Roysbel
Why say "samukata desu"? Shouldn't it be "samui deshita"? I was surprised and a bit confused when I learned that, to say "it was cold", you'd say "samukata desu". I was completey expecting it to be "samui deshita", since "deshita" means "was". What does the suffix "kata" even mean? Why is it that way and not using "deshita"?
Jul 10, 2014 3:35 AM
Answers · 3
5
It's because there are 2 types of adjectives in japanese i- adjectives and na- adjectives. Samui is an i-adjective, as it Ends with an i. So to form the past tense for i-adjectives you get rid of the last i and exchange it with katta, hence samukatta (desu). For na- adjectives like shizuka it is like you expected: shizuka deshita. I think you should look more closely at the past tense, because sadly reducing deshita to was is not that easily. I hope I was able to help.
July 10, 2014
It should be sumukatta, or samukatta desu. It was cold.
March 18, 2024
Yeah, what the original Answer said. One can say "Samui desu" in present tense, but one cannot say "Samui da". You could, but it would make you sound silly. Desu are added to i-adjectives only to make them sound polite. To a stranger you can say "Samui desu ne?" But to your bestfriend you'd just say "Samui ne?" since you don't have to add the desu to be polite. Now, with "Samukatta desu", you'd just say "Samukatta" in an informal situation.
July 10, 2014
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