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  2. Japanese-Language Proficiency Test - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese-Language...

    The Japanese-Language Proficiency Test (日本語能力試験, Nihongo Nōryoku Shiken), or JLPT, is a standardized criterion-referenced test to evaluate and certify Japanese language proficiency for non-native speakers, covering language knowledge, reading ability, and listening ability. [1]

  3. Honorific speech in Japanese - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Honorific_speech_in_Japanese

    Negatives are formed by adding suffix na: taberu na "do not eat", gomi o suteru na: "do not throw away rubbish". Similarly, the negative of da, ja nai, can be used: taberu n ja nai. More polite, but still strict, is the nasai suffix, which attaches to the i-form of the verb. This originates in the polite verb nasaru.

  4. Japanese wordplay - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_wordplay

    In Japanese, each digit/number has at least one native Japanese (), Sino-Japanese (), and English-origin reading.Furthermore, variants of readings may be produced through abbreviation (i.e. rendering ichi as i), consonant voicing (i.e sa as za; see Dakuten and handakuten), gemination (i.e. roku as rokku; see sokuon), vowel lengthening (i.e. ni as nii; see chōonpu), or the insertion of the ...

  5. Japanese particles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_particles

    Japanese particles are written in hiragana in modern Japanese, though some of them also have kanji forms: (弖 or 天 for te て; 爾 for ni に; 乎 or 遠 for o を; and 波 for wa は).

  6. Your Party - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Your_Party

    A campaign truck announcing policy outside Kashiwa Station in Chiba.. Your Party (みんなの党, Minna no Tō, literally "Everyone's Party") is a Japanese parliamentary caucus consisting of Yoshimi Watanabe and Takashi Tachibana, later Satoshi Hamada after Tachibana forfeited his seat, in the House of Councillors.

  7. Japanese adjectives - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_adjectives

    na-adjectives always occur with a form of the copula, traditionally considered part of the na-adjective itself. The only syntactical difference between nouns and na-adjective is in the attributive form, where nouns take の (no) and adjectives take な (na). This has led many linguists to consider them a type of nominal (noun-like part of ...

  8. Adjectival noun (Japanese) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adjectival_noun_(Japanese)

    For example, Eleanor Harz Jorden refers to them as "na-nominals" in her textbook Japanese: The Spoken Language. In fact, by some analyses, nouns and na-nominals are fundamentally grammatically the same, where 〜の vs. 〜な when used attributively is simply a conventional stylistic complementary distribution, with 〜の/〜な being ...

  9. Minna no Ie - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minna_no_Ie

    Minna no Ie (みんなのいえ, Minna no Ie) (also known as All About Our House) is a 2001 comedy film written and directed by Japanese director Kōki Mitani. [1] [2] The film is about an affluent couple who decide to build a new house and the clash between traditional Japanese and modern western styles between the people they hire to build it.