A Dictionary of Basic Japanese Sentence Patterns

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Format: Paperback
Pub. Date: 2000-08-01
Publisher(s): Kodansha USA
List Price: $22.00

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Summary

A Dictionary of Basic Japanese Sentence Patterns is a fundamental learning tool for all students of the Japanese language, whether they be unblemished beginners or scarred veterans. With both types of struggling student, as well as for all the gradations that fall in between, there is a strong tendency, in the heat of battle, to lose sight of the essential nature of the Japanese sentence. It is for just such people that this dictionary has been created, to help them keep their eyes fixed firmly on the target and not be led astray. The dictionary contains fifty of the most fundamental Japanese sentence patterns as well as sixty-nine variations. This number covers all the patterns that are needed for levels 3 and 4 of the Japanese Language Proficiency Test. Each pattern and variation is clearly defined by a formula given in Japanese, romanization, and English. Each is exemplified by sample sentences (both in single sentences and in dialogues), and each is represented in both polite and informal usage. By means of this approach, the essential nature of the Japanese sentence is clarified, and once that has been done, the many patterns and variations fall easily into place. The simple, undisguised truth is that there are only three types of sentence in Japanese, and all of the convolutions and complications that distract and bemuse the student are nothing more than modifications of these three fundamental types. The study of the Japanese sentence need not be as difficult as it is seems. A Dictionary of Basic Japanese Sentence Patterns may be used as a reference book to look up individual patterns for the purpose of learning, confirming, or reapproaching them, or it may be used as a textbook to be read from beginning to end, providing an overview of the Japanese sentence while buttressing the student's grasp of individual patterns. Naoko Chino, the author of the best-selling All about Particles and Japanese Verbs at a Glance, has again presented one of the more forbidding aspects of the language in a way that is both approachable and eminently comprehensible. Main Features - Fifty of the Most Common Basic Patterns - Sixty-nine Variations of the Basic Patterns - Formulas Delineating Basic Pattern Structure - Definitions of Terms Used in the Formulas - Polite Example Sentences and Dialogues - Informal Example Sentences and Dialogues - Commentary on Individual Usages - All the Basic Patterns Needed for Levels 3 & 4 of the Japanese Language Proficiency Test

Author Biography


NAOKO CHINO is a lecturer at Sophia University, Tokyo, and the author of All About Particles and Japanese Verbs at a Glance.

