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11-17-2009, 12:38 AM
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Counting in Japanese is pretty logical. Think about the basics. To get 'tens' of numbers, ie, 20, 30, 40, we take the number of tens, and then add the tens. So ni-jyuu, san-jyuu, yon-kyuu, go-jyuu, which literally is 'two-tens, three-tens, four-tens, five-tens etc" At 100, instead of saying 'ten-tens' or 'jyuu-jyuu' we switch to using 'hyaku' and the process starts again. At 1000, we change 'jyuu-hyaku' to 'sen'. at 10,000, we change 'jyuu-sen' to 'man'. The trick when you get to 'jyuu-man' you don't change it. So with numbers over 100,000, it's mostly just a case of adding up 10,000's, until you get to 100 million, then the word 'oku' is used. EG: 5= go = five 15=jyuu-go= ten and five 50= go-jyuu= five tens 500= go-hyaku =five one-hundreds 550=go-hyaku-go-jyuu= five one-hundreds and five tens. 5000= go-sen= five one-thousands. 5555= go-sen-go-hyakyu-go-jyuu-go= five one-thousands and five one-hundreds and five tens and five. 50,000= go-man= five ten-thousands. 100,000= jyuu-man = ten ten-thousands. 150,000= jyuu-go-man= 15 ten-thousands. 1,000,000= hyaku-man = 100 ten-thousands (aka, one million) 10,000,000= Sen-man = 1000 ten-thousans (aka, ten million) As for "In the morning I eat _______." Or "I eat ____ in the morning", the simplest structure is: ( "Time" ni "Food" o "Tabemasu"). So "asa ni _____ o tabemasu." Ni is, on a very very basic level, a time/location marker. It's the 'In the' part of "in the morning' or the 'at' of "at noon". Obviously, that's not the whole story; ni has many more uses but that's all you need to know to make this sentence work. But seriously seriously, learn your hiragana and katakana before you start going much further with your learning. Romaji will only handicap your understanding of Japanese. |
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11-17-2009, 01:48 AM
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11-17-2009, 03:12 AM
Thanks. That really helps.
And I can read and write hiragana and katakana and some kanji. I just can't type those on here because I don't know how therefore I use romanji. >.< We've already covered counting in class...I was just unclear of how counting was with the bigger numbers because it's quite different from English. I'm actually not as much of a beginner as you would think...I swear. >.< lol! |
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11-17-2009, 09:22 AM
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11-18-2009, 12:05 AM
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11-18-2009, 10:16 AM
Same. Also, I can't wait to make my first expensive purchase and to stare blankly in panic at the poor shop assistant when (s)he tells me the price and I can't figure it out.. lol
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