When we want to show respect to the listener or the person we are talking about, we say O or GO before nouns or adjectives concerning that person. For example, SHIGOTO (work) becomes OSHIGOTO. GENKI ...
Join Josh and Ollie on Jolly as they explore the Korean particle '만,' which means 'only.' This fun and educational lesson covers how to use '만' with nouns, pronouns, and verbs. With real-life examples ...
The new question-of-the-week is: How should we teach grammar to students? Our students need to learn grammar, but the real question is how to teach it in ways that don’t bore them out of their minds.
The most common way of telling the gender of a noun is by its ending, the last three or four letters of the word. There is a common theory that broad and slender endings can be used to denote the ...
To change verbs into nouns, you add NO or KOTO to the plain forms of verbs, such as the dictionary form or the TA-form. Let me explain this, using the sentence in the skit that means "To be a Japanese ...