Conjugation Explained http://www.epochryph......verbs.html
Notes on the conjugation and use of Japanese verbs.
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Conjugation Tables http://www.geom.uiuc......dings.html
To use the tables, first determine the class and radical of the word in question. If the dictionary form of a verb ends in -eru or -iru, it is a class-I verb (see Note 0 for exceptions), and its radical
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501 Verbs http://www.amazon.co......oding=utf8
The most commonly used Japanese verbs are presented with English translations, one to a page, completely conjugated, and transliterated into the Roman alphabet. A special section fully explains all details of Japanese pronunciation. For quick and easy reference, there is an alphabetical English-to-Japanese verb index, as well as a second index that lists Japanese verbs by their gerund form. New in this edition are hundreds of examples of verbs used in sentences, complete with English translation.
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Step 3 Verbs http://www.nona.dti.......tep03.html
Japanese verbs have many conjugated forms. There are some rules of the conjugation. Whenever I see the conjugation chart, I wonder if non-Japanese people understand and use them. Because It's very difficult for even Japanese.
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Uniformed Regular Conjugation http://homepage3.nif......niform.htm
In this article, I introduce "Uniformed Regular Verbal Conjugation of Japanese". This rule intend to regulate most of Japanese verbs. After knowing this rule, All Japanese learners and Japanese teachers can...
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Conjugation Builder http://homepage3.nif....../index.htm
Enter a dictionary form verb and this script will conjugate it into all possible forms.
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Conjugation Summary http://sa_yoshi.at.i......short.html
(1) る-verbs:
(2) う-verbs:
(3) irregular verbs:
2. How to tell the type of a verb from its dictionary form
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U- Conjugations http://sa_yoshi.at.i......ation.html
Quick u- conjugation chart summary.
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Yookoso Portal http://www.yookoso.com/
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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Giving and Receiving http://learnjapanese......php?id=316
The standard way to say that you are giving something to someone in Japanese is to use the verb 上げる(あげる). The sentence structure is fairly easy to remember:
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Noni - In spite of http://learnjapanese......php?id=169
in spite of, verb, i & na adj short form + noni, noun + na noni, for example....
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Okayama Verb Guide http://www.okayama-u......index.html
Choose the right answer and click on the number button.
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Quiz Lessons http://www.quia.com/......anese.html
Class Page for GCSE Japanese Class
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Fundamentals http://www.geocities....../japanese/
The purpose of this course is to give the student a fundamental understanding of the Japanese language and to be able to converse on a limited level with someone in the Japanese language. There is no prerequisite for this course.
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AJALT Learning Supplements http://www.ajalt.org/sfyj/
Numbers, Counters, Adjectives, Verbs, Money, Time
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JLPT 3 Verbs Quiz http://www.spurrymos......_2002.html
Randomly displays 6 quiz questions then grades you when youo click finish. Take the test several times and each time you'll get new questions.
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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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Japanese is Possible http://maktos.jimmyseal.net/jip.html
Your home for Japanese language, culture, video games, and anime.
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Learning Japanese Blog http://www.ideogramme.ca/japan/
A wonderfully clever blog about learning Japanese. As grammar is learned the author explains why it was confusing and how it was resolved. Much better than the standard textbook style method.
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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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