多彩な 英語 講師陣から検索…
Lars
What is the difference between tomo, tomodachi and yūjin ... ... and what is correct and what is incorrect (and why) and what is the difference in meaning: yōsei no tomo yōsei no tomodachi yōsei no yūjin yōsei yūjin
2013年2月15日 22:22
回答 · 8
I'm wondering if yōsei means someone's name or "fairly tail", but it's not a main topic in thi situation^^ yōsei no tomo... correct yōsei no tomodachi...correct yōsei no yūjin...correct yōsei yūjin...wrong When you say "a friend of someone", you can say normaly " someone no tomodachi " in Japanese. For example, "I'm a friend of Tom" means "私はトムさんの友達です (Watashi ha Tom-san no tomodachi desu)” "tomodachi" is the most common word which means friend. "tomo" and "yujin" also mean friend. And I think "yujin" is more formal than "Tomodachi". If I introduce myself to elder people, I'll say "Watashi ha Tom-san no yujin desu". About "tomo", we rarely use this word as a meaning of friend. Hope this will help ;)
2013年2月16日
You can use "tomodachi" in any case. "yujin" can be used for the relationship over teenage. I cant understand what "yosei" means exactly. When it means "positive" or "good", "yoi tomodachi" is most useful.
2013年2月16日
まだあなたの答えが見つかりませんか?
質問を書き留めて、ネイティブスピーカーに手伝ってもらいましょう!