awesome sensei. That being said, your lessons from the perspective of someone who studied and learned Japanese as a foreign language has been invaluable as a supplemental tool for really drilling home what we are learning in class, and getting a different perspective on the subject matter. Considering she is a native speaker, I think that sensei forgot what it was like to learn Japanese, and sometimes can gloss over very important points that to her are intuitive, but for us quite counter intuitive. You've definitely helped me to maintain an A and excel! Thanks so much

    • @ToKiniAndy
      @ToKiniAndy  2 года назад +2

      That's awesome to here! Thank you! I'm so glad I've been able to help. ☺️

  • @yeen4204
    @yeen4204 2 года назад +22

    I checked 日本語基本文法辞典 for the nominalizing の since i wanted to go into a little more depth than Genki does and found that they describe the difference between the nominalizing の and こと as follows:
    の is generally used when the clause expresses something concrete and perceptible, and when the speaker feels close to the thing being nominalized, such as being personally involved or percieving it.
    事 is generally used when the clause expresses something abstract, or when the speaker is not particularly attached to the thing being nominalized. (this might explain it being more common formally?)
    The example they use that i found helpful is 小説を書く*こと*は難しい vs 小説を書く*の*は難しい, with the former stating a general and objective fact that writing a novel is difficult and the latter saying "Writing a novel is hard (and I know personally)"
    Of course, i'm just learning this myself. All I've done is paraphrased what seemed important to me, maybe I'll look back at this and feel like I skimmed over something important! but hopefully this is still helpful to someone. 日本語基本文法辞典 also contains a short list of common verbs and adjectives along with which nominalizer is generally appropriate (and obviously goes far more in depth on these grammar points) for anyone who wants to take a further look.

  • @UnmeiWasurete
    @UnmeiWasurete 4 года назад +7

    I'm so glad I found your page searching for Genki Listening Comprehension for my online Japanese class in college. This is super helpful. My professor is good and kind, but she speeds through class expecting you to understand immediately after going over 2 examples..
    ありがとうございます、お疲れ様です!

    • @ToKiniAndy
      @ToKiniAndy  4 года назад +3

      Many many examples are needed to really drive a point home. =) I'm glad that you are finding them helpful. Thank you for watching!

  • @supreethbasabattini62
    @supreethbasabattini62 4 года назад +26

    Great content! I've been learning Japanese using your videos along with having my Genki 1 beside throughout the session ^^

  • @usnairframer
    @usnairframer 3 года назад +1

    I'm glad you pointed out that no one here really minds you using informal Japanese as a foreigner here. I've known a few people, including myself, who were really worried about insulting people by using informal Japanese so much that it makes you forget which words to use. Lol
    In general, I think its a part of a double-edged sword of learning Japanese. You get a lot of leeway, but you're always exceeding expectations as well. For example, I guarantee that no matter how long you've been living here, nor how fluent you are in the language, that even you (Andy) still get the "あっ、日本語上手!" comments 😆

  • @d-redfox
    @d-redfox 9 дней назад

    Hello! OMG I just finished Lesson 8 excercises and getting readz on to the next chapter!! Thanks again for the review and corrections. This time lesson 8 totallz knocked me down, it took me a few weeks to complete... felt very overwhelemed by many of previous building blocks being mixed in this one... I wish anyone else following you with this book also the patience and to take some time to relax and enjoy the journey of learning. A quote from the stormlight archive books, "Journey before Destsiny".

  • @Sebastian-oq5qt
    @Sebastian-oq5qt 2 года назад +5

    Thanks for the breakdown! Your explanations help out a lot when my eyes get tired of working through the genki workbook. You just got yourself a new course subscriber!

    • @ToKiniAndy
      @ToKiniAndy  2 года назад

      I'm glad to hear that you are finding these helpful! Thank you! I hope you can find the course helpful too!

