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.V.[Noun] tomodachi - friend[Noun] ude - arm[Noun] uta - song[Pron] aitsu - that guy[Pron] aitsu - he, she (informal)[Pron] anata - you (always appropriate)[Pron] are - that over there[Pron] atashi - I (said by females)[Pron] boku - I (said by males)[Pron] kanojo - she[Pron] kare - he[Pron] kisama - you (what you would say to a baby -- or anenemy)[Pron] koitsu - same as aitsu[Pron] kore - this[Pron] omae - you (said to inferiors)[Pron] ore - I (speaker thinks he is superior)[Pron] sore - that[Pron] temee - you (one step above kisama - still extremely rude!)[Verb] aruku - to walk[Verb] bakuhatsu suru - to explode[Verb] erabu - to choose[Verb] hanasu - to speak[Verb] hashiru - to run[Verb] iru - to be somewhere (for a person)[Verb] iku - to go [Verb] kaesu - return something, give back[Verb] kasegu - to earn (money) [Verb] kikoeru - to be heard[Verb] kiku - to listen[Verb] kuru - to come[br] [Verb] korosu - to kill[Verb] miru - to see[Verb] miru - to see, watch[Verb] mitsukeru - to find[Verb] motsu - to have[Verb] mukau - to face, to head for[Verb] naru - to become[Verb] nomu - to drink[Verb] noru - to ride[Verb] omou - to think[Verb] osu - to push[Verb] ou - to follow[Verb] sagasu - to search (for)[Verb] taberu - to eat[Verb] tamesu - to test[Verb] tasukeru - to rescue[Verb] tataku - to hit[Verb] tekagen suru - to hold back[Verb] tomaru - to stop[Verb] toru - to take[Verb] tsukeru - to attach[Verb] tsukiau - to hang around, to date[Verb] tsuzukeru - to continue[Verb] unten suru - to drive[Verb] utau - to singHiraganaIf you see garbled letters in the brackets [] below, you need to setup your computer to read Japanese text.The Japanese encodingpage should be able to solve your problem.If it doesn't,somebody in the JIP forum will surely help you out.In this lesson, you will learn the hiragana characters for thevowels i and u.In English the order of the vowels is "a, e, i, o, u,"their order in the alphabet.In Japanese, it's "a, i, u, e, o," and thisis a little more significant than it is in English, as you will seemuch later.Right now, here's what i and u look like:[D0] and [F0]Writing them is pretty simple.For i just draw the left stroke fromtop to bottom, then the right stroke from top to bottom.For u, firstdraw the top stroke from left to right, then the bottom stroke,starting to the left and finishing below.I'm sure you've gathered apattern by now.For the most part, each stroke is drawn from topto bottom, left to right, and in a character, the top-leftmost strokesare drawn first, proceeding down to the bottom-right ones.Whena stroke slants down and to the left or curls around, you usuallystart drawing from the higher tip and finish at the lower tip of thestroke. With these new characters, you can already write a few simplewords:[D0D0] (ii-good) [B0F0] (au-to meet) [B0D0] (ai-love)Be here for the next lesson where you'lllearn:Ï% More GrammarÏ% Common PhrasesÏ% Two more hiraganaÏ% More Popular WordsCopyright c 2001 Maktos.com.All Rights Reserved [ Pobierz caÅ‚ość w formacie PDF ]
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