Çeşitli İngilizce öğretmenleri arasından arama yapın...
Konstantin
How would I refer to something that belongs to me?
How do you say "my" in Japanese?
Ex: my book...
21 Haz 2012 02:32
Yanıtlar · 6
1
Ownership is expressed by the particle no (の). But that between the possesor and possesee.
Ie: my book= watashi no hon.
No is also used to narrow down locations.
Ie: under the table=teeburu no shita. (Not for left and right. That is ni. Migi ni, hidari ni, ect.)
21 Haziran 2012
Hi there!
watashi-no(polite and both female and male can use this in daily concersation. especially business occasion you should use watashi)
boku-no( usually for boy)
ore-no(for man, a little rough though really common for man)
funny one
sessha-no(quite old one)
soregashi-no(quite old one, too)
There are several "my" in Japanese.
But common one for foreigner is watashi-no
Keep it up your great job!
25 Haziran 2012
"Watashi-no + a noun"="my ~~". "Watashi" means "I", and "no" is the genitive case particle. "Watashi-no" is the most general word for "my", which can be used gender-neutrally, both in the written and the spoken style, while "boku-no"/"ore-no" sound masculine and are normally used by guys, more often in a daily conversation.
21 Haziran 2012
thank you guys :)
21 Haziran 2012
Watashi no hon.
21 Haziran 2012
Hâlâ cevap bulamadın mı?
Sorularını yaz ve ana dil konuşanlar sana yardım etsin!
Konstantin
Dil Becerileri
İngilizce, Japonca, Rusça, İspanyolca
Öğrenim Dili
Japonca, İspanyolca
Beğenebileceğin Makaleler

How to Ask for a Raise or Promotion in English
10 beğeni · 8 Yorumlar

The Key to Learning a Language Faster
35 beğeni · 8 Yorumlar

Why "General English" is Failing Your Career (An Engineer’s Perspective)
30 beğeni · 12 Yorumlar
Daha fazla makale