  • @ケイラ-y6h
    @ケイラ-y6h 4 года назад +6

    I'm surprised these videos don't have more views omg!!! They are very comprehensive. It's really helpful since I had to take Japanese 102 online this year... (My university is all online due to COVID)

    • @ToKiniAndy
      @ToKiniAndy  4 года назад +1

      I'm happy to hear that you have found them useful! I'm still a relatively new channel, so there is plenty of time for them to get some attention. =)
      Thank you for watching!

  • @Monkeybehindthekeyboard
    @Monkeybehindthekeyboard Год назад +1

    I just took a 2 month break and returned to this chapter. Very helpful video I’m surprised at how much I remember and also how much I don’t lol.

  • @CP-hw6jd
    @CP-hw6jd Год назад +2

    this is going to take a while to process and digest, but this video was extremely help and def cleared up a lot of previous mistakes I was making!!

  • @memberberry4512
    @memberberry4512 Год назад +1

    I know you probably won't see this comment, but this was by far my most important lesson. As my goals for learning Japanese are to consume manga and anime in JP, I've always found it weird that I was yet to see anyone talk about informal (or casual) Japanese, which is used a lot more in manga and anime, as the characters talking are usually close to each other.
    I've started my learning experience with formal Japanese, and I don't mind learning about it more than informal, but getting exposure to informal is very beneficial to me for my purposes. I was so weirded out when I reached my 2 month milestone and thought "wait a minute, I hardly recall any anime characters ever saying "です", what's up with that?", so learning informal is great!

  • @chantale8773
    @chantale8773 7 месяцев назад

    Great explanation, thank you for the info on "I think" as something used as making the sentence more formal. I heared this a lot in interviews but didn't understand the meaning before.

  • @DeathbringerShini
    @DeathbringerShini 3 года назад +3

    I honestly wish you were my teacher. I'm seriously struggling on these later chapters for class.

  • @Noondestroyer
    @Noondestroyer 4 года назад +3

    Been doing Genki I during my summer vacation and these videos have been very helpful, thanks a bunch Andy.

    • @ToKiniAndy
      @ToKiniAndy  4 года назад +2

      I'm happy to hear that! Many more to come.
      Thank you for watching. ☺️

  • @アキセ
    @アキセ 3 года назад

    lifesaver, honestly think if not for these videos I would never understand the concepts.

  • @ToKiniAndy
    @ToKiniAndy  4 года назад +6

    ToKini Andy has outgrown Patreon. There is so much premium content now, that we decided to move (there were other reasons too). You can now access our premium course material at: www.tokiniandy.com/
    edit: 5/19/2021

  • @SquirrelStalker
    @SquirrelStalker 7 месяцев назад

    Stumbled onto your channel trying to get some grammar help. So glad I did!

  • @mil3966
    @mil3966 4 года назад +3

    Thank you for this video! Your examples are incredibly helpful. This lesson was so fun!!

    • @ToKiniAndy
      @ToKiniAndy  4 года назад +1

      Thank you! I'm happy to hear that you found it helpful!

  • @kart0ffel
    @kart0ffel Год назад +1

    Thanks a lot for uploading this videos. Extremely helpful.

  • @lunarleaf
    @lunarleaf 2 года назад +1

    そういえば、本当に日本語を勉強するのが好きだと思います!とっても楽して面白いだよね~ (少しい難しいもww)

  • @mantiagtr
    @mantiagtr 3 месяца назад

    Thanks!

    • @ToKiniAndy
      @ToKiniAndy  3 месяца назад

      ありがとうございます!Thank you so much @mantiagtr !

  • @dereklynch5304
    @dereklynch5304 Год назад +2

    And suddenly, all the dialogue we hear in anime and Japanese dramas make a heck of a lot more sense 😅

  • @superretroquest
    @superretroquest 3 года назад

    Thanks

    • @ToKiniAndy
      @ToKiniAndy  3 года назад +1

      Thank you so much @Japarama!

    • @superretroquest
      @superretroquest 3 года назад

      @@ToKiniAndy the minimum I could do…. been enjoying these videos!

