Page 3

- Past affirmative (yes) and negative (no) form of
(to
be):
Affirmative |
|
|
Negative |
|
Non-past |
 |
desu |
 |
dewa
arimasen |
Past |
 |
deshita |
  |
dewa
arimasen deshita |
As you learned in Lesson 4, Japanese verbs have a
non-past form, used for the present and the future, and a past form.
You make the negative of the past tense by attaching (deshita)
to the negative non-past form.

Kino wa Lucy no tanjobi deshita. |
Yesterday
was Lucy's birthday. |
    
Purezento wa seta deshita. |
The present
was a sweater. |
   
Shatsu dewa arimasen deshita. |
It was
not a shirt. |
(suki) like, be fond of
,
or "like," is classified as a noun, not an adjective. This
means you have to use the particle
to mark the thing that is liked.
      
Kenta wa sakka ga suki desu. |
Kenta likes
soccer. |
        
Lucy wa tenisu to sakka ga suki desu. |
Lucy likes
tennis and soccer. |
      
Kenta wa tenisu ga suki dewa arimasen. |
Kenta does
not like tennis. |

-
(to): and
is used like the word "and" in English. When you combine
many things in English, you say "A, B, C, D and E," but
in Japanese you use
every time: "A to B to C to D to E."
     
Orenji to banana o tabemashita. |
( I ) ate
an orange and a banana. |
       
Orenji to banana to kukki o tabemashita. |
( I ) ate
an orange, a banana and cookies. |

     
(kore, sore, are, dore): this and that...

|