Table of Contents

Preface 18(9)
Abbreviations and Definitions 27(2)
PART 1 Noun and Adjective Sentences 29(92)
Basic Patterns 1-3
30(30)
Noun Sentence
31(1)
Adjective Sentence
32(4)
Adjective Modifying the Subject
36(3)
Noun Sentence with mo after the Subject
39(1)
Adjective Sentence with mo after the Subject
40(2)
Noun Sentence in Past Tense
42(1)
I-adjective and Na-adjective Sentences in Past Tense
43(3)
Noun and Adjective Sentences as Questions
46(4)
Questions with interrogative Words
50(2)
N2 desu ka, N3 desu ka as Predicate in Questions
52(3)
Negative Noun and Adjective Sentences
55(5)
Basic Patterns 4-5
60(20)
Noun Sentences with N2 no N3 as Predicate
60(4)
Noun Sentence with N2 no as Predicate
64(2)
Noun and Adjective Sentences with N1 no N2 as Subject
66(2)
Noun Sentence with N2 to N3 as Predicate
68(2)
Noun and Adjective Sentence with N1 to N2 as Subject
70(3)
Two Noun Sentences Connected by de
73(2)
Adjective Sentence with Adj1 te/de Adj2 as Predicate
75(2)
Adjective Sentence with Adjectives Connected by shi/da shi
77(3)
Basic Patterns 6-14
80(20)
Adjective Sentence with Topic (wa) and Subject (ga)
80(2)
Adjective Sentences with Topic/Subject and shi/da shi
82(2)
Adjective Sentences Connected by ga/da ga
84(1)
Adjective Sentences Connected by te/de
85(3)
Noun Sentence with the Subject Omitted
88(2)
Adjective Question with dochira and Answer with ho
90(2)
Adjective Sentence Stating Preference with ho and yori
92(2)
Adjective Question with dore and Answer with ichiban
94(2)
Adjective Sentence Indicating Equality with onaji kurai
96(2)
Adjective Sentence Indicating Inequality with hodo...nai
98(2)
Basic Patterns 15-17
100(21)
Subjunctive Adjective Sentence with tara/dattara
100(2)
Subjunctive Adjective Sentence with to/da to
102(2)
Subjunctive I-adjective Sentence with kereba
104(2)
Subjunctive Adjective Sentence with nara
106(2)
Adjective Sentence about Appearance with-so
108(2)
Negative Adjective Sentence about Appearance with-so
110(2)
Adjective Sentence Indicating Hearsay with so
112(2)
Negative Adjective Sentence Indicating Hearsay with so
114(3)
Conjectural Noun and Adjective Sentences with daro to omoimasu
117(4)
PART 2 Verb Sentences 121(152)
Basic Pattern 18
122(25)
Verbs of Existence for Inanimate and Animate Objects
122(3)
Verbs of Existence with mo after the Subject
125(2)
Verbs of Existence in Questions
127(2)
Verbs of Existence with Interrogatives
129(3)
Verbs of Existence in the Negative
132(2)
Negative Verbs of Existence with mo after the Subject
134(3)
Verbs of Existence in the Past Tense
137(4)
Verbs of Existence with Place (ni) and Subject
141(2)
Verbs of Existence with Subject and Place (ni)
143(4)
Basic Patterns 19-22
147(21)
V-masu Sentence in the Present/Future Tense
147(2)
V-masu Sentence with mo after the Subject
149(2)
V-masu Sentence as Question
151(1)
V-masu Sentence in the Negative
152(2)
V-masu Sentence in the Past Tense
154(1)
Time Indicated by ni
155(2)
Direction of Movement Indicated by ni/e
157(1)
Time (ni) and Movement (ni/e)
158(2)
Direct Object Indicated by o
160(2)
Direct Object (o) and Location (de)
162(2)
Time (ni), Location (de), and Direct Object (o)
164(2)
Purpose of V-masu Verb Indicated by ni
166(2)
Basic Patterns 23-27
168(27)
Te imasu Showing Action in Progress
168(2)
Te imasu Showing Regular or Habitual Action
170(2)
Te imasu Showing an Unintentional State or Condition
172(2)
Te arimasu Showing an Intentional State or Condition
174(1)
Te Form Indicating Successive Actions
175(2)
Te kara Indicating One Action Occurs after Another
177(2)
Mae ni Indicating One Action Occurs before Another
179(1)
Te kudasai for a Polite Request
180(2)
Nai de kudasai for a Negative Polite Request
182(2)
Te kudasaimasen ka for a Polite Request
184(1)
Te itadakemasen ka for a Polite Request
185(1)
Te hoshii for a Request
186(2)
Requesting Permission with te mo ii desu ka
188(2)
Requesting Permission with te mo kamaimasen ka
190(2)
Saying ``Shouldn't'' with te wa ikemasen
192(1)
Expression Prohibition with dame desu
193(2)
Basic Patterns 28-29
195(13)
Giving with agemasu
195(2)
Receiving with moraimasu
197(3)
Giving with kuremasu
200(2)
Doing Something for Another with te agemasu
202(2)
Being the Recipient of an Action with te moraimasu
204(2)
Giving with te kuremasu
206(2)
Basic Patterns 30-41
208(31)
Inviting with V-masen ka
208(2)
Inviting with V-masho
210(1)
Inviting with V-masho ka
211(1)
Showing Intention with tsumori
212(1)
Showing Negative Intention with V-nai tsumori
213(2)
Showing Intention with V-yo to omoimasu
215(2)
Expressing a Desire with V-tai
217(2)
Expressing a Desire with V-tai to omoimasu/omotte imasu
219(1)
Expressing Ability with V koto ga dekimasu
220(2)
Expressing Ability with V (potential)-masu
222(1)
Becoming Able with V(potential) yo ni narimasu/narimashita
223(2)
Commencing an Action with V yo ni narimasu/narimashita
225(1)
Avoiding an Action with V-nai yo ni V-masu
226(2)
Stating Previous Experience (V-ta koto ga arimasu)
228(1)
Indicating Habitual Action with V koto ga/mo arimasu
229(2)
Indicating Habitual Actions with V-tari V-tari shimasu
231(2)
Offering Advice with V-ta ho ga ii/yokatta
233(1)
Offering Advice with V-nai ho ga ii/yokatta
234(3)
Doing Things in Advance with V-te okimasu
237(2)
Basic Patterns 42-46
239(14)
Expressing Duty and Necessity with V-nakereba narimasen/ikemasen
239(2)
Expressing Duty and Necessity with V-nakute mo ii/kamaimasen
241(1)
Verb Modifying Noun (V N)
242(2)
Negative Verb Modifying Noun (V-nai N)
244(2)
Expressing Hearsay with V so
246(1)
Expressing Negative Hearsay with V-nai so
247(1)
Conjecturing and Making Suppositions with V-so
248(2)
Conjecturing and Making Suppositions with V yo
250(1)
Conjecturing and Making Suppositions with V rashii
251(2)
Basic Pattern 47
253(7)
The Subjunctive with V-tara
253(2)
The Subjunctive with V-ba
255(2)
The Subjunctive with to
257(3)
Basic Patterns 48-50
260(13)
Direct Passive (N ni [transitive] V[passive]-masu)
260(2)
Indirect Passive (N ni [intransitive] V[passive]-masu)
262(2)
Suffering Passive (N ni N o [transitive] V[passive]-masu)
264(1)
Causative with N o/ni V(causative)-masu
265(2)
Causative with N o/ni N o V(causative)-masu
267(1)
Causative Passive with N ni V(causative-passive)-masu
268(2)
Causative Passive with N ni N o V(causative-passive)-masu
270(3)
Appendices 273(27)
Verb Conjugation Chart
274(18)
Adjective Inflection Chart
292(8)
Index 300

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