Cerca tra vari insegnanti di Inglese...
Hairi
"seru" or saseru" are verbs that mean "let "have" & "make" how can you tell the difference?
19 ago 2010 21:56
Risposte · 5
1
They both change the verb into "let someone do" form.
There is no difference in the meanings. It's just grammar matter.
"Saseru" can be used attached to other verb or as a stand alone verb (as "suru" can).
"Seru" should be always attached to other verb.
kaku(write) - kakaseru (let someone write)
taberu(eat) - tabesaseru(let someone eat)
suru (do) - saseru (let someone do)
benkyo suru (study) - benkyo saseru (let someone study)
@bill tong
"can do" is "dekiru" =)
20 agosto 2010
1
seru Probably I think that it is a mistake in writing.
suru I think that I wanted to write it in this way.
suru suru is words to use when the person does something voluntarily.
saseru
saseru is words to use when a person is made to do something by a person forcibly.
20 agosto 2010
1
Class 1 verb plus せる Class 2 verb plusさせる
たとえば:
1田中さんにレボートを書かせます 2部長は田中さんを出張させます
20 agosto 2010
1
i think seru means " can do "..
20 agosto 2010
You tell the difference from the context.
19 agosto 2010
Non hai ancora trovato le tue risposte?
Scrivi le tue domande e lascia che i madrelingua ti aiutino!
Hairi
Competenze linguistiche
Cinese (mandarino), Inglese, Giapponese
Lingua di apprendimento
Cinese (mandarino), Giapponese
Altri articoli che potrebbero piacerti

Same Word, Different Meaning: American, British, and South African English
17 consensi · 14 Commenti

How to Sound Confident in English (Even When You’re Nervous)
15 consensi · 12 Commenti

Marketing Vocabulary and Phrases for Business English Learners
12 consensi · 6 Commenti
Altri articoli
