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AT? IN? To? With? に (ni) VS で (de) Differences┃The Ultimate Guide

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Japanese Ammo with Misa

Japanese Ammo with Misa

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 560
@omninulla9472
@omninulla9472 6 жыл бұрын
this made me realize how complicated and weird the English prepositions "at" and "in" are too. consider the following sentences: "I left my book AT home." "Where IN your house did you leave it?" "IN my room. It sucks because I wanted to read it AT the park after school. i cant get it now because I am IN class." "if you were not AT school right now you could go get it." How would you explain to a non English speaker when to use "at" and when to use "in"?
@rauloropeza_
@rauloropeza_ 6 жыл бұрын
As a Professor of English I usually tell my students that the rule of thumb is that you use 'at' when doing the action related to the place your are in, and not just being in the place, like: I'm at the bank. (I'm doing a transaction or I work there) I'm at school (I'm studying or I work there) I'm in the bank (I'm just inside the building but I might not be doing anything) Now, that said, I always clarify that there are exceptions and they should just learn them and memorize them, like "I'm at home."
@KabooM1067
@KabooM1067 5 жыл бұрын
Exactly! We use these things without thinking. I use English as a second language and I have no issues with these prepositions at all. When you pick them up in natural contexts instead of studying them logically and trying to apply them, you find them very easy to use later on. These videos are good for getting a feeling for it but not for implementation. If someone doesn't get the video content, don't worry about it and listen to more Japanese. Eventually you will get it whether you want to or not. Your brain will force you to get it.
@omninulla9472
@omninulla9472 5 жыл бұрын
@The Radical Twig how old were you when you learned it?
@kaleeshsynth9994
@kaleeshsynth9994 5 жыл бұрын
Its so weird, its infinitive to native speakers, but must be a pain if this is your second language.
@LordArioh
@LordArioh 5 жыл бұрын
'in home' just sounds weird. English is my second-third language, I watch everything in English and use it every day more than even my native language, I just got used to how it sounds, but I'm pretty sure I make mistakes sometimes, like any native English speakers. tho I never really talk to native speakers.
@MarkHogan994
@MarkHogan994 6 жыл бұрын
I really can't describe how awesome your videos are. You're honestly probably one the absolute best teachers I've ever seen, for any subject, not just languages. Such great content, thank you for all your effort ! どうもありがとうございますみさ先生。
@shaunstapleton3197
@shaunstapleton3197 6 жыл бұрын
stephen tang Me too!
@NovaEra520
@NovaEra520 5 жыл бұрын
I'm been studing Japanese about 18 years and still in begginer. I lik Japanese Ammo help a lot I'm not give up! Thank you
@sagefields5847
@sagefields5847 5 жыл бұрын
@@NovaEra520 I would strongly suggest you find a new hobby. You have used about a third of your life to stay a beginner.
@lxtunaxl9353
@lxtunaxl9353 4 жыл бұрын
Nova Era 18 years consistently or on and off? I’ve been going on 6 months maybe 3-4 consistently. I don’t think I’m good but maybe a little above beginner
@raudamushroom6343
@raudamushroom6343 4 жыл бұрын
Nova Era 18 years...wow..you could have be native like by now-
@MuriloBR3
@MuriloBR3 4 жыл бұрын
"it sounds like u are, literally using your friend to hit someone" "u don't do that" Well, you never know.
@rupkumarmurmu4840
@rupkumarmurmu4840 3 жыл бұрын
Reminds me of a meme from 2012: "I beat a motherfucker with another motherfucker" 🤣🤣🤣
@chaosof99
@chaosof99 3 жыл бұрын
@@rupkumarmurmu4840 River City Ransom intensifies.
@RozArialind
@RozArialind 2 жыл бұрын
soul eater basically
@alexv3357
@alexv3357 2 жыл бұрын
The Holy Queen Calca Bessarez
@luiscosta6610
@luiscosta6610 6 жыл бұрын
に = to 2 (に) = two lol, love these coincidences.
@crimebelt
@crimebelt 4 жыл бұрын
Can u say the difference between wo and wa I don't understand that please?
@noholla
@noholla 4 жыл бұрын
Zoe を is used to mark the direct object of a sentence, and は is used to mark the subject of the sentence.
@crimebelt
@crimebelt 4 жыл бұрын
@@noholla oh thx....
