Watashi no daigaku
Watashi wa gakuse desu.
→ Watashi wa gakuse
i desu.
Greensboro, North Carolina de benkyoshimasu.
→ North Carolina no Greensboro de benkyou
shiteimasu.
*In Japanese, we say bigger things first, for example, in English "Greensboro, North Carolina, USA," but in Japanese "USA (America), North Carolina no Greensboro."
*suru/shimasu = when you are going to do something soon or in the future
*shiteiru/shiteimasu = when you are already doing something
*の(no) = of
Watashi no daigaku konomimasu.
→ Watashi wa jibun no daigaku ga sukidesu.
*じぶんの (jibun no) = my
(You can also say "watashi no" for "my," but you have "watashi" right in front of "wa" and would have to say "watashi" twice in that case (which is not a mistake at all, but) so I thought it would sound better or smooth to say "jibun no" there.)
*suki sounds better for "like" I think.
Watashi no daigaku gakuse ga takusan imasu.
→ Watashi no daigaku niwa(ha) gakuse
i ga takusan imasu.
*には (niwa/ha) = at
Watashi no kyoju ii shinsetsuna desu.
→ Watashi no kyojyu (or sensei) wa, ii hito de, shinsetsu desu.
*We say "~ (someone's name) wa ii hito da/desu" for "~ is nice."
*shinsetsu = adjective predicate
*shinsetsuna is always followed by a noun. For example, "shinsetsuna hito" = "kind person."
Watashi wa kiezai benkyoshimasu.
→ Watashi wa k
eizai o(wo) benkyou
shiteimasu.
*suru/shimasu = when you are going to do something soon or in the future
*shiteiru/shiteimasu = when you are already doing something
Kiezaiwa omoshiroi desu, dakedo kiezai tsumaranai tokidoki desu.
→ K
eizai wa omoshiroi desu, dakedo tokidoki tsumaranai desu.
*tokidoki comes before verbs/adjectives.
1) What is the Japanese equivalent of "it"?
it = それ (sore)
2) How would one say "diverse" in Japanese?
たよう(な) (tayou (na)), さまざま(な) (samazama (na))
*without な = adjective predicate
3) How would you say "I am a junior" (as in freshman, sophomore, JUNIOR, senior)
わたしはだいがく3ねんせいです (watashi wa daigaku 3nensei desu)
freshman = 1nensei
sophomore = 2nensei
senior = 4nensei
sorry, ↑ may be unnecessary.
4) What is the Japanese verb that means "attend"?
attend
= さんかする (sanka suru) or いく (iku) *when you attend a meeting, event, etc.
= しゅっせきする (shusseki suru) *when you attend a class