10:20 that’s daunting to look at 🤣 I’m glad I can finally piece together these conjugation combos! Ty sensei
@EricsNihongoLessons-EnglishКүн бұрын
いいえ、どういたしまして。頑張ってください。;)
@UNEWS_ANIMATIONS6 күн бұрын
Amazing, great lesson. Thanks
@EricsNihongoLessons-English6 күн бұрын
いいえ、どういたしまして。
@janusmcgee89096 күн бұрын
I’ve always been curious about this nuance when it came to verbs. Thank you for the clarification sensei 🔥
@EricsNihongoLessons-English6 күн бұрын
いいえ、どういたしまして。;)
@groomistagroomy54378 күн бұрын
Very nice explaination 🙌
@EricsNihongoLessons-English8 күн бұрын
どうもありがとう!
@janusmcgee890912 күн бұрын
その男は顔は化け物の顔をしている 😂😂😂
@malaikaj208613 күн бұрын
Shouldn't 'to buy' be 'Kaimasu'? One of the examples translate Aimasu (to meet) as 'to buy'
@EricsNihongoLessons-English13 күн бұрын
Yes, "kaimasu" is buy and "aimasu" means meet. That was a typo. どうもありがとう!
@janusmcgee890913 күн бұрын
So is ような basically same as ように, just depends on the sentence?
@EricsNihongoLessons-English13 күн бұрын
Same function in the sense that they are connectors, but here is the key difference: ような = grammatically a na-adjective, to be followed by a noun. ように = grammatically an adverb, to describe a verb.
@janusmcgee890914 күн бұрын
I watched this over 5 months ago after finding it in Japanese news I couldn’t understand. I still didn’t understand it properly, then I went through your entire playlist. Happy to say I finally understand it and my Japanese has improved exponentially thanks to your channels. 🙂
@EricsNihongoLessons-English14 күн бұрын
お言葉どうもありがとう。I'm glad that my videos have helped you in your study of the Japanese language! Any questions, don't hesitate to ask! 頑張れ!
@janusmcgee890918 күн бұрын
These advance lessons melt my brain. I still appreciate the uploads! Thank you!
@EricsNihongoLessons-English18 күн бұрын
いいえ、どういたしまして。「という」is quotation ("is called") and I explain about it in detail in Lesson 105: kzbin.info/www/bejne/fquUfZWhfbaqo9U Any questions, just let me know. ;) 頑張ってください。
@Diha-in-Wonderland18 күн бұрын
kore wa totemo yakunitachimashita. Arigatougozaimasu.
What would happen if I said 'Ichiyoubi, niyoubi, sanyoubi' instead of the special names? -Would Japanese speakers know what I am referring to?
@EricsNihongoLessons-EnglishАй бұрын
Unfortunately no, they would not know what you're talking about. ;)
@zullyhollyАй бұрын
I'll come back to this video once I decided to learn write the kanas 😂
@EricsNihongoLessons-EnglishАй бұрын
はい、頑張ってください!;)
@rajansapkota7807Ай бұрын
❤
@furanchizuАй бұрын
Wow, thank you very much! Such underrated content
@EricsNihongoLessons-EnglishАй бұрын
どうもありがとう。
@mantaray79Ай бұрын
Is there another way to know where to put o or go for someone who doesn't know any chinese?
@EricsNihongoLessons-EnglishАй бұрын
Now that is a bit tricky because there are so many exceptions to the rule. The general rule is if it is a Japanese word (i.e., one kanji pronounced in more than 2 syllables), then it is "o", but if it is Chinese pronunciation (i.e., one kanji pronounced as 1 or 2 syllables only), then it is "go." My advice is to simply get exposed constantly. Or keep on repeating this video until the words sound like second nature to you.
@LyrachiАй бұрын
Recently discovered this channel and starting all the lessons from the beginning, thank you so much
@EricsNihongoLessons-EnglishАй бұрын
いいえ、どういたしまして。質問があったら、いつでも聞いてください。頑張ってね!Good luck on your journey! Should you have a question, feel free to ask! ;)
@MohanRaj-xx1ceАй бұрын
Hi Sensei Can I Learn JLPT N4 Level Through Your Videos?
@EricsNihongoLessons-EnglishАй бұрын
Absolutely, when it comes to the grammar concepts. However, you need to use other resources to build up vocabulary, especially nouns.