  • @mariag4696
    @mariag4696 2 года назад

    Oh and I played it at 90 percent speed so bc my brain couldn't keep up with your words! Super helpful lesson -- thank you!~

  • @The_DoubtingThomas
    @The_DoubtingThomas Год назад

    アイスクリームを食べるのが好きです。
    Thanks Andy

  • @mamrelaadi4066
    @mamrelaadi4066 10 месяцев назад

    I don't always have motivation to study japanese, and so my pace has been quite slow. These videos always get me excited to continue learning though!

  • @aureaproportio
    @aureaproportio 8 месяцев назад

    Exceptional content. Thank you Andy.

  • @thestruggler7926
    @thestruggler7926 3 года назад

    Wow I should've started looking at these Genki videos when I started. Thanks for the explanations 💯

  • @yasseralg3928
    @yasseralg3928 7 месяцев назад

    Amazing work. Thank you very much

  • @rigbyb
    @rigbyb 7 месяцев назад

    Amazing job teaching this. Thank you :)

  • @Nathan-sq9xv
    @Nathan-sq9xv 3 года назад +2

    I was about to move on to lesson 9 but I just now realized that お父さんは歌うのが好きだと言った works
    You can have のが and と言った in the same sentence
    I was doing the final exercise in the book of lesson eight and I realized that it was asking me to make sentences like, “my dad said that he likes to sing”. That is not the same as, “my dad likes to sing”. That’s kind of cool that you can combine the two
    Well, time for lesson 9. (Past tense short forms)

  • @_Username__
    @_Username__ 3 года назад +1

    where have you been man, why didn't i know about you until i finished this lesson

  • @dannyallen2894
    @dannyallen2894 3 года назад

    日本語を勉強するのが大好き!

  • @JackTse
    @JackTse Год назад +2

    Made it to 8!!!!

  • @yeahbuddy8235
    @yeahbuddy8235 4 года назад

    Great vid man! I want to suggest making a quick recap vid of the first book so derps like me can remember the most important stuff of each chapter. Keep up the good work! And thanks for the helpfull vids!

    • @ToKiniAndy
      @ToKiniAndy  4 года назад +1

      That is something I would like to do at some point. I'm trying to figure out how I could keep a video like that UNDER 2 hours long though... haha

    • @yeahbuddy8235
      @yeahbuddy8235 4 года назад

      @@ToKiniAndy yhea, makes sense... I would also like to compliment you on your dedication to your channel. The way you make the time to read every comment and listen to your subscribers is really cool. Thanks for the great content!

  • @FragdaddyXXL
    @FragdaddyXXL Год назад

    What I just realized is you can translate 'toitteimasu' to 'with them saying', as the 'to' particle is often similar to 'with' and 'itteimasu' is just 'saying'. Clicks in my head more easily than the straight 'they said' translation.

  • @tamkingshorts
    @tamkingshorts 2 года назад

    Thank you for the list of exceptions at 5:52 ! My edition of Genki didn't really address those, and I was really confused for a bit. Wonderful lesson as always, thanks for the video!

    • @tjc_2661
      @tjc_2661 Год назад +1

      Yeah, I dont know why genki doesnt really mention them

  • @alaindubois1505
    @alaindubois1505 2 года назад

    I must be Japanese because I understand why I'd say 'でしょう' and add 'と思います' . It's because it's humble to recognize that we do not know the future. Some may notice that Japanese really has no special future tense. つもり is used to show intention. My life has rarely gone to a schedule or the way one would wish.
    Both Shinto and Buddhism may indicate our existence as being a part of the environment, just as Indigenous Australians traditionally feel they are a part of the land.
    Today, more than ever, people aware of reality, may live each day as if their last.

  • @reskikasyafari279
    @reskikasyafari279 2 года назад

    What a good lesson

  • @ShinyTurkey
    @ShinyTurkey 4 года назад

    Super helpful, thank you very much.

    • @ToKiniAndy
      @ToKiniAndy  4 года назад

      You're welcome! Thank you for watching.

  • @Ingenium04
    @Ingenium04 4 года назад +1

    ありがとう!

