Page 3
- Affirmative (yes) and negative (no) sentences
You have already learned how to make a sentence with
desu (to be):
Watashi wa Lucy Kent desu. |
I am Lucy
Kent. |
But the negative form of desu is a little different
from the negative verbs you learned in Lesson 4. Let's take a look
at how to make the negative form of the sentence, "I am 13 years
old":
Jusansai desu. |
[I] am
13 years old. |
Jusansai dewa arimasen. |
[I] am
not 13 years old. |
Here are some more examples of sentences that use
desu, and their negative forms:
Kyo wa getsuyobi desu. |
Today is
Monday. |
Kayobi dewa arimasen. |
[It] is
not Tuesday. |
Ashita wa kinyobi desu ka. |
Is tomorrow
Friday? |
Iie, kayobi desu. |
No, [it]
is Tuesday. |
Kyo wa yasumi desu. |
Today is
a holiday. |
- Days and dates
Saying a date in Japanese is much like saying it
in English: You just put the day of the month after the month itself.
For instance, if today's date were November 11, you would say:
Kyo wa juichigatsu juichinichi desu. |
As you have already learned, it's easy to make a question
out of the sentence by adding a :
Kyo wa juichigatsu juichinichi desu ka? |
If you want to ask today's date, or what day of
the week it is, you use the word [nan,
the alternate form of the word "what"] and add either [nichi],
if you want to know the date, or [yobi]
if you would like to find the day of the week:
|
Kyo wa nannichi desu ka. |
|
Kyo wa nanyobi desu ka. |
- Asking people's ages
[sai] is a counter for age-you add it to a number to express how
many years old someone is. Like the words in 3-2, you can add "what"
to this word to ask how old a person is: [nansai].
Nansai desu ka. |
How old
are you? |
Lucy wa jusansai desu. |
Lucy is
13 years old. |
- When?
In Lesson 2 you learned how to ask someone's name:
Namae wa nan desu ka. Now let's take a look at how to ask someone's
birthday using the word [itsu],
"when":
Tanjobi wa itsu desu ka? |
When is
[your] birthday? |
Hachigatsu yokka desu. |
August
fourth. |
- time particle [ni]
[ni
] has a function similar to in, on, or at in English. If you do
something at a certain time, or on a certain day, you put [ni]
after the time or day to express that.
Nichiyobi ni tenisu o shimashita. |
I played
tennis on Sunday. |
|