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watashi wa baka gaijin des.
oh c'mon... my grammar is wrong
Andocrates wrote:watashi sounds a little girly, use boku or ore.
yakinoumiso wrote:Really? My Japanese teacher's been trying to stop me from using 'ore', and instead using 'boku' in more casual setting and 'watashi' in a less. Hrumph, I think she's a bit batty though.Andocrates wrote:watashi sounds a little girly, use boku or ore.
yakinoumiso wrote::oops: Why not just "baka desu/da/yo"? I mean, this isn't exactly the kind of reply you'd give to your bucho, even if he were Taro sama. Though, I suppose the answer to why not is probably obvious (baka desu?).
Why did you forget her name?
aa, baka da, though for added effect, I'd let the final a trail off and put my head down on the table.
Hey you, why can't you read hiragana?
baka da kara
Wassamata U?
baka yo
Though, it's probably worth mentioning that a lot of nihonjin may react with more shock than amusument towards your perfectly plausible explaination.Andocrates wrote:watashi sounds a little girly, use boku or ore.
Really? My Japanese teacher's been trying to stop me from using 'ore', and instead using 'boku' in more casual setting and 'watashi' in a less. Hrumph, I think she's a bit batty though.
Steve Bildermann wrote:...The explanations are focused on how to make sense of the grammar not from English but from a Japanese point of view...
Steve Bildermann wrote:A Japanese guide to Japanese grammar
This is a website that explains Japanese grammar in a systematic step-by-step process, released under the Creative Commons License (2.0). It is a good resource for those who want to learn Japanese grammar in a rational, intuitive way that makes sense in Japanese. The explanations are focused on how to make sense of the grammar not from English but from a Japanese point of view. To find out more about this guide, go to the introduction page and start learning this intriguing and unique language
http://www.geocities.jp/nihongoguide/index.html
Tom's Links for Studying Japanese
SUPER LINKS TO Japanese WEBSITES - Everything you ever wanted to know and lots of stuff you didn't know and quite possible lots of stuff you don't need to know
kotatsuneko wrote:"But the bigger problem is that native speakers of English are usually poorly trained in grammar, and aren't even capable of thinking about grammar in English"
an excellent point, Charles.
E Otenki des ne?
And another...
Shinjuku ecki doko des ka?
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