JAPANESE GRAMMAR



The Japanese language, unlike other languages, is basically a completely unknown language for most people. Japanese is not a member of the Indio-European family, and of course it is not related to the English language, and in contrast, many people think that Japanese is a completely different language from Chinese, even though Japanese has borrowed a large vocabulary from the Chinese language.

As a result of this linguistic difference, the Japanese grammar is different from the grammar of most languages. This difference is not related to forms and endings; there is, literally, a new way to explain things. If you want to learn Japanese, you should suspend almost everything that you have learned about the English grammar, or the grammar of any other language that you’ve learn. You have to understand that Japanese grammar is completely different.

However, the Japanese grammar can be simpler than English grammar. It can be extremely simple to express basic ideas, but at the same time, it can be complicated to express more elaborated ideas. Another important feature about the Japanese language is the fact that it is regular in all its grammatical forms; it has only a few exceptions which you can count with your fingers.

Japanese Grammar

Japanese Grammar

Japanese Adjectives
Japanese Adverbs
Japanese Articles
Auxiliary Verb
Japanese Conjugation
Japanese Conjunction
Demonstrative Adjective
Demonstrative Pronoun
Japanese Exclamation
Japanese Gerund
Japanese Interjection
Japanese Intonation
Japanese Nouns
Japanese Onomatopoeia
Possessive Adjective
Japanese Prepositions
Japanese Pronouns
Japanese Sentence
Japanese Subjunctive
Subordinating conjunction
Japanese Tenses
Japanese Verbs



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