    • @ToKiniAndy
      @ToKiniAndy  4 года назад +1

      こちらこそありがとう!

  • @SPSibes
    @SPSibes 4 года назад

    Another awesome video! Thank you :) Really helps!!

    • @ToKiniAndy
      @ToKiniAndy  4 года назад +1

      Thank you for watching! I'm happy to hear it helps!

  • @cunha4791
    @cunha4791 3 года назад

    バスケットボールをするのが好きです。

  • @mene90m
    @mene90m 5 месяцев назад

    Hi Andy, another great lesson! Thanks to you (and Genki) I'm learning japanese by myself and just a year ago i thinked it was impossible!
    Now I've got a question for you: at 13:30 when you made the example with 開いていない you read it あいていない but it shouldn't be read as あけいていない? the dictionary form is あける

    • @Turtle76rus
      @Turtle76rus 4 месяца назад

      In case the question is still relevant, you're mixing up intransitive 開く and transitive 開ける.
      店は開いていない
      (俺は)店を開けていない

  • @williamcolachicco
    @williamcolachicco 3 года назад

    This is amazing! Thank you!

  • @Nathan-sq9xv
    @Nathan-sq9xv 3 года назад

    It’s so weird. In around early January I randomly started liking Japan and Japanese. I still do like it it’s just I find it weird how it’s so sudden I just so suddenly started liking it

    • @ToKiniAndy
      @ToKiniAndy  3 года назад +1

      It will happen a lot in your life. Suddenly you'll be really into something and not know why. Same for when you stop liking things. =)

    • @Nathan-sq9xv
      @Nathan-sq9xv 3 года назад

      @@ToKiniAndy I’m obviously not gonna stop but when I plan on moving to japan (2023), I plan on attending language school because I’m really not a good teacher when it comes to teaching myself . Today I learned the positive and negative informal present tense and it’s pretty straight forward.
      I really wanna learn
      I can
      I could
      I would
      In japanese

  • @RyanLeung-g4f
    @RyanLeung-g4f 3 дня назад

    私は運動するのが好きです。=]

  • @yuriybesarab11
    @yuriybesarab11 3 года назад +3

    Dear Andy, when you speak in your mind to yourself, do you use short forms? And Japanese people?

  • @lawrnc1424
    @lawrnc1424 5 месяцев назад

    Thanks for the awesome content! One question: is Genki 1 enough for JLPT N5? And / or what resources do you recommend for each JLPT level? Have you perhaps made a video about this? Thanks in advance!

  • @chandradickinson3731
    @chandradickinson3731 3 года назад +2

    is there specific situations where 何の is more appropriate than どんな when asking "what kind of...?" or is it just personal preference?

  • @giangargo669
    @giangargo669 5 месяцев назад

    it's funny because "tsukiatta" sounds a lot like "schiatta" in italian which is a rude way to tell someone to go and die while the japanese translation is very wholesome

  • @wiibuu6521
    @wiibuu6521 4 года назад +1

    A. 日本語を勉強することが好きです。そして、アニメをみることが好きですよ。

  • @valeriisobolenko3388
    @valeriisobolenko3388 3 года назад +1

    Question: 23:57: I don't think Wasabi is spicy, but isn't it actually I think Wasabi is not spicy? Because I don't think spicy and I think not spicy is a bit different...

    • @Tylerb7
      @Tylerb7 3 года назад

      genki says it's more natural to say the equivalent of 'I think ___ is not ___' than 'I don't think ___ is ___', even though in english those mean slightly different things. i couldn't say how accurate that is.

  • @windworldwidespread2004
    @windworldwidespread2004 Год назад

    19:26 - “I think . . .”
    27:31 - “They said . . .”
    32:43 - “Please don’t . . .”

  • @steveolg
    @steveolg Месяц назад

    Ummmm Haircut!!! Looking good!

  • @felis3936
    @felis3936 4 месяца назад

    31:33 why do we use iku in the first sentence i didn't get it.