@kaioocarvalho
@kaioocarvalho 4 жыл бұрын
@@noholla Nope, careful there! The は is used as the topic marker (it shows the main theme of the sentence, what is being talked about, the TOPIC of the conversation). For example, "I'm drinking coffee" is "私は、コーヒーを飲む"[Watashi wa kouhii wo nomu]. Usually, you don't have to show the "私は"[watashi wa] bit. The literal translation is "As for me, to drink coffee". So は is not really showing the subject, but it is rather showing that the point of the sentence is that I am the topic of the conversation, that we're talking about me. It is true that in this particular sentence I am also (possibly) the subject, but here is the thing: Japanese simply does not mark the subject, and you get it by context. The phrase "As for me, to drink coffee" at a first thought might mean "I drink coffee", and in can mean that in Japanese, but consider this conversation: 明菜:「憲司くんは、朝、大抵運動する。」 Akina: "As for Kenji-kun, morning, physical exercise to do" 千里:「私は、コーヒーを飲む」 Chisato: "As for me, to drink coffee" As you can see, in the second sentence, Chisato meant drinking coffee is what she likes to do as she wakes up, not that she is doing it. To clarify even further that this is the topic, not the subject, consider the following sentences: "As for today, tough test" 「今日は、大変な試験。」 "As for the spoon, ate" 「スプーンは、食べた。」 "As for the aisle, scary" 「廊下は、怖い。」 Would you really consider these words with the は as subjects, or as conversation themes? Lastly, を vs は. The を particle is very simple, it governs the direct object of a verb. Pretty straightforward. "To drink beer." 「ビールを飲む。」 "To look at a woman." 「女の人を見る。」 But the direct object can also be the subject. While talking about coffee, you can say you drink it, for instance. In this case, は replaces を. "As for coffee, to drink" 「コーヒーは、飲む。」 "To drink coffee" 「コーヒーを飲む。」 Yup, coffee is the direct object in both sentences. But only in the first one it is emphasized, or put as the main subject of a sentence, as if the whole conversation is about coffee, and in the second one the coffee drinking is really a piece of a talk about something else (maybe a man describing what his wife usually does, so the woman is the actual topic, previously pointed out or understood by context somewhere else in the conversation. Now, let me grab my mug, 'cause I'm desperate for coffee!
@kevinhansen2499
@kevinhansen2499 4 жыл бұрын
@@kaioocarvalho I stumbled across your explanation and wanted to tell you that I'm so grateful for it! Explained it pretty well. Kind of wish you put hiragana next to the kanjis as I didn't understand most of them. However, by reading the English translation, I could sort of figure out the Japanese words as I've heard most of them before. :D Again, thank you kind stranger!
@markmartiros660
@markmartiros660 6 жыл бұрын
Wow! You made a truly exhaustive guide for this subject. There's more content here than in some textbooks.
@BiGSmoke-.-
@BiGSmoke-.- 3 жыл бұрын
I hope you are at a intermediate level now by watching her videos.
@alexandreprodan5014
@alexandreprodan5014 2 жыл бұрын
@@BiGSmoke-.- bruh i think i saw u making the same comment everywhere lmfao what's up with that
@usedtobeasleepyhead
@usedtobeasleepyhead 6 жыл бұрын
I love how I can always learn something from your videos even when I thought I'm already pretty good with this topic :D
@BiGSmoke-.-
@BiGSmoke-.- 3 жыл бұрын
I hope you are at a intermediate level now by watching her videos.
@Sebastian-xy3xk
@Sebastian-xy3xk 6 жыл бұрын
ペンと書く Is my new favorite phrase 😂😂
@BiGSmoke-.-
@BiGSmoke-.- 3 жыл бұрын
I hope you are at a intermediate level now by watching her videos.
@jlocke3482
@jlocke3482 5 жыл бұрын
Thank you for your effort. The video seems effortless, but I/we know each video requires hours of editing. That's just the technical side. You go the extra step with examples and explanations to further help us understand. Thank you Misa sensei.
@pisicafairy4606
@pisicafairy4606 4 жыл бұрын
It blows my mind that learning Japanese in English is so much easier than learning Japanese in my own native language. Thank you for this crystal clear explanation Misa-sensei!