@MohanRaj-xx1ceАй бұрын
ありがとうごさいます 😊 I'm Going To Attend The JLPT N4 Exam Coming July. Your Videos Are Very Helpful🤗@@EricsNihongoLessons-English
@EricsNihongoLessons-EnglishАй бұрын
@@MohanRaj-xx1ce いいえ、どういたしまして。I hope you pass your exam! がんばってください! ;)
@EricsNihongoLessons-EnglishАй бұрын
@@MohanRaj-xx1ce お言葉どうもありがとう。JLPTN4、頑張ってください!
@elenaekanathapetrova2282Ай бұрын
excuse me, I didn't found part 1 for this verb
@EricsNihongoLessons-EnglishАй бұрын
This is the whole playlist, which is good to bookmark, as you can see all the videos in chronological order. 頑張ってください。 kzbin.info/door/irVP3vW7qKEyPtkARHWk0w
@EricsNihongoLessons-EnglishАй бұрын
Thanks for asking about it. It was set to private but I now set it to public. ;)
@elenaekanathapetrova2282Ай бұрын
cool. ありがとうございました
@EricsNihongoLessons-EnglishАй бұрын
いいえ、どういたしまして。
@elenaekanathapetrova2282Ай бұрын
I really appreciate this summary. I tried to find down something like this a while ago. which levels it is covering? I mean which level is all those hundred structures
@EricsNihongoLessons-EnglishАй бұрын
お言葉どうもありがとう。Do you mean the JLPT levels? They cover levels 2 to 5.
Omg🔥 One Of The Best Japanese Teaching Video I Have Ever Seen😊 Keep Going🥳
@EricsNihongoLessons-EnglishАй бұрын
お言葉どうもありがとう。;)
@christac1526Ай бұрын
Thank you
@EricsNihongoLessons-EnglishАй бұрын
いいえ、どういたしまして。
@andrettax6052Ай бұрын
Thanks, that was really helpful, I don't think Cure Dolly covered this, you have my like sir! A lot of examples as well, I even mined some. By the way, it would be amazing if you could also add etymology of expressions like this of Japanese if you know or can find about. For expressions etymology helps a lot with memorizing and grasping the different usages as one thing that makes sense in all cases.
@EricsNihongoLessons-EnglishАй бұрын
お言葉どうもありがとう。Thank you for your support. Thanks for your suggestion about etymology. I do not know much about them, but if I do, I will include them in future videos that I make. ;)
@rafaelalcomantovani5822Ай бұрын
teacher, your channel is pure gold but I wonder why are you doing all these videos for free?? I have never seen other channel doing this, this is literally more than just a course, why are you doing that? I'm amazed by all the content you're giving to us japanese learners. God Bless you for all your effort in doing this and keep it consistently!!!
@EricsNihongoLessons-EnglishАй бұрын
いいえ、どういたしまして。I teach a high school Japanese language course here in Toronto, and developed these PowerPoints when we moved online during Covid. Then I made versions of them in Tagalog and Cebuano, all in the same channel, which confused viewers. Hence, I'm separating the videos in English language instruction into this just one channel. At some point, when this channel reaches 1K subscribers and 4K hours of viewing, then this channel can start to monetize. I am glad you find these videos useful! 頑張ってください!;)
@rafaelalcomantovani5822Ай бұрын
@@EricsNihongoLessons-English God Bless your work teacher and your students!!!
@EricsNihongoLessons-EnglishАй бұрын
@@rafaelalcomantovani5822 どうもありがとう。質問があったら、遠慮なく聞いてください。Thanks for your kind words. If you have any questions, please don't hesitate to ask. ;)
@rafaelalcomantovani5822Ай бұрын
your channel will get famous for sure
@EricsNihongoLessons-EnglishАй бұрын
お言葉どうもありがとう。
@sergiokiwon6688Ай бұрын
Muito bom parabéns 🙏🇧🇷
@EricsNihongoLessons-EnglishАй бұрын
どうもありがとう! ;)
@sergiokiwon6688Ай бұрын
Muito obrigado pelo vídeo
@EricsNihongoLessons-EnglishАй бұрын
どうもありがとう! ;)
@ksiretsusАй бұрын
I'm so glad you re-uploaded this and I found it. I had it open in a tab from yesterday but when I came back it said "video removed by uploader" and I panicked because it's a really good breakdown.