  • @cataloukitcat
    @cataloukitcat 3 года назад

    Random question/thought about ”夏はスイカがだい好き” "I like watermelon a lot during the summer" I feel like I would have said...夏に or even 夏で , but は is used?

  • @davidgun07
    @davidgun07 4 месяца назад

    ゲームのがが好きです😀

  • @franckvincent5190
    @franckvincent5190 2 года назад

    I agree that Wasabi is not spicy. It gives me the same sensation as mildly spiced mustard.

  • @Wazhai
    @Wazhai 4 года назад

    6:43 Interestingly enough, it's the other way around when we negate verbs and adjectives with ない. Negated adjectives still look like adjectives; they end with い like normal, don't they? So instead it's negated verbs that literally turn into adjectives with ない. As in "読ま無い", written like this to show that the negative form is derived using the adjective 無い.

    • @ToKiniAndy
      @ToKiniAndy  4 года назад +1

      Indeed. Be careful not to write them with the kanji in real life though. ;-)

  • @justamanwithoutamustache
    @justamanwithoutamustache Год назад

    諸説をよむのがだいすきです!

  • @pikoulakizoe1720
    @pikoulakizoe1720 2 месяца назад

    私は犬と一緒に散歩に行くのが好きです。

  • @matiduden7997
    @matiduden7997 2 года назад

    37:38 is it possible to replace は for が. Or must you use が every time?

  • @JKash7411
    @JKash7411 10 месяцев назад

    Great video as always! I do have a question about Nominalizing Sentences. It's almost seeming to me like you would use noga (or kotoga) as if it was a wa particle (eg. regarding taking a bath, I like it). Would wa also be correct here and, if so, what's the difference really between wa and noga in their uses for this?

    • @ToKiniAndy
      @ToKiniAndy  10 месяцев назад +1

      More so than は, it acts like the subject particle が. Because that’s what it is. The の and こと do the nominalizing, and the が is just the が particle. You could also use を here instead if you want to ACT on the nominalized phrase. 😊
      You can’t use は alone without nominalizing, and in this case it would be more of the contrast は than just the topic particle (which I talk about more in my short は vs が video).
      I hope that makes sense!

  • @Omni0404
    @Omni0404 3 года назад

    I'm in a weird stage where even when I don't recognize a Kanji sometimes parts of it stand out. Like how sing has two little phrase Kanji stacked up. Sometimes this works but other times it fails spectacularly.

  • @kuhaku3805
    @kuhaku3805 4 года назад +2

    Hello Andy!
    Can が be used instead of を,で、orに to add emphasis?
    Also can you use Direction + が + movement verb/noun?

    • @ToKiniAndy
      @ToKiniAndy  4 года назад +2

      Hi there.
      To answer your first question: It depends on the sentence.
      And for your second question: No, you can't.
      Thank you for watching! =)

  • @hanagara1907
    @hanagara1907 Год назад

    Something that kind of annoyed me before I knew informal speech: pretty much all textbooks teach formal first with the justification "it's better to be too polite than too casual". Great, but if someone speaks casual to me, I won't understand (from the point of view of past me that is). I know they have to teach SOMETHING first but the fact pretty much all textbooks do leaves very few options and as I pointed out, the reasoning does not hold in real life. They could even say at the same time "here is the casual form"

  • @mattloulou123123
    @mattloulou123123 3 года назад

    Sorry to bother you, but I was just looking at 13:51, and I am under the impression that the 開 furigana should be ひら instead of い? Please correct me if I am wrong

  • @mariag4696
    @mariag4696 2 года назад

    Awesome video! Just checking: The whole negative adjective business really is pretty much the negating we learned in Chapter 5, minus the desu, right?

  • @iannefai
    @iannefai 10 месяцев назад

    What is the difference of Ki ni shinaide and Shinpai shinaide?

  • @hjimpie9328
    @hjimpie9328 3 года назад

    22:48
    So if you have to put だ after a noun/adjective before と shouldn’t the first 2 examples also have a だ before the と?
    Or is it that you don’t have to do that with い-adjectives?

