Great Verb Explanation http://www.griffith.......verbs.html
Japanese verbs are categorised in three groups according to their conjugation styles. They are 5(ご) んどうし (u-verb) , 1(いち) ん どうし (ru-verb) and Irregular verbs.
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Great List of Grammar Structures http://www.nafai.org......jpphrases/
3.8 Easy/difficult, advantageous, substantial
3.9 Start and finish doing, completion
3.10 Movement (te kuru, te iku)
3.11 From now on, begin to (te iku, te kuru)
3.15 Facts, things generally accepted as
4 Conjunctional phrases
4.1 Reason and cause
4.2 In order to, for, to, so that
4.4 Even, even though, although
4.5 Limiting (Without, because not, not...but, but, instead of)
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Grammatical Terms Explained http://www2.hawaii.e......frame.html
Topic is a key concept in understanding Japanese. Roughly speaking, the topic of a sentence is what the sentence is about. For example, in (a), the topic is Hanako and the rest of the sentence provides information about Hanako.
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Grammar Syllabus http://pweb.sophia.a......rammar.htm
Be able to handle the following expressions (equivalent to Level 4 of the Japanese Language Proficiency Test?JLPT*) Basic structure, and the necessary parts of speech.
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Grammar Resources http://www.gu.edu.au......_home.html
School of Languages and Linguistics with several resources available.
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Grammar in Use http://www.amazon.co......e&n=283155
Amazon.com: Grammar in Use Japanese Edition : Self-study Reference and Practice for Students of English (Grammar in Use): Books: Raymond Murphy,William R. Smalzer,Izumi Walker by Raymond Murphy,William R. Smalzer,Izumi Walker
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Grammar Guide http://www.gu.edu.au......frame.html
School of Languages and Linguistics
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Georgia's Irasshai TV Show http://66.110.202.42......homepg.htm
With a total of 136 award-winning, highly-interactive video lessons, a tailor-made textbook, native-speaking Japanese telephone teachers, a state-of-the-art assessment system, and a lively website, Irasshai is designed to meet the needs of high school or college students wanting for-credit Japanese courses as well as the needs of businessmen and women who desire to acquire language and culture skills in Japanese.
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Games to Learn Japanese http://www.southwold......panese.htm
Games for learning Japanese. They are very much good.
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Emotion Markers http://www.sf.airnet......otion.html
Japanese has several communication-oriented particles to clarify a speaker's intention. Let's call them emotion markers here. You have learned two other kinds of particles: case markers (postpositions), such as
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Documents about Japanese http://www.jpf.org.u......sicws.html
Documents for teaching Japanese, but we can use them to learn.
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Deshou - Probably http://www.as.ua.edu......ammar6.htm
Deshou, particles, positions, comparative.
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Cornell Univ Japanese Lessons http://lrc.cornell.edu/japanese/
Cornell University, Department of Asian Studies, Japanese Program, Kawasaki Japanese Learning Materials
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Copula http://www.sf.airnet......opula.html
A copula is a special word that combines the subject of a sentence and its description. Copulas are often irregular in many languages. The English word be is a copula. It is the verb whose inflection is most irregular in English.
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Conversation Practice http://nihongo.anthonet.com/
Japanese Language, japanese, japanese, Kanji, Hiragana, Katagana, Japan Tour Guide, Ginza, Tokyo, Osaka, Conversation, Technical Words
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Colloquial Japanese http://www.fredshack......alabs.html
A long list of colloquial Japanese and grammar terms.
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Classes & Lessons http://www.japonin.c......tbooks.php
Classes at JOI include FlexLessons (small-group lessons) and private lessons.
Instruction is available at all levels, from introductory to advanced.
Coordinated private lessons from more than one native Japanese teacher is available.
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Causative, Passive Verb Forms http://www.yookoso.c......&pagenum=1
Yookoso! is a portal for those who study Japanese language (Nihongo) and writing (Kanji) and those who want to travel to Japan or learn more about Japanese culture, life, music (JPOP) and more
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Case and Preposition http://www.sf.airnet....../case.html
Cases are markers of the grammatical roles of nouns. In most European languages, inflection of articles, adjectives, and nouns is used to show cases. English pronouns have three cases:
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Breen's Trans-Intrans Chart http://www.csse.mona......_list.html
As usual, a very thorough chart showing transitive and intransitive verb pairs. Possibly around 100 pairs with meanings and readings.
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