- Japanese is easy to pronounce. It has only five vowels.
- Japanese nouns do not have gender, and rarely, number aspects. With most Japanese nouns, number is not an issue. The same word is used for one or more than one. For example, "hon" can mean "a book" or "books" and "kuruma" means "a car" or "cars."
- Verb conjugation is not affected by the gender or number. The same verb is used no matter what the subject is.
- 私はビデオをよく見ます。(Watashi wa bideo o yoku mimasu.) --- I watch videos often.
VVVVVideo, sua anta, nao Bideo!!! ta' pior que italiano 'speakam inglesheee'.. - 彼はテレビをよく見ます。(Kare wa terebi o yoku mimasu.) --- He watches TV often.
bom, assumo que o verbo seja"o yoku mimasu" portanto... cara estranha pra um verbo, mas quem sou eu pra falar alguma coisa?!
- 私はビデオをよく見ます。(Watashi wa bideo o yoku mimasu.) --- I watch videos often.
- Japanese verbs have only two tenses; the present tense and the past tense. The present tense refers to habitual action or the future. The past tense is used for actions completed in the past. It is also equivalent to the English present perfect or past perfect.
flw
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