@emmajulie7508
@emmajulie7508 3 жыл бұрын
plot twist shes japanese
@Dmitry_Timchenko
@Dmitry_Timchenko Жыл бұрын
@pisicafairy, The same here! :) By the way, Misa-sensei's English is very good and clean.
@identityrose693
@identityrose693 3 ай бұрын
I am currently a Highschool student in Japan. And honestly, I don’t know what I would do without your videos. Thank you so much💕💕
@egosirius
@egosirius 3 жыл бұрын
Imagine you typing all this subs on the screen in a 50 min video and choose the color of words and type in different languages. I'm know 1 minute is already kind of tough, but 50 is impressive, great job.
@goblinsbride5848
@goblinsbride5848 3 жыл бұрын
(30:49 - bookmark only) I gotta say this video is THE MOST COMPREHENSIVE lesson there is for particle ni and de. I learned so much and understood SO MUCH! Thank you! ❤️
@chichirinuriko20
@chichirinuriko20 6 жыл бұрын
I'm not even half way through the video and already this makes sense. Jazz hands Misa. ❤
@JapaneseAmmowithMisa
@JapaneseAmmowithMisa 6 жыл бұрын
ありがとう(*^^*)
@wvter8498
@wvter8498 4 жыл бұрын
Honestly, Misa Sensei's videos teach English Grammar better than public schools in US do lol. Most people in public schools don't even know what a preposition is.
@blu-rae864
@blu-rae864 3 жыл бұрын
They teach us about those things in public school. Problem is, there's no point in remembering anything that won't be on a standardized test. So if you ask the average public school student what a preposition is, they'd swear they heard it before because they did.
@liugmeh
@liugmeh 6 жыл бұрын
"Ye lets write duude ~~"
@Lampuunion9989
@Lampuunion9989 5 жыл бұрын
You suck
@stratis5360
@stratis5360 4 жыл бұрын
What
@user-lw9tu1tj7c
@user-lw9tu1tj7c 4 жыл бұрын
@@stratis5360 she said it in the video
@oussamamasri5515
@oussamamasri5515 4 жыл бұрын
😂
@imeralvarez5
@imeralvarez5 4 жыл бұрын
@@user-lw9tu1tj7c when?
@user-td9hn7gn3i
@user-td9hn7gn3i 3 жыл бұрын
I've been studing japanese for the last two year. And well, this is by far the best explanation between に and で. Thank you sou mucha, Misa.
@2wcp
@2wcp Жыл бұрын
Thank you for the video! Easy, concise and helpful to understand about the 2 most devilish particles in nihongo 😂 Personal timestamps: 33:48 Note about 'morau' 35:05 'に' particle as 'into' or 'onto' 39:15 'に' particle as existence 'in' or 'at' 41:40 'tomaru' and 'taizaisuru' 45:20 exception to existence verb 50:01 note about 'tsutomeru'
@songthanh896
@songthanh896 Жыл бұрын
みさ先生、ありがとうございます!私は日本の大学で修士号で勉強する、ベトナム人です。今年の4月に日本に来ました。日本語と日本文化はすごいです!ビデオは面白いで、見て日本語を学ぶのが好きです。
@KuyaPow
@KuyaPow 6 жыл бұрын
Was just watching your older videos then a notification for this popped up! I studied Japanese in High school 8 years ago but haven't touched upon specific grammar rules for a while now, but since watching your videos I'm starting to watch Japanese shows without subtitles! Loving the content :)
@TheGreatSawyer1
@TheGreatSawyer1 5 жыл бұрын
ついにミサ先生の説明のおかげで「に」と「で」の違いところがわかります。本当にありがとうございます。
@noxxcaelum
@noxxcaelum 4 жыл бұрын
Thank you for your explanation, Misa sensei! After years I've been confused about the concept of で and に, now I understand them better! After watching this video, I tried to break the differences down by paying attention to the nuance and emotion. I think why で is used along with action verbs? Because で implies that the action takes place in the exact place. For example, "I eat in the restaurant." 'in' in this sentence is 'で' because 'eat' happens in a certain spot; where seat do I eat, where do the seat exist: in the north part of the restaurant, south part, or else, etc. Same goes with 'to sleep', as to why does it use で, because sleeping takes place in the exact place. When we sleep on the bed, it means that we're always on the bed while sleeping. It indicates the concept of a certain spot I've mentioned above. We use で when we say "I bought manga on Amazon." because the place we bought the manga is very clear; "Amazon is the place where I bought the manga." (but not to be mistaken with the concept of が). We use で when we want to tell that there was an event because the event took place in the exact place. After understanding that で is also used when we say 'with (something)/by using (something)', I kind of sense that で has a stronger or tighter nuance than に in terms of 'in/at (place)'. Why? Because using で in 'with (something)/by using (something)' means that we tend to focus on what method/tool do we use, not on what we're doing. For