Making Sense of Japanese Grammar 在线电子书 图书标签: 日語 Nonfiction Linguistics Japanese English
发表于2024-11-25
Making Sense of Japanese Grammar 在线电子书 pdf 下载 txt下载 epub 下载 mobi 下载 2024
Pt. 1. Grammatical Categories and the Basic Architecture of a Sentence. 1. The subject corresponds to an item around which an event evolves. 2. Use the verb at the end! 3. An explicit subject is optional. 4. Pay attention to the last part of a sentence. 5. There are three types of verb-like constituents. 6. The noun in the sentence gakusei-desu is not the subject! 7. Japanese speakers avoid certain pronouns. 8. You cannot always guess the grammatical category of a Japanese form from the grammatical category of its English counterpart. 9. Dictionary forms of all Japanese adjectives end with -ii, -ai, -oi, or -ui. 10. "Noun" is an open category in Japanese. 11. Use the same word order for questions. Attach -ka to a statement to turn it into a question. 12. Do not hesitate to use the same verb over and over again. 13. Japanese particles are postpositions. 14. Classification of particles -- Pt. 2. Phrase Particles: Marking the Functions of Noun Phrases in a Sentence. 15. A phrase particle determines the function of the noun. 16. The particle -wa identifies what the sentence is about and urges the listener to pay attention to the part that follows. 17. The particle -mo adds the preceding noun phrase to a list of objects. 18. Use of -wa and -mo presupposes a contextual set. 19. -ga is the subject marker; -o is the direct object marker. 20. -ga and -o mark a fresh participant; -wa marks a familiar participant already anchored in a context. 21. Do not attach -wa to interrogative WH-phrases. 22. Only one direct object particle -o appears per verb. 23. The subject and the direct object are the primary grammatical categories. 24. Two types of locational particles: -de and -ni. 25. Three reasons not to use phrase particles. 26. "Exceptional" uses of -ga. 27. Grammatical reasons for alternations of particles. 28. The person marked with the particle -ni is an active participant in an interaction. 29. The person marked with the particle -to is a "reciprocal" participant in an interaction. 30. Certain auxiliary verbs take the non-subject participant particle -ni. 31. The auxiliary verb -morau comes with -ni; the auxiliary verbs -ageru and -kureru do not. 32. Another consequence of the double-o constraint. 33. Phrase particles are powerful! -- Pt. 3. Expanding Noun Phrases. 34. The particle -no between two nouns turns the first noun into a modifier. 35. A noun modified by an adjective functions like a noun. 36. The modifier consistently precedes the modified. 37. Spatial relationships are expressed with stacked nouns. 38. The particle -no mediates a wide range of relationships. Mekishiko-jin-no tomodachi, for instance, means either "a friend of a Mexican" or "a friend who is Mexican" 39. The particle -to connects noun phrases representing separate objects. 40. Na-nouns behave like nouns, but they have "fuzzy" meanings. 41. To say something more complex, use complex noun phrases. 42. The head noun of a complex noun phrase carries with it only the particle which marks its function in a larger sphere. 43. Japanese does not employ WH-phrases for creating complex noun phrases. 44. Mekishiko-jin-no tomodachi "a Mexican friend" is a complex noun phrase. 45. Atarashii tomodachi "a new friend" is also a kind of complex noun phrase. 46. One more way to create a complex noun phrase. 47. No is for a familiar event; koto is for an abstract idea -- Pt. 4. Tense and Events. 48. There are only two tenses in Japanese: non-past and past. 49. Special use of past tense forms. 50. Te-forms connect very closely related events. 51. Tense markers separate events. 52. Events are tied with varying degrees of cohesion inside a sentence. 53. Two perspectives for tense inside a subordinate clause. 54. The main clause perspective means involvement. 55. The speaker's perspective means incidental connection, speaker's recollection, or speaker's reasoning -- Pt. 5. Miscellaneous Topics. 56. Hai and ee mean "I agree" or "I hear you"; iie means "I disagree" 57. Are "that" is for things known to both speaker and hearer; sore "that" is for something just mentioned. 58. The longer and vaguer, the more polite. 59. Polite forms and direct forms. 60. Reality consists of continuous-grade scales; language makes things discrete. 61. Interpretations of -te-kuru/-te-iku. 62. Expressing solidarity with -te-kuru/-te-iku. 63. -n-da expresses expectation of mutual understanding. 64. -n-da-kara does not provide personal information. Do not overuse it! 65. There are ways to identify hidden subjects. 66. Do not be intimidated by apparent complexity.
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Making Sense of Japanese Grammar 在线电子书 pdf 下载 txt下载 epub 下载 mobi 下载 2024