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11-03-2011, 12:50 AM
Do you mean particles like さ and し (sentence particles that took me a long time to find), or actual suffixes like 的 and っぽい? Or maybe conjugations?
Japanese particles - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia is as good as any you'll find online for the former, although you'd be better off with a good grammar book. Tim Sensei's Corner - Japanese Verbs - Introduction and Table of Contents is good for most conjugations. My only regret is it's in romaji. But again, you want a good grammar book. I thought Jisho had the actual suffixes in it, but it's down right now (my heart...) |
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11-03-2011, 11:09 AM
Yeah, I guess I wasn't clear enough.
What I meant was just anything that one adds to the end of a verb or adjective to change the meaning. Like conjugations. For example, my Japanese teacher is teaching us how to write "to be able to do" forms of verbs. 食べられます、聞けます。<<like that. Is there anywhere where I can find a list of things like that? |
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11-03-2011, 08:31 PM
Quote:
As far as actual conjugations, there aren't many. formality: polite honorific humble tense: past て-form conjunctive form meaning change imperative volitional passive causative causative-passive potential That's pretty close to all for verb endings. There are numerous combinations of verbs, so we can't really list all those (it's like asking for all possible suffixes in English—even me telling you wouldn't help you learn the language). Also, many of these will be done differently depending on what word you're talking about. Typically you will have a formality choice, tense choice, and meaning choice for every verb. For example, 食べる as a polite, causative, past tense would be 食べさせました。 ([i] made [him] eat.) |
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