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12-08-2010, 03:11 PM
You're confusing two different grammar points. One of them, you attach ようにする to an entire verb. The other, you do the volitional form (よう form, I guess you could call it) and then attach とする. Look at the difference in the verb in these two examples with an ichidan verb:
食べるようにする in order to eat 食べようとする try to eat Now, it's mega-important to realize the difference in form because if you use a godan verb like 飲む: 飲むようにする in order to drink 飲もうとする try to drink here, there is no よう at all because the volitional form of a godan verb does not have よう Look at your examples and their English translations to see they aren't "try" sentences. 行くよう、使うよう, they are "in order to [be able to]" sentences. 行こう and 使おう would be "try" sentence forms. Volitional form, and no よう, since neither is an ichidan verb. I will try to eat sushi すしを食べようとする In order to eat sushi, I use chopsticks. すしを食べるようにはしを使う |
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12-08-2010, 03:21 PM
I didn't write the whole thing, just used ー, but I am not confusing them. In the books I have they treat both ーとする and ーようにする as "try to do something". The way I know it is "in order to drink" should be 飲むように without する.
Give me few minutes to go and get the examples the books use... 暗闇の中 歩くしかねぇ everything’s gonna be okay 恐れることねぇ 辛い時こそ胸を張れ |
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12-08-2010, 03:31 PM
From the last book I bought (the one that explain the difference).
忘れないように書きます I will write it so (in order to) I won't forget. 忘れないようにします I Will try not to forget たまごを食べないようにしています I am trying not to eat eggs. うそをつこうとしました I tried to lie. And so on... But the fact is that every book ties ようにする to "try". What I would like to find out is if there are other meanings...if it is the way I think, actually even "try" doesn't translate the exact nuance of ようにする. Actually the whole translation "in order to" doesn't really represent the whole concept of よう (way). But of course I am talking with knowledge of how it works in another language...but if I am true and in Japanese is like Italian, sorry, but in English there is no way to translate ようにする because it assumes many different meanings (trust me, I have tried and tried...and still can't express my real feeling coz I can't use ようにする in English in many cases). 暗闇の中 歩くしかねぇ everything’s gonna be okay 恐れることねぇ 辛い時こそ胸を張れ |
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12-08-2010, 03:47 PM
Quote:
犬に今夜餌を与えるようにしろ trying to literally translate would be "tonight do in a way that you feed the dogs". The nuance of this phrase is: no matter what else you have to do, you do find 5 minutes and you feed the dogs. The example about my mother やさいを食べるようにしてください even though looks polite implies I don't care however you will do it, but you are going to finish you veggies or you get in trouble. 暗闇の中 歩くしかねぇ everything’s gonna be okay 恐れることねぇ 辛い時こそ胸を張れ |
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12-08-2010, 04:24 PM
Quote:
やさいを食べるようにしてください is a valid sentence but it doesn't mean what you said. It doesn't talk about just today or a particular meal. It's something a doctor or mom would tell you if you don't consume enough vegetables on a day-to-day basis. It's really saying "(Please change your diet and) try to eat more vegetables." ~~ようにする most often means "to make an effort so that ~~ would occur". |
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12-08-2010, 04:36 PM
Quote:
I guess I will have to go to google and see various example to learn in what way it is used in Japan. But at least now I know it is not only "try" like my grammar book taught me. 暗闇の中 歩くしかねぇ everything’s gonna be okay 恐れることねぇ 辛い時こそ胸を張れ |
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12-08-2010, 05:32 PM
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For example, 雨が降るように雨乞いをします。 So that it might rain, I will do a rain dance. You are not trying to rain. You are merely doing a dance, and your goal is that hopefully the dance causes it to rain. Hence 〜ように should not be thought of as trying to do anything. The closest it can be to your "try" attempts is to "try and cause something to happen" rather than "try to directly do something." |
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12-08-2010, 06:35 PM
Quote:
ようにする has no attempt in it. Maybe (if grammatically correct) ようにしてみる has an attempt in it. But on the other hand, it doesn't even have a purpose in it, for that you should have ようにするために. The way I used it in my language for 30 years and that Masaeguさん confirmed is a method. You do do something by means of which you obtain something else. よう means "way", not in order to or try. A way of doing something. Sometimes in English can be translated with "try", sometimes with "in order to" and other times (like the phrase that was on my book and it's quoted in my opening message) "to make sure that". It is always different. I hope this will help you better. I got a 5 year old daughter and I am trying to teach her Italian, but she is not that good yet. The other day before going to bed I told her (in Italian) after I go to bed 音が立てないようにしてください She stared at me and said ようにして?? so I repeated 音が立てないでください. The meaning is the same. But while with the second phrase I ask her please to try not to make noise, with the first phrase I ask her please to make a strong effort not to make a noise. Now, by what I understood from Mesaeguさん, in Japanese it is still a request. While in Italian it becomes more an order...I do want that effort to produced the result I asked. This was mainly what my question was revolving about. If they have the same use and it seems they kinda do, with some different nuances. I really hope I am making myself understand. I don't mean to prove you wrong, but I guess you didn't understand my question from the beginning. 暗闇の中 歩くしかねぇ everything’s gonna be okay 恐れることねぇ 辛い時こそ胸を張れ |
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