    • @brianhogan3261
      @brianhogan3261 3 года назад +1

      nouns and na adjective you add da. I adjectives you don't need it.

  • @Lindormber
    @Lindormber 3 месяца назад +1

    Is "omou" pronounced "omoo" with a long "o" at the end? Not "omo-u"? I was thinking since the "-u" is grammatical.

    • @ideac.
      @ideac. 2 месяца назад

      I think it doesnt matter

  • @imdacutest
    @imdacutest 9 месяцев назад

    I have a question. In the textbook Lesson 8 in practice section has ( Genki Janai) and Lesson 12 vocabulary section has ( Genki Ga Nai). im not confused 😂😂😂

  • @nipunkumar7164
    @nipunkumar7164 3 года назад

    at 42:40, you said dare ga iku? Shouldn't it be dare TO iku?

  • @drlawrencemayo
    @drlawrencemayo 4 года назад

    can you do a Video on Nihongo so matome N3 please ! thanks...really good teacher!

    • @ToKiniAndy
      @ToKiniAndy  4 года назад +2

      Funny, I'd never heard of this. I just looked it up on Amazon, and realized that my friend had given me a copy of the N2 Grammar version of this. I'll have to take a look at it. (^_^) Thank you for watching.

    • @drlawrencemayo
      @drlawrencemayo 4 года назад

      @@ToKiniAndy Im still starting out, I am a Junior Doctor from Malta studying Japanese while battling Covid. Your videos are a welcome break during the Chaos on the wards. I have something to look forward too. Thank you for the inspiration to help me continue striving to study a new language!

  • @ingarid6582
    @ingarid6582 4 месяца назад

    41:49 ~ga

  • @RogersJimmy-n4q
    @RogersJimmy-n4q Год назад

    If 〇〇と言っています means "They said ....", How do I say "I said....?"

  • @macrocodespeedruns2560
    @macrocodespeedruns2560 3 месяца назад

    is it fair to say the "short form" is just the casual form? I've been learning from some other sources and no one has used the "short form" I've been learning casual and polite and polite/formal.

    • @Turtle76rus
      @Turtle76rus 3 месяца назад

      Yes, short/plain/casual are describing the same thing.
      However, there's an important caveat here: casual form does not automatically mean casual speech. Some clauses are always in the short/casual form regardless of the speech type you're aiming for.
      For example, 母が作ったケーキを食べました (I ate a cake that my mother made) is a polite sentence ending with ました, but the sub-sentence modifying the cake (母が作った) is in the short/casual form. As long as you keep that distinction in mind you should be fine with calling it 'casual form'.

  • @sophiatheczech1918
    @sophiatheczech1918 3 года назад

    19:13 is where I ended

  • @Ataleay
    @Ataleay 4 дня назад

    "konai" in Polish sounds like "konaj", which basically means "go die.", be careful with that one if anyone is planning to learn both languages lol

  • @willbeach8232
    @willbeach8232 4 года назад +1

    Hey Andy. I have been working through the textbook exercises and checking with the answer key. I have been doing some of the tasks for nominalising sentences and have noticed that sometimes the の in のが is sometimes dropped.
    For example: they ask for a translation of "Mary is good at cooking" so I wrote 「メアリーさんは料理するのが上手です。」, but the answer key lists the correct answer as 「メアリーさんは料理が上手です。」
    I'm starting to think that you only use のが for verbs and you can just use が for nouns, but this isn't explained in Genki. Am I right? I was wondering if you could help explain this. Thanks!

    • @ToKiniAndy
      @ToKiniAndy  4 года назад +3

      Hey Will,
      The difference there is that 料理 is on it's own, a noun, so you can use it like one. The second sentence says she is good at the NOUN 料理, while your sentence means she is good at DOING 料理. They are both correct.
      So, long story short, yes. You are correct. のが allows you to modify a verb like you could a noun.