@EricsNihongoLessons-EnglishАй бұрын
Sorry about that. It's less confusing for my subscribers to have just one medium of instruction - English - as a separate channel! 応援してくださってどうもありがとう! ;)
@rafaelalcomantovani5822Ай бұрын
nice video!
@EricsNihongoLessons-EnglishАй бұрын
お言葉どうもありがとう。
@rafaelalcomantovani5822Ай бұрын
nice video!!
@EricsNihongoLessons-English9 күн бұрын
どうもありがとう!
@rafaelalcomantovani5822Ай бұрын
fantastic!!!!!
@EricsNihongoLessons-EnglishАй бұрын
どうもありがとう。
@rafaelalcomantovani5822Ай бұрын
fantastic channel!!
@EricsNihongoLessons-EnglishАй бұрын
どうもありがとう。
@johngalera299Ай бұрын
Are you a Japanese citizen?
@EricsNihongoLessons-EnglishАй бұрын
LOL... No, I'm Filipino-Canadian, who lived and studied in Japan and worked with Japanese people for quite a while.
@runningriot7963Ай бұрын
Wow, I can aleady speak Japanese for over 10 years, but this showed up on my feed and I got curious, great video! シェアしてくれてありがとうございます!!
@EricsNihongoLessons-EnglishАй бұрын
いいえ、どういたしまして。お言葉どうもありがとう。
@BlizzardGamingReviewsАй бұрын
These videos are awesome. Is this properly said? ありがとうございます
Wow, this is a GREAT video. Thank you for that lesson!
@EricsNihongoLessons-EnglishАй бұрын
いいえ、どういたしまして。
@nimeoblessАй бұрын
While It's "easy" to explain as transitive/intransitive for English speaker - It's not really correct way imho. If you look at the Japanese kanji that describe those verbs they have very distinguish first kanji 他 - "other" (ta/hoka) 自 - "self" (ji) So a fully correct way would be: "other-move" and "self-move" for example 従う - to obey it is a self-move, so the correct answer it is "intransitive" in Japanese, although English version is "transitive" by all means - you have and object to obey/follow etc. You will even have a を particle in sentence, like 行動または習慣を従わせる but the "transitive" Japanese version (correct way to say "others-move") is 従える So if you are followed by someone/accompanied by some - it is "other-move", not yours :). It is actually clears all confusion, when you start thinking of Japanese verbs as a "self-move" / "other-move". Just to point out that your video is great and you definitely explain it with a correct examples. Just that terminology of intransitive/transitive can be misleading when you try to apply English version of them to Japanese verbs. PS why I'm making this post. Because I've got trapped into transitive/intransitive wrong loop also. And while doing my WaniKani - all my critical errors are in translating some verbs using "transitive/intransitive" idea applied from English verbs. It's soo much clearer now when I have "self"/"other" move understanding instead. Hope it can also helps someone ;)
@EricsNihongoLessons-EnglishАй бұрын
Thank you so much for your perspective. That's a very helpful way to explain things, going back to the kanji root of 他動詞 and 自動詞。とても勉強になりました!どうもありがとう!
@KIKU-ABMAАй бұрын
ありがとうございます先生
@EricsNihongoLessons-EnglishАй бұрын
いいえ、どういたしまして。
@ricardolizarralde8163Ай бұрын
Eric, hello. First of all, thanks for all the videos you've been uploading now to this English channel. I was wondering if you will be uploading how to modify nouns with verbs since I still find it difficult to understand. Thanks in advance!
@EricsNihongoLessons-EnglishАй бұрын
お言葉どうもありがとう。Yes, I have a lesson how to nominalize using nouns. That is Lesson 43: kzbin.info/www/bejne/n53UgWSNdtCsrqs 頑張ってください。
@ricardolizarralde8163Ай бұрын
@@EricsNihongoLessons-English Thanks, I watched it and understood everything!
@EricsNihongoLessons-EnglishАй бұрын
@@ricardolizarralde8163 いいえ、どういたしまして。質問があったら、遠慮なくいつでも聞いてください。You're welcome! Any questions, feel free to ask! ;)