Tips And Advice: Learning Japanese Language
There is so much that can be gained when you learn the Japanese language. You just have to consider that while Japan has the second largest economy in the world and has 120 million people, not many of them know how to speak English. Even if the Japanese have studied a mandatory 6 years of English classes in their public schools, there are still many of them who do not speak the international language of trade at all.
I am going to put here some very useful Japanese grammar that will hopefully benefit your Japanese language learning. These grammar principles are commonly used in everyday Japanese conversation. 10 principles are henceforth and coming below that may help you towards better Japanese. In the old days, when grammar-translation methods of teaching a foreign language were king, my JPPGG would have been called a substitution drills. I prefer to call this way of studying Japanese JPPGGi or Japanese Plug and Play Ghetto Grammar. The idea behind JPPGGi is while you are learning your vocabulary (nouns, verbs, adjectives, expressions, salutations, adverbs, particles etc.) the grammar won’t be holding you back. Once you learn a grammar principle you simply continue to plug in more and more learned vocabulary.
It’s a lot of fun too. I always use the word for, “to fart”, and it makes the learning of Japanese fun. I mean the word,”to go” is fun and all, but the verb to burp or fart makes sentences come alive and all the tediousness of second language learning disappears, like magic. Honest Joe! I’ll laugh and laugh about the new constructions I’ve made. But seriously, I would do whatever it takes to improve my Japanese skills and using JPPGGi in this un-orthodox way seems to have certainly helped me. I know boast a vocabulary of over 7000 words using my JPPGG method. So wherever you are at in your Japanese studies, just keep plugging and playing your way to a healthy and stout Japanese mouth. God luck!
Now below I am going to show you 10 Japanese grammar principles that all use a form of verbs commonly called base III verbs. If you aren’t familiar with the term, base III verbs are verbs in their pure dictionary form. Un-adulterated pure words in the form of an action word, or predicate, which are taken straight from any old Wa-Ei (Japanese to English) or Ei-Wa (English to Japanese) dictionary.
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December 6th, 2008 at 8:06 pm
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