example, "I eat with a chopstick." then we kind of focused on 'the chopstick', not 'I eat' because the presence of 'the chopstick' is strong; "Chopstick is the tool I use when eating." Maybe the proper concept isn't like that as it could be mistaken with the concept of が, it's just what I feel about the nuance of で, correct me if I'm wrong. Because of で has a stronger nuance in terms of 'in/at (place)', the usage of で isn't as much as に. I found out that に has so many concepts, it can means 'on/in/at/to/from (in もらう)'. Then I kind of sense that に has a lighter or more abstract nuance in terms of 'in/at (place)' than で. If で indicates that the action takes place in the exact place (the focus is 'the exact spot'), then に indicates that the verb is happening somewhere (the focus is 'somewhere but the exact spot is unknown/not important to know/not the focus here'). If I could visualize it, で implies a dot, while に implies the area surrounding the dot. That's why に is used along with presence verbs(?) such as 'to live', 'to exist', 'to stand', etc. When we put the same idea above into this sentence, "I live in Tokyo." the concept is less like "Tokyo is the place where I live (usage of で)." but more like "Tokyo is somewhere I live (usage of に)." Maybe because of the indirectness, Japanese people tend not to tell their exact address when they were being asked by someone. The idea of 'に is the more abstract way to tell a place' is working in this context, and I think this also works when we use に in terms of telling time (at 7 o'clock, in October, etc.) because time is intangible (abstract). When understanding に, I tend to find out the 'basic' meaning of に as 'to' so the concept of に (for me) means 'directions/where to/whom to'. I tend to see the usage of に in 'to stand' as 'where do I step my foot onto', so that's why 'to stand' uses に. The same goes for 'to sit on' although it considered as action verbs. Maybe that's why the に in verbs like 'to live', 'to stay', 'to exist', etc. could be mean 'where do I step my foot onto' because 'to live', 'to stay', 'to exist' always happen when we step on the certain place first, or it may because of the indirectness thing. But when it comes to verbs like 'to return', 'to go home', etc., I think the concept of に as 'directions' is obvious. Because of it, I kind of understand why does もらう use に to imply 'from'? I think because it's part of the Japanese culture of appreciating someone's giving. に in もらう means 'this is the person who gives me something and I want to repay him/her later'. If we use から, it seems like we don't see the giver as a whole person or we just take the giving for granted, no intention to appreciate or to repay the giver's sacrifice of giving something he/she has to us. When it comes to 'whom we appreciate/repay', it indicates the concept of 'directions', so we use に! The same goes for あげる and くれる because the culture of giving and taking contains a life lesson that we have to help each other, share the happiness we have, or simply we live with others so we considered as being selfish if we just take the giving for granted and selfish is a bad thing we should avoid. This is just only my perception and my way to understand the nuance and emotion of で and に better so I could minimalize my mistakes. If there's something wrong please correct me because I'm also still learning (and not Japanese myself so I'm not so sure about the culture part, I was using my imagination).
@CerridwenAwel
@CerridwenAwel 11 ай бұрын
I've always thought it in a simple way: particle "ni" is used to pinpoint a place, to set it apart from others; particle "de" is used when you're at the place to "use it" - like being at the bar for drinking, people are there with intent to use the space for its services. Stupid example: 今朝モールに行きました。(i went to the mall this morning. That's my destination, still didn't use it for anything) 今朝モールで買い物しました。(this morning i went shopping at the mall. In this case I used the place to execute my action, shopping).
@skeletonhands01
@skeletonhands01 Жыл бұрын
I love her so much :( she’s so pretty and her lessons are super helpful! Not to mention the example sentences help a lot
@kylemccrea873
@kylemccrea873 4 жыл бұрын
By the first 5 mins she could've stopped and I would have had a crystal clear answer to my question...but she went on for 45 mins more to truly answer my questionS and fully enlighten me in things I didn't even know I had questions for.
