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日本語の基本英語 Basic English for Japanese begginers

語彙を改善する-動詞、名詞、形容詞、そして間もなく役立つフレーズ。 Improve your vocabulary - Verbs, Nouns, Adjectives and coming soon useful phrases.

  • -Adjectives (形容詞)
  • -Nouns (名詞) : People
  • -Verbs (動詞)
  • -Phrases (言葉)
  • -Nouns (名詞) : In The Home
  • -Verbs 1 : Past Tense (過去動詞)

Basic Japanese for begginers

  • -Hiragana Stroking
  • -Katakana Stroking
  • -Kanji reading
  • -Japanese Vocabularies
  • -Japanese sentence writing and grammars
  • -Japanese work ethics and cultures

Definitions

Hiragana and Katakana Stroking

Hiragana and Katakana Stroking

Learning the two Japanese phonetic alphabets, hiragana and katakana, are key to learning basic Japanese. Each hiragana character represents a single vowel or consonant-vowel sound. In the chart below you can see all of the basic hiragana characters along with the closest sounding roman letters. The five vowel sounds, a (ah), i (ee), u (oo), e (eh), o (oh), are combined with the consonant sounds k, s, t, n, h, m, y, r, w to produce almost all the sounds represented by hiragana characters. The consonant-only n character appears at the end of words. These characters were all originally written with a brush, so writing the strokes of a hiragana character in the right order is important in getting the shape of the character correct.

Kanji reading

Kanji reading

Kanji in Japanese can have one or several readings. The reading for Kanji is split into two major categories called kun-yomi and on-yomi. Kun-yomi is the Japanese reading of the character while on-yomi is based on the original Chinese pronunciation. Generally, Kun-yomi is used for words that only use one character.

Basic

Top Basic Japanese Words

We have selected the top Basic Japanese words you need to know and sorted them into 8 lists.

Greetings, People, Numbers, Months, Days of Weeks & Times in a Day, Adjectives, Verbs, Food

Grammars

Sentence writing and grammars

Japanese vs. English Sentence Structure:
A Basic Overview Japanese sentence structure is very different from English, but it’s not hard to master. Compared to other languages I’ve studied, Japanese isn’t heavily grammatical.

The words don’t change a great deal to express tense, number, aspect or much else.
That’s good news for you! It’s just a matter of mastering the sentence structure. When it comes to basic sentence structure, Japanese is an SOV language while English is SVO. SOV means “subject-object-verb.”

This is a language where the verb is at the end of the sentence. You’ll see examples of this in Japanese as you read on. SVO stands for “subject-verb-object.” This means that the verb follows the subject, like in English. The verb is like the link between the subject and the other parts of the sentence.

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