From my textbook: "I-adjectives change their forms depending on the tense or whether they are affirmative or negative. In the present affirmative, however, there is no change of form, and the i-adjective is followed by desu. Unlike the copula desu "to be", the desu used with i-adjectives does not conjugate."
(Side note: Mandarin does not use copula for adjectives, only nouns. This is a significant difference between Chinese and Japanese and in this case, the Japanese way actually makes more sense to an English speaker. Not that Chinese and Japanese are the same at all, except for their stolen writing systems. But still.)
My words:
takai - expensive
yasui - inexpensive
ii/yoi - good/okay/nice/fine
warui - bad
ookii - big
chiisai - small
Sentence examples:
Takai desu. - It is expensive.
Ookii desu. - It is big.
Hooray simplicity! At least for now...
Also, I have finally learned all of the hiragana from chapter 2 of my textbook! Hooray! The last holdouts were ぬ (nu) ね (ne) の (no).
の is really easy because it's absolutely EVERYWHERE (and marks possessive!), but ね and ぬ are had to draw and remember. Again with the feeling like a child who doesn't yet know how to form letters.... I kind of wish I had one of those books with the dotted lines so you can get the spacing right and then maybe some hiragana to trace over before I move on to writing them myself...
25 unique hiragana now live in my brain!
No comments:
Post a Comment