@LuffyTU
@LuffyTU 2 жыл бұрын
You are a very good teacher,I can see you put huge effort in every of your videos
@salilphadnis4147
@salilphadnis4147 Жыл бұрын
Every time I think I already know the topic covered in the video, I end up learning so many things I didn't know. Amazing.
@kullerva5738
@kullerva5738 5 жыл бұрын
I just started learning Japanese a month ago and found your videos today. They're amazing. You answer all the questions I have in incredible detail with plenty of examples, with an eye and ear for actually using the language. みさ先生は素晴らしい。ありがとうございます!
@faina_yevheniia
@faina_yevheniia 2 жыл бұрын
Hello! How's your progress now?
@ixionk
@ixionk 5 жыл бұрын
Wow, this was the best class I've ever had. Not even in the Japanese language school they explained it to me as well as you did. Now I understand better how to use these particles! Thank you so much for you work and excellent videos!! Grettings from Mexico!!
@BiGSmoke-.-
@BiGSmoke-.- 3 жыл бұрын
I hope you are at a intermediate level now by watching her videos.
@JJRClassic88
@JJRClassic88 3 жыл бұрын
Thank you for coloring each of the words and particles. This makes learning REALLY helpful.
@Lagnajit9
@Lagnajit9 4 жыл бұрын
Thanks for so much examples.....most channel's dont realise you need examples rather than grammar to understand the feel of a language
@DrKhubaibPT
@DrKhubaibPT 6 жыл бұрын
Misa sensei please create videos for jlpt, love you'r videos. They are like super helpful 😊
@AaronfromQueens
@AaronfromQueens 3 жыл бұрын
19:24 It sounds like you’ve been playing a lot of video games. Misa, thank you for the video! Some of its a little too advanced for me, but this is still very helpful. I’ll look for more beginner videos.
@irongretta
@irongretta 5 жыл бұрын
こんな素晴らしい動画を作って、そして分かりやすい例文を伝えてくれてありがとうございます。「で」と「に」はずっと困りましたけど、これから前より正しく使えます。本当にありがとうございます!
@kmusic5944
@kmusic5944 8 ай бұрын
Seriously without Miss I would never understand all the nuisances of Japanese...Thank you so much.!!!I hope you reach 5 millions subs one day.. you deserve it.. everything she says is everything I get confused about when studying by myself.. no other KZbin learning channel makes it more clear how to speak like an native...
@meganevlogs53
@meganevlogs53 3 жыл бұрын
This video is pure light for me wow Finally I can see when I have to use に and で!!! 本当にありがとうございました❗
@RJCPalFish
@RJCPalFish Жыл бұрын
Thank you SO much for this video! I’ve been having a lot of trouble differentiating between when to use ni and de. Now I totally understand! You are a lifesaver!
@ecstasy-8957
@ecstasy-8957 2 жыл бұрын
the fact that there are very helpful youtubers like MISA is surprising. I just found her video and I’m starting to understand these slightly complicated grammars. Thanks みさ-先生!
@gakusei79
@gakusei79 6 жыл бұрын
Wil you consider making lessons for advanced learners? If you do I would definitely support you! ☺☺☺
@binfernus
@binfernus 6 жыл бұрын
It looks as though she is slowly building from beginner up so eventually it will probably be advanced.
@tamakigold
@tamakigold 6 жыл бұрын
Why wait to support her? You already know she is an excellent teacher. The best things in life aren't free. Make the first move and take action and support her here. www.patreon.com/japaneseammo. I would hazard a guess your Japanese can't be that advanced or you would have written that request in Japanese not English and in the same breath credit her with getting you from beginner to advanced. I stumbled upon this channel and this teacher is a real teacher. She takes the complexity of the Japanese language and culture and breaks it down into easily understandable and digestible English and throws in an explanation of the dichotomy of the two cultures for good measure. Incredible when you think about it since English isn't her first language.
@alfjones6377
@alfjones6377 2 жыл бұрын
Wow you are amazing! I have 8 Japanese books that are so helpful, but one hour of listening to your classes pretty much tempts me to trash my beloved books. Thank you so much. Hurry everyone! Write all this down in your journals before it is too late!!!
