in English | in Japanese | S |
---|---|---|
wanted to say/tell | γγγγγ£γ |
Comments, Questions, Etc. About Wanted to say/tell in Japanese
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γγγγγ£γ info.
Remembering the Japanese word:
– "γγγγγ£γ" (iitakatta) can be broken down into:
– "θ¨γγ" (iita) – the stem form of "θ¨γ" (iu), which means "to say" or "to tell".
– "γγ£γ" (katta) – the past-tense form for adjectives and verbs in Japanese.
– Together, they form "θ¨γγγγ£γ" (wanted to say).
Explanations:
– "θ¨γ" (iu) is the infinitive form which means "to say" or "to tell".
– By changing "θ¨γ" (iu) to "θ¨γγγ" (iitai), it expresses a desire to say/tell.
– Adding "γγ£γ" to "θ¨γγγ" (iitai) makes it past tense, forming "θ¨γγγγ£γ" (iitakatta), indicating "wanted to say/tell".
Other similar words:
– θ©±γγγγ£γ (hanaakatta) – "wanted to talk" (from θ©±γ, hanasu)
– θͺγγγγ£γ (kataritakatta) – "wanted to tell" a story or narrative (from θͺγ, kataru)
Conjugations:
– Present: θ¨γ (iu)
– Present (polite): θ¨γγΎγ (iimasu)
– Past: θ¨γ£γ (itta)
– Past (polite): θ¨γγΎγγ (iimaa)
– Future: θ¨γγ γγ (iu darou) / θ¨γγ§γγγ (iu deshou) (both mean "will say" or "probably say")
– Volitional: θ¨γγ (iou) – "let's say"
– Te-form: θ¨γ£γ¦ (itte) – "saying"
Examples of sentences:
1. Past Tense:
– ε½Όγ«θ¨γγγγ£γγγ©γγγγγ (Kare ni iitakatta kedo, yameta.)
– I wanted to tell him, but I stopped.
2. Present Tense/Infinitive:
– ε½Όε₯³γ―δ½γγθ¨γγγγΏγγγ γ (Kanojo wa nanika o iitai mitai da.)
– It looks like she wants to say something.
3. Future Tense:
– ζζ₯γε½Όγ«θ¨γγ€γγγ γ (Aa, kare ni iu tsumori da.)
– I intend to tell him tomorrow.
4. Polite Present Tense:
– δ»δ½γγθ¨γγγγ§γγοΌ (Ima nanika o iitai desu ka?)
– Do you want to say something now?
5. Volitional:
– γΏγγͺγ«γγγγ¨γγ¨θ¨γγγ (Minna ni arigatou to iou.)
– Let's say thank you to everyone.
6. Te-form:
– ε½Όε₯³γ―η¬γ£γ¦θ¨γ£γγ (Kanojo wa waratte itta.)
– She said, laughing.
Remember, conjugation patterns can vary slightly, but these cover the basic and most commonly used forms.
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