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Konstantin
How would I refer to something that belongs to me?
How do you say "my" in Japanese?
Ex: my book...
2012年6月21日 02:32
回答 · 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.)
2012年6月21日
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!
2012年6月25日
"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.
2012年6月21日
thank you guys :)
2012年6月21日
Watashi no hon.
2012年6月21日
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Konstantin
语言技能
英语, 日语, 俄语, 西班牙语
学习语言
日语, 西班牙语
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