Search from various English teachers...
Vitor Silvério de Souza
How to use: "けど", "でも" and "~が、" ?
Hello, I only knew the "でも" to write "but", but a guy corrected a text that I wrote, saying that I should to use "~が、" in some locations in a continuous phrases(I don't know if I'm saying it correctly xD), and today I see in a Anime a guy saying "けど".
Then it is my question: How and where I should to use theses?
Sep 26, 2011 10:57 PM
Answers · 5
4
There are many Japanese which mean 'but'.
For example, けど、が、でも、しかし、ところが...
(cf. http://www.weblio.jp/parts-of-speech/%E6%8E%A5%E7%B6%9A%E8%A9%9E(%E9%80%86%E6%8E%A5)_1)
About your question,
●「が」 means 'but', we use to connect two sentences.
明日は雨だが、ピクニックにいく。
(It will rain tomorrow, but we will go to a picnic)
●「しかし」 also means 'but', we use it the beginning of sentence.
明日は雨だ。しかし、ピクニックに行く。
(It will rain tomorrow. But we will go to a picnic)
●「けど」 is slang, the word comes from 「けれど」
and we can use 「けれど」 as the same meaning as が and しかし
明日は雨だけれど、ピクニックに行く。
明日は雨だ。けれど、ピクニックに行く。
●「でも」 means 'even if' as Mr.Eliot said.
明日は雨でも、ピクニックに行く。
(Even if it rains tomorrow, we will go to a picnic.)
September 27, 2011
けど is informal for が, and means the same thing.
でも = but, but it carries the nuance of "even if".
が is the correct word for transitioning clauses that have a mild "but" relationship.
E.g: He likes cats,(but) she likes dogs.
September 26, 2011
Still haven’t found your answers?
Write down your questions and let the native speakers help you!
Vitor Silvério de Souza
Language Skills
English, Japanese, Portuguese, Spanish
Learning Language
Japanese
Articles You May Also Like

Same Word, Different Meaning: American, British, and South African English
10 likes · 7 Comments

How to Sound Confident in English (Even When You’re Nervous)
12 likes · 9 Comments

Marketing Vocabulary and Phrases for Business English Learners
9 likes · 2 Comments
More articles