Çeşitli İngilizce öğretmenleri arasından arama yapın...
James
"Oni ga aru?" or "Oni ga iru?"
More generally, I'm asking how the Japanese distinguish between living things (iru) and non-living things. The following is a list of nouns I'm unsure how the Japanese categorize (whether used with 'iru" or "aru"):
- Demons
- Ghosts
- Vampires
- Zombies
- Plants
- Feet
- Hands
- Viruses
- The universe
Anyone who can enlighten me on this would be greatly appreciated. Thanks!
23 Eki 2015 18:15
Yanıtlar · 2
2
I would write how we say in general. (In some poet or something, it may be changed by authors or speakers.)
- Demons いる
- Ghosts いる
- Vampires いる
- Zombies いる
- Plants ある
- Feet ある
- Hands ある
- Viruses いる and ある
- The universe ある
I hope this helps you.
23 Ekim 2015
this sounds like a strange method, but what i like to do when i am unsure about which word to use, i do a quick check in my google search bar, and usually the commonly asked quesiton/used phrase will appear.
here is what i mean:
http://imgur.com/OClU88Y
http://imgur.com/a3tthBV
that method helps me a lot when i feel like i need to make a quick judgment.
of course it's always best to refer to a native speaker of that language.
hope it helps, though!
23 Ekim 2015
Hâlâ cevap bulamadın mı?
Sorularını yaz ve ana dil konuşanlar sana yardım etsin!
James
Dil Becerileri
Çince (Mandarin), İngilizce, Fransızca, Hintçe, Japonca, İspanyolca
Öğrenim Dili
Çince (Mandarin), Fransızca, Hintçe, Japonca
Beğenebileceğin Makaleler

Same Word, Different Meaning: American, British, and South African English
16 beğeni · 12 Yorumlar

How to Sound Confident in English (Even When You’re Nervous)
15 beğeni · 12 Yorumlar

Marketing Vocabulary and Phrases for Business English Learners
12 beğeni · 6 Yorumlar
Daha fazla makale
