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The Verb to Receive (morau, itadaku) Indicating the Source of Receiving with the Particle ni Indicating the Occasion with the Particle ni Colors The Counters.

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Presentation on theme: "The Verb to Receive (morau, itadaku) Indicating the Source of Receiving with the Particle ni Indicating the Occasion with the Particle ni Colors The Counters."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Verb to Receive (morau, itadaku) Indicating the Source of Receiving with the Particle ni Indicating the Occasion with the Particle ni Colors The Counters hiki, satsu, and dai The Distributive Suffix zutsu Using me to Express Ordinal Numbers Japanese 1100-L11b-07-16-20121 Class Session 11b Chapter 7

2 Japanese 1100-L11b-07-16-20122 The Verb to Receive (morau, itadaku) The verb that means to receive is morau in Japanese regardless of who is giving to whom The person who receives is represented as the subject noun. watashi wa tomodachi kara tegami o moraimashita. I received a letter from a friend. itadaku is used in place of morau to express respect to the person from whom the the item is received: sensei kara hon o itadakimashita. I received a book from the teacher.

3 Japanese 1100-L11b-07-16-20123 Indicating the Source of Receiving with the Particle ni The person from whom the item is received is marked by the particle ni or kara: watashi wa sobo ni o-okozukai o moraimashita. I received some allowance from my grandmother. sofu kara saifu o moraimashita. I received a wallet from my grandfather. sensei ni jisho o itadakimashita. I received a dictionary from my teacher. The particle ni means “to” when used with giving verbs and “from” when used with receiving verbs; make sure you consider the verb when translating ni

4 Japanese 1100-L11b-07-16-20124 Indicating the Occasion with the Particle ni The particle ni marks the occassion of giving and receiving: sofu ga nyūgaku no o-iwai ni tokei o kuremashita. My grandfather gave me a watch in celebration of my school admission. tanjōbi no puresento ni handobaggu o moraimashita. I received a handbag for my birthday present. shussan-iwai ni yoko-san ni akachan no fuku o agemashita. I gave Yoko baby clothes to celebrate the birth of her baby.

5 Japanese 1100-L11b-07-16-20125 Colors NounColorAdjective akaredakai aoblue (green)aoi kuroblackkuroi kiiroyellowkiiroi shirowhiteshiroi midorigreenmidori no murasakipurplemurasaki no chairobrownchairo no haiirogreyhaiiro no

6 Japanese 1100-L11b-07-16-20126 The Counters hiki, satsu, and dai The counter hiki is used for small or medium-size animals such as fish, insects, dogs, cats, and monkeys uchi ni wa kingyo ga go-hiki imasu. There are five goldfish at my house. For larger animals (such as elephants and cows) the counter tō is used. In common speech, if it has four legs, regardless of size the counter hiki is often used asoko ni ushi ga san-biki arimasu. There are three cows over there. The counter satsu is used for counting bound items (e.g., books, magazines, and notebooks) hon o ni-satsu kaimasu. I will buy two books. The counter dai is used for counting machines or mechanical items (e.g., cars, trucks and copiers). kuruma ga ichi-dai arimasu. There is one car.

7 Japanese 1100-L11b-07-16-20127 Pronunciation of Counters hiki, satsu, and dai NumberAnimalsBooksMachines 1 ip-pikiissatsuichidai 2ni-hikini-satsuni-dai 3san-bikisan-satsusan-dai 4yon-hikiyon-satsuyon-dai 5go-hikigo-satsugo-dai 6rop-pikiroku-satsuroku-dai 7nana-hikinana-satsushichi-dai 8hap-pikihas-satsuhachi-dai 9kyū-hikikyū-satsukyū-dai 10jūp-pikijūs-satsujū-dai

8 Japanese 1100-L11b-07-16-20128 The Distributive Suffix zutsu The suffix zutsu follows a number and means “each” or “at a time” kodomo ga ame o mi-tsu zutsu moraimasu. Children will receive three candies each. gakusei ga futari zutsu kimasu. Two student at a time will come. heya ni wa tsukue ga fu-tatsu zutsu arimasu. There are two desks in each room. mainnichi, kanji o itsu-tsu zutsu benkyoo shimasu. I study five kanji each day.

9 Japanese 1100-L11b-07-16-20129 Using me to Express Ordinal Numbers Ordinal (as opposed to cardinal) numbers express position in order (e.g., first, second, third, etc.) Ordinal numbers in Japanese are created by adding the suffix me to a number phrase with a counter mi-tsu means three pieces, but mi-tsu-me means the “third piece” Examples: san-nin-me no gakusei wa nihon-jin desu. The third student is Japanese. futa-tsu-me no kōsaten made arukimasu. I will walk up to the second intersection


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