in English | in Japanese | S |
---|---|---|
Nobody wants to go out this weekend | γγγγ γγΎγ€γ― γ γγ«γ γ§γγγγγͺγγ§γγ |
Comments, Questions, Etc. About Nobody wants to go out this weekend in Japanese
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- Tips and tricks to remember how to say Nobody wants to go out this weekend in Japanese
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Sentence info.
γγγγ γγΎγ€γ― γ γγ«γ γ§γγγγγͺγγ§γγ
Sentence Breakdown:
1. γγγγ γγΎγ€ (δ»ι±ζ«, konshuumatsu) – "this weekend"
– γγγγ γ (δ»ι±, konshuu) means "this week" and γΎγ€ (ζ«, matsu) means "end".
2. γ― (wa) – topic marker
– Indicates that "this weekend" is the topic of the sentence.
3. γ γγ«γ (dareni mo) – "nobody" or "to anyone"
– γ γ (dare) means "who" and γ«γ (nimo) is used to indicate "nobody" as it emphasizes the negative.
4. γ§γγγγγͺγ (dekaketakunai) – "do not want to go out"
– γ§γγγ (dekakeru) is the verb "to go out", combined with γγγͺγ (takunai), the negative form of "want to".
5. γ§γ (desu) – polite ending
Tips to Remember:
– "γγγγ γγΎγ€" refers to the specific time, "this weekend."
– "γ γγ«γ" uses "γ γ" and "γ«γ" to emphasize "nobody."
– "γ§γγγγγͺγ" combines the verb "γ§γγγ" with the negative want form "γγγͺγ."
Alternate ways to say "Nobody wants to go out this weekend":
1. δ»ι±ζ«γ― θͺ°γ ε€γ«εΊγγγγͺγγ§γγ
(γγγγ γγΎγ€γ― γ γγ γγ¨γ« γ§γγγγͺγγ§γγkonshuumatsu wa daremo soto ni detagaranai desu.)
– ε€γ«εΊγ (γγ¨γ«γ§γ, soto ni deru) means "to go outside" and γγγγͺγ (tagaranai) indicates nobody's desire to do so.
2. δ»ι±ζ«γ― θͺ°γ εΊγγγζ°γγγΎγγγ
(γγγγ γγΎγ€γ― γ γγ γ§γγγ γγγγΎγγγkonshuumatsu wa daremo dekakeru ki ga shimasen.)
– ζ°γγγΎγγ (γγγγΎγγ, ki ga shimasen) means "not in the mood".
3. δ»ι±ζ«γ― θͺ°γ εΊγγγγγͺγγ
(γγγγ γγΎγ€γ― γ γγ γ§γγγγγͺγγkonshuumatsu wa daremo dekaketakunai.)
– A more casual way to say the same sentence without the polite ending γ§γ.
Romanized:
– Konshuumatsu wa dareni mo dekaketakunai desu.
– Konshuumatsu wa daremo soto ni detagaranai desu.
– Konshuumatsu wa daremo dekakeru ki ga shimasen.
– Konshuumatsu wa daremo dekaketakunai.
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