    • @willbeach8232
      @willbeach8232 4 года назад +1

      @@ToKiniAndy Thanks!!! And double thanks for such a prompt reply! I guess it’s like in English you can say, “I’m good at tennis” as opposed to “playing tennis”? 😁

  • @supacyanide4442
    @supacyanide4442 2 года назад

    So short forms are the same as informal form? I got my self a bit confused on that?

  • @Nathan-sq9xv
    @Nathan-sq9xv 3 года назад

    私は歌うのが好きです
    Am I allowed to say
    勉強するのが好きです
    I read something on Genki that said 勉強が好きです
    Can I say either or

    • @ToKiniAndy
      @ToKiniAndy  3 года назад +1

      In this situation, both are fine. =)

    • @Nathan-sq9xv
      @Nathan-sq9xv 3 года назад

      @@ToKiniAndy Am I allowed to always use のが as long as the verb is informal? Or is there something I haven’t learned yet like exceptions or something because I wouldn’t be surprised

    • @ToKiniAndy
      @ToKiniAndy  3 года назад +1

      @@Nathan-sq9xv のが allows you to treat whatever comes before it as a noun. So yeah, as long as the verb that comes before is in an informal conjugation, you're good to go.

    • @Nathan-sq9xv
      @Nathan-sq9xv 3 года назад

      @@ToKiniAndy thank you sir

  • @Rabianurguven
    @Rabianurguven Год назад

    what is the "btw" meaning in Japanese i couldn't find

  • @ThirdCoastGardening
    @ThirdCoastGardening Год назад

    少年アニメをよく見る。

  • @winstonbeats
    @winstonbeats 9 месяцев назад

    this video made me realize i’m not smart enough to continue learning japanese:/

    • @pherdogwood
      @pherdogwood 5 месяцев назад

      Yes you are smart enough ! It’ll just take time. If it’s something you want to learn then you can make it happen.

    • @MarvelousMadDog
      @MarvelousMadDog 6 дней назад

      This is bullshit and you know it.

  • @Nathan-sq9xv
    @Nathan-sq9xv 3 года назад

    The thing I don’t get is why does genki randomly start using transitive and intransitive verbs without bringing anything up of when it’s used? I know when it’s used cuz I spent 1-2 weeks trying to understand. It doesn’t make sense y they don’t even mention the difference

    • @ToKiniAndy
      @ToKiniAndy  3 года назад +2

      Because it's not an exclusively Japanese thing. Transitive and Intransitive verbs exist in most languages (maybe all?), including English. Genki doesn't bother covering what grammatical terms mean. They expect that it was taught in English class. ;-)

    • @Nathan-sq9xv
      @Nathan-sq9xv 3 года назад

      @@ToKiniAndy oh alright, thx

  • @hambaku7318
    @hambaku7318 4 года назад +6

    you cute homie

  • @neight227
    @neight227 Год назад

    37:50

  • @Jerome-mh4vl
    @Jerome-mh4vl 3 года назад +1

    why is the short form of 開ける 開いて

    • @ToKiniAndy
      @ToKiniAndy  3 года назад

      It's not. The Te form of 開ける is 開けて
      開いて is the Te form of 開く

    • @Jerome-mh4vl
      @Jerome-mh4vl 3 года назад

      @@ToKiniAndy that makes so much more sense, thanks for the fast reply too!

  • @madelinehermosa8832
    @madelinehermosa8832 2 года назад

    9:07

  • @_Username__
    @_Username__ 3 года назад

    I thought 4 nen sai desu means 4 years old

    • @ToKiniAndy
      @ToKiniAndy  3 года назад +4

      4 SAI means 4 years old. 4 NEN SEI means 4th year student.

  • @Nathan-sq9xv
    @Nathan-sq9xv 3 года назад

    Is it rude to say 知りません as opposed to わかりません

    • @ToKiniAndy
      @ToKiniAndy  3 года назад +1

      It depends on the situation, but for some things it would sound rude, yes.

    • @Nathan-sq9xv
      @Nathan-sq9xv 3 года назад

      @@ToKiniAndy thank you