Tuesday, December 7, 2010

Japanese Verbs


Japanese Verbs
When it comes to learning the Japanese Verbs, there is good news, unlike English or most European language, Japanese verb conjugation is the same for all subjects, first person ("I", "we"), second person ("thou", "you") and third person ("he/she/it" and "they"), singular and plural. The plain form of all verbs ends in u. There are very few irregular verbs, but if you master the regular verbs and how to use them, then you would have taken care of 98% of the verbs use.

Japanese Present Tense
More good news is that the present and the future are the same in Japanese. To understand that better we will take examples in English, in English sometimes you can refer to the future using the present tense, for example a person might say: I'm taking the kids with me next time, even though the present tense was used here, it still refer to the future, usually it's understood by context or using words refering to the future "next time", "tomorrow"... The same goes with the Japanese future tense. For example:
(私は)買い物をする (watashi wa) kaimono wo suru: "(I) shop", or "(I) will shop". (私は)明日 勉強する (watashi wa) ashita benkyou suru: "Tomorrow, (I) will study". (Japanese pronouns usually are omitted when it is clear about whom the speaker is talking.) (check the list of verbs below)

Japanese Past Tense
The easiness of the Japanese Verbs doesn't stop with the present and future tense. Even the past tense is very easy to conjugate. The past tense is very similar in conjugation to the "te" form. Most of the past tenses are formed by replacing "te" with "ta". Examine the table below:

As you can see, the table above shows the Japanese verbs in the raw format and then when it's in the past tense very straight forward method. There are some irregular forms but they're not too many, here are some examples:
する suru (do) becomes した shita.
来る kuru (come) becomes 来た kita.
行く iku (go) becomes 行った itta.

Japanese Verbs in the Negative Form
To use the negative with verbs it's very easy as well. The basic pattern is that "u" becomes "anai", for example: 焼く yaku (to burn) becomes 焼かない yakanai (not to burn). 読む yomu (to read) becomes 読まない yomanai (not to read), easy right?

Japanese Verb List
One of the characteristics of the Japanese language is that the verb generally comes at the end of the sentence. Japanese has two types of regular verbs:
consonant stem, godan katsuyō (五段活用?), Group I, or u verbs.
Vowel stem, ichidan katsuyō (一段活用?), Group II, or ru verbs.
Here is a list of verbs ending in "eru" which are Group 1 Verbs:

This is a list of verbs ending in "iru" which are Group 1 Verbs


This is a list of the most commonly used verbs:



Wish Someone Something

    Ganbatte ne!
Good luck!

Tanjyoubi omedetou gozaimasu!
Happy birthday!

Akemashite omedetou gozaimasu.
Happy new year!

Merii Kurisumasu! 
Merry Christmas!

Omedetou! 
Congratulations!

(noun, etc) wo tanoshinde kudasai.
Enjoy! (for meals...)

Ituka nihon wo otozure tai.
I'd like to visit Japan one day

John ni yoroshiku to tsutaete kudasai.
Say hi to John for me

Odaiji ni.
Bless you (when sneezing)

Oyasumi nasai.
Good night and sweet dreams!

How to Introduce Yourself

Anata wa eigo/nihongo wo hanashimasu ka?
Do you speak (English/ Japanese)?

Sukoshi dake.  
Just a little.

Namae wa nandesu ka? 
What's your name?

Watashi no namae wa …..
My name is ...

“-san” is adequate for all.
Mr.../ Mrs.…/ Miss…

Hajimemashite! or Oai dekite ureshii desu. 
Nice to meet you!

Anata wa totemo shinsetsu desu.
You're very kind!

Doko no shusshin desu ka?
Where are you from?

Amerika/Nihon kara desu
I'm from (the U.S/ Japan)

Watashi wa Amerika jin desu. 
I'm (American)

Doko ni sun de imasu ka?
Where do you live?

Watashi wa amerika / nihon ni sundeimasu.
I live in (the U.S/ Japan)

Kokowa suki ni narimashita ka?
Did you like it here?

Nihon ha subarashii kuni desu. 
Japan is a wonderful country

Osigoto wa nandesu ka?
What do you do for a living?

Osigoto wa nandesu ka? 
I work as a (translator/ businessman)

Watashi wa nihongo ga suki desu.
I like Japanese

I will be right back!
I've been learning Japanese for 1 month

Sorewa iidesu ne.
Oh! That's good!

Toshi wa ikutsu desu ka?  
How old are you?

Watshi wa (20, 30) sai desu.
I'm (twenty, thirty...) years old.

Ikanakutewa narimasen.  
I have to go

Sugu modori masu. 
I will be right back!

Asking for Help and Directions

Mayotte shimai mashita.
I'm lost

Otetsudai shimashouka?
Can I help you?

Tetsudatte kuremasuka?
Can you help me?

(Toire/yakkyoku) wa doko desuka?
Where is the (bathroom/ pharmacy)?

