Learn Japanese Vocabulary http://www.expressjapanese.com
Learn Japanese vocabulary using Japanese Kanji Flash from Express Japanese. Flash cards on your mobile phone / cell phone for you to study anytime, anywhere.
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Verb Conjugation Chart http://www.as.ua.edu......gation.htm
"Direct style" is a term made up by an American linguist. It is a useful term to refer to when discussing grammar. Words (nouns, verbs or adjectives) in direct style are words in dictionary form or any conjugation other than masu forms. You can think of "direct" style as speaking without masu forms, which is
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Advanced Verb Conjugation Chart http://www.as.ua.edu......oomaji.htm
Advanced and detailed verb conjugation chart.
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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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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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Intracacies of the Verb http://www.wvup.edu/......e_verb.htm
Note A: Students should learn the formal forms first since those are the ones they will use most, especially with strangers and people they meet for the first time. After the formal forms are mastered, the informal forms can be learned. Those forms are used with good friends.
Note B: Each form can refer to I, you, he, she, we, they. The indicative in Japanese means the present and future forms.
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te aru / te oku http://homepage3.nif......on-e33.htm
The difference in the troublesome pair of tearu and teoku explained.
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Hou ga ii http://homepage3.nif......on-e38.htm
Hou ga ii explained in detail with several examples.
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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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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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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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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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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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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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