@jacpanpann6156
@jacpanpann6156 3 ай бұрын
I watch your channel over and over again misa sensei! Arigathanks! 😍
@stephennordlinger365
@stephennordlinger365 5 жыл бұрын
It is very helpful when you match the colors with the words. 😁
@juice2623
@juice2623 4 жыл бұрын
i recommend this video if someone of you wants to learn japanese this is very informative
@Vongola10Cd
@Vongola10Cd 4 жыл бұрын
This is so incredibly helpful! You explain these concepts with such clarity while making them interesting as well!! Thank you so much!
@HarukiAdamu
@HarukiAdamu 3 жыл бұрын
You are the only KZbinr who could explain it good for me!! Thank you so much!
@VerySleepy14
@VerySleepy14 6 жыл бұрын
Hello Misa sensei! I'm going to Japan in November and while I'm not fluent yet, I am more confident in practicing my conversational Japanese with a native speaker largely thanks to your videos. Just wanted to say thank you for all of your content!
@kamaboko1
@kamaboko1 9 ай бұрын
Loved the reasoning: "technically you burn calories while you sleep." I'll never forget that. Great, great explanation of de and ni.
@cpnCarnage666
@cpnCarnage666 6 жыл бұрын
your lessons are a great addition to my routine of learning! Ive been able to retain so much knowledge from your vids and thank you for that!
@soumiu.8264
@soumiu.8264 4 жыл бұрын
Who else noticed the Tokyo ghoul manga on the shelf behind her? I love these videos by the way. Thank you for helping me to learn these particles!
@silverrain530
@silverrain530 5 жыл бұрын
This is something I have been doing wrong for a long time now. Thank you for letting me know when to use で and に. You're videos are always insightful! さすがみさ!
@DarkAngel2512
@DarkAngel2512 3 жыл бұрын
You need to make a book. You're sucha good teacher. If you made a book I'd buy it
@carloscabrera4752
@carloscabrera4752 3 жыл бұрын
I´ve been struggling with に and で for months! . But after watching this video I finally got it! Thanks so much!
@stucky101
@stucky101 2 жыл бұрын
Wow. I just learned a ton and it cleaned up so many issues I had. Best Kyoshi ever !
@Lukius16
@Lukius16 6 жыл бұрын
で and に have been driving me crazy recently. This is perfect timing - thanks Misa!
@dvollmeier
@dvollmeier 6 жыл бұрын
みさ先生が大好きです ♥
@Rev251
@Rev251 4 жыл бұрын
Right? Shes awesome.
@MultiDelila
@MultiDelila 2 жыл бұрын
Misa san you are really good at this, your videos are so awesome ありがとう
@evol632
@evol632 4 жыл бұрын
Thanks for all the videos you make you are a really good teacher these videos help a lot
@xaciso
@xaciso Жыл бұрын
I want to give you super like really very helpful for me I never saw a teacher like you.
@astorcas
@astorcas 5 жыл бұрын
Thank you very much for your lessons, The best ones on KZbin! Despite I’m not a native English speaker you are extremely clear and exhaustive' even for an Italian guy like me 😁
@tzamouri
@tzamouri 2 жыл бұрын
ありがとうございます😭😊 You help a lot with clarifying things !! 😻😻😻
@manamal769
@manamal769 5 жыл бұрын
I really love watching your videos. You’re so clear and precise with your teaching and explanation. Thank you so much! You’re awesome! 🧔🏾👍🏾
@richardjohnson919
@richardjohnson919 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for sharing these videos, they are so detailed and insightful, it really helps!!!
@VisserZer0
@VisserZer0 6 жыл бұрын
I always find something new to learn in these videos, even when they're on "beginner" topics. There's always some nuance I didn't know, a couple vocabulary words... Something.
@savatagedude
@savatagedude 4 жыл бұрын
in-fXckin-credible!!! Misa, you are so awesome. The amount of work you put into your videos and how well you explain everything. Thank you, Thank you, Thank you!