Massugu itte kudasai. Soshite, hidari 
migi ni magatte kudasai
Go straight! then turn left/ right!

John wo sagashite imasu.
I'm looking for john.

    Chotto matte kudasai. 
One moment please!
Hold on please! (phone)

Kore wa ikura desuka? 
How much is this?

Sumimasen!  
Excuse me ...! (to ask for something)
Excuse me! ( to pass by)

Watashi to issho ni kite kudasai.
Come with me!

Links

http://www.linguanaut.com/english_japanese.htm

http://www.wa-pedia.com/language/japanese_common_phrases.shtml

http://www.dummies.com/how-to/content/ten-favorite-japanese-expressions.html 

http://www.learn-hiragana-katakana.com/japanese-phrases/

http://everything2.com/title/Japanese+expressions 

New Japanese


Domesuchikku baiorensu
domestic violence

Doraggu
drugs

Reipu
rape

Gaaden sumoka
garden smoker

Jenda gappu
gender gap

Risutora kaiko
layoffs or dismissal due to corporate restructuring

Nyuu takkusu
new tax

Sutohkingu
stalking

kimoi
unpleasant or disagreeable

muzui
difficult

jikochu
self-absorbed to an annoying degree

ga
moths

mayoraa
majonaise

kechap-aa
ketchup

gehmaa
gamer

meru tomo

mail friend

meruado
mail adress

Parting


Sayounara
goodbye

O-tsukare sama desu
Goodbye [after work]

O-yasumi nasai
Goodnight

At Home


Tadaima!.
I'm home!.

O-kaeri nasai
Welcome home!.

Itte kimasu
I'm off now

Itte rasshai
Ok. See you later

Eating


Itadakimasu
said before eating

Go-chisou sama deshita
said after eating

O-kanjou kudasai
check, please

Shopping


Sumimasen
excuse me

Kore wa ikura desu ka
how much is this?.

Kore kudasai
I'll take this, please

Motto yasui no was arimasu ka
Do you have a cheaper one?.

Arigatou gozimasu
Thank you very much

Sore wa nan desu ka?.
What is that?.

Takai, desu ne?.
Expensive, isn't it!.

Kekko desu
No, thank you
I'm fine, thank you

Greetings I


O-hayou gozaimasu
good morning

konnichi wa
hello

konban wa
good evening

yaa
hei

Youkoso irasshai mashita.
Welcome! (to greet someone)

How are you?
Ogenki desuka?

I'm fine, thanks!
Watashi wa genki desu. Arigato!

And you?
Anatawa?

Genki desu. / maa-maa desu.
Good/ So-So.

Thank you (very much)!
Arigatou!

Dou itashi mashite.
You're welcome! (for "thank you")

Samishi katta desu.
I missed you so much!

Saikin dou desuka?
What's new?

Kawari nai desu.
Nothing much

Oyasumi nasai.
Good night!

Mata atode aimashou!
See you later!

Sayonara!
Good bye!

General

hai, ee, un
yes

iie
no

chigau
wrong

tadashii
correct

ikura
how much?.

ikutsu
how many?.

koko
here

soko, asoko
there

itsu
when?.

dare
who?.

nani
what?.

migi
right

hidari
left

ue
up

shita
down

naka
in, inside

soto
outside

mae
in front of

ushiro
behind

aida
between

muko
opposite

toi
far

kyo
today

kino
yesterday

ototoi
2 days ago

hi, nichi
day

shu, shukan
week

tsuki, getsu
month

toshi, nen
year

jikan
hour

fun, pun
minute

Places I


byou-in
hospital

kouban
police box

yubinkyoku
post office

toshokan
library

ginkou
bank

kuukou
airport

eki
station

kouen
park

ie
house

mise
shop

Colors I


akai
red

aoi
blue

kuroi
black

shiroi
white

kiiroi
yellow

midori
green

cha-iro
brown

hai-iro
gray

murasaki
purple

orenji-iro
orange

Food & Drink I


gohan
cooked rice

miso shiru
miso soup

tsukemono
pickles

tei-shoku
lunch set

bento
lunch box

o-cha
green tea

kohii
coffee

gyunyu
milk

o-sake
alcohol

mizu
water

Numbers Over 10

11
ju-ichi

12
ju-ni

13
ju-san

20
ni-ju

40
yon-ju

55
go-ju-go

100
hyaku

300
san-bayuku

1,000
sen

10,000
man

Examples
go-gatsu ju-san nichi = May 13th
hyaku-man en = 1 million yen

Numbers Without counters


 1
ichi 
hitotsu

ni 
futatsu

 3
san 
mittsu

 4
shi,  
yon 
yottsu

go 
itsutsu
 
roku 
mutsu

 7
shichi,  
nana 
nanatsu

 8
hachi
 yatsu

 9
kyu 
kokonotsu
 
10 
ju 
to

Examples:
ichi-nin mae = serving for one person
shichi-nin no samurai = The Seven Samurai