| bio | website | |
|---|---|---|
| location | ||
| age | ||
| visits | member for | 1 year, 5 months |
| seen | 13 hours ago | |
| stats | profile views | 56 |
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May 7 |
accepted | <te form> + っと (conditional particle) |
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May 7 |
comment |
<te form> + っと (conditional particle) i learned that らりるれろ often turns into ん but i guess sometimes it also turns into っ huh? i think i've seen it in other places too like 寝るから -> 寝っから possibly. |
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May 7 |
asked | <te form> + っと (conditional particle) |
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Apr 30 |
accepted | Role of の in そんなの |
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Apr 29 |
comment |
Role of の in そんなの @Flaw so are you saying that そんなの could refer to the "tempting offer"? because that makes a lot of sense in context. (sorry, i couldn't find a scan) |
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Apr 27 |
comment |
Role of の in そんなの @Pacerier I think it was in the first or second chapter of volume 19 of the manga. I'll try to find a scan later. |
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Apr 27 |
revised |
Role of の in そんなの added 139 characters in body |
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Apr 27 |
comment |
Role of の in そんなの sorry i guess i was just asking about how it works grammatically, but maybe the question could be expanded? |
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Apr 27 |
asked | Role of の in そんなの |
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Apr 16 |
accepted | <verb stem>+たかない |
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Apr 16 |
asked | <verb stem>+たかない |
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Mar 15 |
awarded | Commentator |
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Mar 15 |
comment |
Zero-nominalisation - Why and When? i found this sentence in a manga: "残るはボクだけですか". is this another example, or something else? |
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Mar 6 |
awarded | Teacher |
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Mar 6 |
answered | This use より baffles me |
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Mar 6 |
comment |
This use より baffles me "A Dictionary of Basic Japanese Grammar" seems to indicate that the way the verb 思う combines with より is an exception: "Either a noun phrase or a sentence precedes yori. When verbs precede yori, they are usually nonpast. However, there are a few cases where past tense verbs are used, as in その試験は思ったよりやさしかった。" |
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Mar 5 |
accepted | relative clauses without verbs |
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Mar 3 |
comment |
relative clauses without verbs ah thanks!!! that answers my question! i wasn't looking for a reason why, i was just sort of confused if that's what was happening or not. so if i'm understanding right, "the time when you were a teacher" would be あなたが先生の時? |
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Mar 3 |
comment |
relative clauses without verbs is there any way to use a phrase of the form あなたが〇〇だ (where the circles are some "no-adjective") to modify a noun, like 時, where the copula is explicit, or somehow present? or is the "pinch" example the normal/only way of doing that? |
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Mar 3 |
comment |
relative clauses without verbs a relative clause was just my best guess. what is it? |