@luismarquez3416
@luismarquez3416 6 жыл бұрын
You make everything seem so easy ! thank you so much Misa sensei
@katiegates817
@katiegates817 4 жыл бұрын
ありがとうございますMisaせんせし!!!!! アメリアじんです、私のいるところは今挙党です。日本語の学生です、夫と、十月から十一月まで(一年)。Your channel is amazing. We started studying Japanese about 1 month ago, and we are watching your videos every day in addition to our lessons at our language school, because your lessons are so much better, :) and we want to be learning faster! Thank you for your hard work, your content is such high quality. We just became your Patreons, and are such big fans of your channel! I am going through your beginners series for the second time through (because it is so good), and I have noticed that your captioning on your more recent videos so great. The color coding, timing, and the way that you have edited the text is perfect. You are brilliant and a genius and we could not survive in Japan without you. Forever grateful
@sundayman99
@sundayman99 3 жыл бұрын
What a thorough explanation! Can't find this level of detail in books (that I've read). I have been taking beginner lessons in-person (Zoom in 2020!), but they just don't drill the concepts into you like this! It must have taken a lot of thought and prep to do this... all for free! Even though this lesson is over 2 years old, it convinced me to support your channel on Patreon. Awesome job!
@user-xf9ih4nx3k
@user-xf9ih4nx3k 2 жыл бұрын
this video is by far the best and most expansive coverage of these particles! you are a lifesaver to a beginner like me…thank you so very much! 🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰
@derrymcmurray843
@derrymcmurray843 5 жыл бұрын
みさ先生がすきです! love your lessons. i always learn alot from u!! i self teach
@KeKeTiGeR
@KeKeTiGeR 6 жыл бұрын
わあ〜あ !どうもありがとう ! Probably the best lesson about に and で I've ever had! There are no such explanations in the textbooks. And very simple to understand too. Merci !! Greetings from Paris.
@nctrn07
@nctrn07 6 жыл бұрын
I love you and all of your videos!
@Lampuunion9989
@Lampuunion9989 5 жыл бұрын
💑💑💑
@indigo_wyvern
@indigo_wyvern 4 жыл бұрын
This was very helpful. Thanks.
@moonrise3251
@moonrise3251 2 жыл бұрын
Super helpful! ありがとうございます, みさ先生。
@anselmlui1273
@anselmlui1273 2 жыл бұрын
Very clearly elucidated. Excellent sensei !!!!!!
@JosephWharton-Brown
@JosephWharton-Brown 2 жыл бұрын
みさ先生がいつもすごい映像を作っていますね。ありがとうございました!お家でいつも床にみさ先生の映像を見ています。
@jamesmayberry28
@jamesmayberry28 6 жыл бұрын
One of the most useful things to me (aside from the main topic of the lesson) is when you discuss the differences between similar verbs. In this video, for example, 勤める、仕事する and 働く along with 昨日の夜 and 昨夜 now make more sense to me. I run into this all the time not even from a “why are they different” but “is one only for formal speech?.” Sometimes the dictionary helps with differences but not always how common/formal a word is. I hope you continue to do that or even more of it! I’m looking forward to the transitive/intransitive video! Thank you so much! ヽ(^o^)
@user-fu2pv6gf6h
@user-fu2pv6gf6h 3 жыл бұрын
日本人ですが、日本語教育に興味があるので見てます!日本語って難しいですねw 英語での説明とっても上手ですね!
@kazannakia
@kazannakia Жыл бұрын
really learn a lot from this video, Misa! Thank you so much!
@jessieshenhuxley835
@jessieshenhuxley835 5 жыл бұрын
Hi Misa, so glad I found you. Really enjoy your British accent and your knowledge sharing. Very very appreciative of your time and detailed explanation on all topics related to Japanese. You are a great teacher! I thank you from the bottom of my heart...
@soul3291
@soul3291 3 жыл бұрын
These videos are so helpful!! どうもうありがとうございます。❣
@yanki2672
@yanki2672 2 жыл бұрын
I appreciate your teaching and really like it. This video helps me a lot and improves me in many ways. Thank you so much 先生 While I have been watching this video, I really want to know more about 「に」and「で」! Please let me ask you one more question 1)日本に留学したい? 2)日本で留学したい? 1と2で どちらが 正しいですか?答え おねがいいたします。なぜですか?助けてくれてね…😿
@weebmon4337
@weebmon4337 4 жыл бұрын
Sugoii!!now I finally understand when to use “de” and “ni” 😅😅 your videos helped me a lot Misa-sensei❤
@pigozs
@pigozs 6 жыл бұрын
Thank you very much for this one! I think the reason learners of Japanese think the main particle for in or at is に is that it's generally presented before で in grammar books. That's because books start from self introduction and explain the phrase xです。日本にす住んでいる。 You starting the video by immediately saying で is the main one you use most of the time makes it more clear!
