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Nathan R
Will someone help me with Japanese verb endings?
Okay so I really don't understand the Japanese verbs. I understand arimasu and arimasen and verbs like it to negate, but what about verbs ending in -shou or -shite or -shita? Will someone explain how to properly conjugate verbs? (deshou as opposed to desu confuses me most of all)
2 de mai de 2013 20:01
Respostas · 3
3
You have three choices:
1. Pay someone to teach you this stuff. http://www.italki.com/teachers/professional
2. Study from a book or website.
3. Find a language partner. http://www.italki.com/partners
3 de maio de 2013
1
~して would be the te-form for all the verbs that end in ~す, such as はなす、わたす、うつす, etc. The te-form has a good bunch of uses, so you need to provide further context.
I suggest you to learn from these two websites:
http://dev.jgram.org/pages/viewList.php?lv=4
http://www.guidetojapanese.org/learn/grammar
3 de maio de 2013
1
I can say that,
"-shita" means always past and its basic form is "desu" and "masu".
*私はパンを食べました。= watashi ha pan wo tabe mashita.= I ate bread.
*私は写真を見ました。= watashi ha shashin wo mi mashita.= I saw the picture.
*あれは犬でした。= are ha inu deshita.= That was a dog.
and "shou"
Its basic form is "desu" or "masu" + "u (auxiliary verb and guess)".
*食べましょう。= tabe mashou.= Let's eat.
*行きましょう。= iki mashou.= Let's go.
*明日は晴れるでしょう。= ashita ha hareru deshou.= It would(will) be sunny tomorrow.
sorry, about "shite", I need some examples.
3 de maio de 2013
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Nathan R
Habilidades linguísticas
Inglês, Alemão, Japonês, Espanhol
Idioma de aprendizado
Alemão, Japonês, Espanhol
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