The Giveaway Thread - Week 46

I'll still continue since I gotta continue this

Korean verbs have a ~다 or ~하다 that means it's gotta be conjugated, a word English people don't know.
Those are in dictionary form, only books have them. In order to have them read by people, gotta pay attention to the word before it. For example, if it has a ~아 or ~오 sound, it is ~아 after it, if it's anything else, it's a 어 sound.
Anything with a ~하다 should be ~해

Remember to throw the ~다 and ~하다 in the trash when you conjugate it

있다 = 있어 (isseo) = there is
앉다 = 앉아 (anja) = to sit
행복하다 = 행복해 (haengbokhae) = to be happy
 
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So kimchi-ean and sushinese has these things called particles. Basically they go after a word to indicate something.

For example, ~은/는 are particles in Korean that identify that object as the main topic, also known as the object particle.
The catch is, if a word ends with a 받침 (badchim), the ending consonant, it is ~은. If it does not have a badchim, it is ~는.

윤기는 (yoongineun) = Yoongi is the main subject of the sentence.
남준은 (namjooneun) = Namjoon is the main subject of the sentence.
 
Weebanese also has particles

は (ha) is one but here's the catch. It's pronounced wa like わ.
Welcome to Nihongo 101.

It is a topic marking particle, making the item or person the topic. Put your anime gear and say your
私は (watashi wa) all you want.

- - - Post Merge - - -

I guess adding to that, が (ga) is the subject particle, it's different.

It's more towards the subject, the person or object rather than the topic which is what the person who is talking about.

私が (watashi ga)
 
を (wo/o) is also a particle that is pronounced like お (o), well...to me.

It identifies the direct object of the sentence, object. If you want help...it's after an object and before a verb.

ハイキューを (haikyu o)
 
Going back to oppa land,

~의 (ui) is a particle that means possession of some kind. It's pronounced as 에 (e) because I don't know.

넌 나의 비올레타 (neon naui biolleta) = You're my violeta.

Also,
~을/를 (eul/reul) is a particle that is like the object particle but it's for verbs. Same rules, if it's a badchim, ~을, if not, ~를

비빔밥을 않아 (bibimbabeul anha) = No bibimbab

Yes, 않다 (anhda) = do not, not
 
~에 (e) is actually a particle that defines location or current location.

위에 (wie) = above
방에 (bange) = room

~에서 (eseo) is another particle that defines "in" or "at" a location. This can also mean some action is happening inside somewhere.

방에서 = in/at the room
미국에서 (migugeseo) = inside/at America
 
Back to anime land again, Japanese has 3 alphabet scripts.

First is Hiragana, it looks like this
どうぶつの
It's used for pretty much anything.

Second is Katakana.
Katakana is for loan words (english words transcribed in Japanese), scientific words, companies and noises.
Looks like ドウブツノ

Third is Kanji
It's basically Chinese characters into Japanese. It has the same meaning and all but pronounced in Japanese.
森 (もり[mori]) = forest
 
I really like this song called "me gustas tu"

The song in Korean is called 오늘부터 우리는

오늘 (oneul) means today
~부터 (buteo) is a particle that means the start of something.
우리 (uri) means we or our
~는 (neun) is a subject particle

So it can be referred to as
"The start of today, together."
 
Hearing another song. :P

하늘 위로 (haneul wiro) = to the sky

하늘 (haneul) = sky
위 (wi) = above
로 (ro) = a particle indicating movement
 
~처럼 (cheoreom) = post particle meaning like as, comparison between two objects

So...~가 (ga) is a particle which is a subject particle.
Also, 네 (ne) means you, so is 니 (ni).
내 (nae) means I, me.

네 (ne) and 내 (nae) sound really similar so you say 네 (ne) as 니 (ni) to avoid confusion.

So it becomes 네가 (niga) pronounced like that meaning you.
It's left at 내가 (naega) meaning I, me.
 
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