in English | in Japanese | S |
---|---|---|
We wanted to go to the partybutwe couldn’t | γγγγγ‘ γ― γγΌγγ£γΌ γ« γγγγγ£γ γ§γ γγ©γ γ γ γ§γγγ |
Comments, Questions, Etc. About We wanted to go to the partybutwe couldn’t in Japanese
Comment on the Japanese word “γγγγγ‘ γ― γγΌγγ£γΌ γ« γγγγγ£γ γ§γ γγ©γ γ γ γ§γγγ” in the following ways:
- Tips and tricks to remember how to say We wanted to go to the partybutwe couldn’t in Japanese
- Explanations on the translation γγγγγ‘ γ― γγΌγγ£γΌ γ« γγγγγ£γ γ§γ γγ©γ γ γ γ§γγγ
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Sentence info.
γγγγγ‘ γ― γγΌγγ£γΌ γ« γγγγγ£γ γ§γ γγ©γ γ γ γ§γγγ
Breakdown of the Sentence:
1. γγγγγ‘ (wataachi): "We"
– γγγ (watashi) means "I"
– γγ‘ (tachi) pluralizes it to "we"
2. γ― (wa): Topic marker
– Indicates that γγγγγ‘ (wataachi) is the topic of the sentence
3. γγΌγγ£γΌ (pΔtΔ«): "Party"
– Loanword from English, written in Katakana
4. γ« (ni): Indicates direction or destination
– In this context, it means "to"
5. γγγγγ£γ (ikitakatta): "Wanted to go"
– γγ (iku) means βto goβ
– γγ (tai) form changes a verb to "want to" go
– γγ£γ (katta) indicates past tense
6. γ§γ (desu): Polite ending particle
– Used at the end of a statement to make it polite
7. γγ© (kedo): "But"
– Conjunction used to contrast or negate the first part of the sentence with the second part
8. γ γ (dame): "Wasn't possible" or "No good"
– Indicates that something did not work out or wasn't allowed
9. γ§γγ (dea): Past tense of γ§γ (desu)
– Indicates that the statement is in the past
Tips to Remember:
– Structure: Subject (γγγγγ‘) + Topic marker (γ―) + Object (γγΌγγ£γΌ) + Direction particle (γ«) + Verb (γγγγγ£γ) + Polite ending (γ§γ) + Contrast/Negative statement (γγ©) + Result (γ γγ§γγ).
– Key Particles: γ― indicates topic; γ« indicates direction; γγ© shows a contrast or contradiction.
Alternate Ways to Say It:
1. γγΌγγ£γΌγ«θ‘γγγγ£γγγ©γθ‘γγͺγγ£γγ
– (PΔtΔ« ni ikitakatta kedo, ikenakatta.)
– Breaking down:
– γγγγγ£γ (ikitakatta) = "wanted to go"
– γγ© (kedo) = "but"
– γγγͺγγ£γ (ikenakatta) = "could not go"
2. γγΌγγ£γΌγ«θ‘γγγγ£γγγ§γγγη‘ηγ§γγγ
– (PΔtΔ« ni ikitakattan desu ga, muri dea.)
– Breaking down:
– γγγγγ£γ (ikitakatta) = "wanted to go"
– γγ§γ (n desu) = "it is that (explanatory tone)"
– γ (ga) = "but" (more formal than γγ©)
– γγ (muri) = "impossible" or "unreasonable"
– γ§γγ (dea) = past tense of γ§γ
3. γγΌγγ£γΌγ«θ‘γγγγ£γγγ©γθ‘γγΎγγγ§γγγ
– (PΔtΔ« ni ikitakatta kedo, ikemasen dea.)
– Breaking down:
– γγγγγ£γ (ikitakatta) = "wanted to go"
– γγ© (kedo) = "but"
– γγγΎγγγ§γγ (ikemasen dea) = "could not go" in a more polite form
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