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Do not teach (polite) in Japanese πŸ‡―πŸ‡΅


in English in Japanese S
do not teach (polite) γŠγ—γˆγΎγ›γ‚“
How to say “do not teach (polite)” in Japanese? “γŠγ—γˆγΎγ›γ‚“”. Here you will learn how to pronounce “γŠγ—γˆγΎγ›γ‚“” correctly and in the comments below you will be able to get all sorts of advice on do not teach (polite) in Japanese like tips & tricks to remember it, questions, explanations and more.

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γŠγ—γˆγΎγ›γ‚“ info.

Tips to remember the Japanese word:
– "γŠγ—γˆ" (oshie) can be related to "ζ•™γˆγ‚‹" (γŠγ—γˆγ‚‹, oshieru) which means "to teach".
– "ません" (masen) is a negative polite ending in Japanese, indicating "do not".

Explanations:
– "γŠγ—γˆγΎγ›γ‚“" (oshie masen) is the negative form of "ζ•™γˆγ‚‹" (oshieru), meaning "to teach".
– When combined with "ません", it becomes "do not teach" in a polite form.

Other words that mean the same thing:
– ζ•™γˆγͺい (oshienai): plain form, not polite (do not teach).
– ζ•™γˆγΎγ›γ‚“γ§γ—γŸ (oshie masendea): past negative polite (did not teach).

Conjugations:
1. Non-past affirmative (present/future): ζ•™γˆγΎγ™ (oshie masu) – teach/will teach
2. Non-past negative (present/future): ζ•™γˆγΎγ›γ‚“ (oshie masen) – do not teach/will not teach
3. Past affirmative: ζ•™γˆγΎγ—γŸ (oshie maa) – taught
4. Past negative: ζ•™γˆγΎγ›γ‚“γ§γ—γŸ (oshie masendea) – did not teach

Examples of sentences:
1. 彼はζ—₯本θͺžγ‚’ζ•™γˆγΎγ›γ‚“γ€‚
(Kare wa nihongo o oshie masen.)
He does not teach Japanese.

2. 私は英θͺžγ‚’ζ•™γˆγΎγ›γ‚“γ§γ—γŸγ€‚
(Watashi wa eigo o oshie masendea.)
I did not teach English.

3. ε­¦ζ ‘γ§γ―ζ­΄ε²γ‚’ζ•™γˆγΎγ›γ‚“γ€‚
(Gakkou de wa rekishi o oshie masen.)
They do not teach history at school.

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