@TeePeaaa
@TeePeaaa 2 жыл бұрын
lovely to see my county (Kent) make it in one of misas videos!
@Madhattersinjeans
@Madhattersinjeans 3 жыл бұрын
Wow this was a long one. Thanks for going over this.
@estellegbd8574
@estellegbd8574 3 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for the video, I'm French and your video is so easy to understand ! I learned a lot about those particules thanks to you :)
@laurelieshane7566
@laurelieshane7566 4 жыл бұрын
Omg! It really is incredible how much effort you put in your videos! They are all super structured and well made so that the watcher understands everything! I cant even imagine how much work you had to do for the editing! :OO Thank you so much!
@BriantWebster
@BriantWebster Жыл бұрын
The main verb dictates what particle is used. To stay, to live, to exist (imasu/iru and aru) use に Tokyo desu (I’m in Tokyo) Tokyo wa atsui desu (as for Tokyo, it’s hot) Zelda wo pureesuru/yaru (Like is an adj in Japanese) On line, on tinder, on Amazon: use de unless you use the verb to be. De can also mean “by using”: pen de kanji wo kaku Ni is used to mark location, direction, or destination. (It pairs with to go, to return. Shigoto ni modoru. Mata nihon ni ~) walk and run use “made.” Eki (station) made hashiru. Writing a letter TO mom. Giving presents TO kids. Putting a cup ON (ni) the table. *Use de w the verb to be when there is an accident or event. *Use ni for time (hour and month-except for today, yester, tomorrow)
@lutravurr
@lutravurr 4 жыл бұрын
You're an amazing teacher I couldn't glean anything from sites explaining the difference between particles
@ramchandragaikwad4488
@ramchandragaikwad4488 4 жыл бұрын
Thanks for clearing the confusion.
@hanhhuynhthibich6454
@hanhhuynhthibich6454 5 жыл бұрын
みさせんせい。どうもありがとうございました。このレッスンはとてもやくにたちます。
@LukeHsieh_rosebaronet
@LukeHsieh_rosebaronet 6 жыл бұрын
This thing had me confused for over a year, I just gave up and than you came along! THANK YOU!
@gabrielgomes1618
@gabrielgomes1618 4 жыл бұрын
For the verb "会います" (to meet), we use に or で? Like 東京で(?)会いましょう。
@user-yv3se5er6z
@user-yv3se5er6z 3 жыл бұрын
に。。。 東京 に あいます。。
@Mamacupcake100
@Mamacupcake100 5 жыл бұрын
greeting from thailand, thank you for your videos. These help me a lot in term of learning japanese and improving my english. Arigatou
@montemayorma.justined.9726
@montemayorma.justined.9726 3 жыл бұрын
Wow, thank you. I had a hard time learning that.
@matthewisawesome
@matthewisawesome 6 жыл бұрын
Watching your videos is very informative and fun! ~ ありがとうございます Have a great day!
@ToureGrantham
@ToureGrantham 6 жыл бұрын
I’ve always wondered about talking “to” someone and talking “with” someone. 友達と話しています。 友達に話しています。I feel like these are very similar
@user-fu2pv6gf6h
@user-fu2pv6gf6h 3 жыл бұрын
友達と話しています⇨talking with my friend 友達に話しています⇨talking to my friend (it sounds like you want to emphasize I’m not talking to You ,I’m talking to MY FRIEND)
@rowenabolotaolo975
@rowenabolotaolo975 5 жыл бұрын
I always take notes whenever I watched your videos. Proudly from Philippines ❤️
@lordangral666
@lordangral666 6 жыл бұрын
I'm always hesitant to watch your videos because they're long but when i click on em' I'm ultimately glad I do! Ammo Mugen !
@HudaSara_TambaLusTaY
@HudaSara_TambaLusTaY 5 жыл бұрын
Misa Sensei, Thanks to your videos I can watch anime without english subtitles and its amazing that somehow I can understand the characters' conversations. Arigato gozaimasu...
@travelandexplorebd8962
@travelandexplorebd8962 3 жыл бұрын
super effective video. thanks once again for nice lesson.
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