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styofa doing anything
🪼

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
Keni
trying on a metaphor
Show & Tell
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year

pixel skylines
Jules of Nature

JVL

blake kathryn

Janaina Medeiros

Origami Around
Peter Solarz
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her

if i look back, i am lost
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
One Nice Bug Per Day
AnasAbdin
$LAYYYTER

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@studywithty
私にも見せて Show me too

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33/100 japanese vocabulary
厚い あつい thick
荒地 あれち wasteland, wilderness
委員 いいん committee member
覆う おおう to cover, to hide
効く きく to be effective (e.g. medicine)
切り開く きりひらく to clear (land)
構成 こうせい organization, configuration
耕地 こうち arable land
耕す たがやす to cultivate
農地 のうち farmland
32/100 japanese vocabulary
案内 あんない guidance, showing around
構いません かまいません no problem, it doesn’t matter
草花 くさばな flowering plant
減量 げんりょう weight reduction
故意 こい intent, on purpose
心がける こころがける to keep in mind
個室 こしつ private room
炭鉱 たんこう coal mine
面する めんする to look out onto
有効 ゆうこう valid, effective
Human Body in Korean
몸 - body
해골 - skeleton
뼈 - bone
머리 - head
머리카락 - hair
얼굴 - face
눈 - eye
코 - nose
입 - mouth
귀 - ear
목 - neck
가슴 - chest
등 - back
위 - stomach
팔 - arm
손 - hand
손가락 - finger
다리 - leg
발 - foot
terrace house vocabulary (テラスハウスの語彙)
OPENING NEW DOORS EDITION :)
these are the words that stood out to me since i noticed that they used it a lot in the show :)))
𝕍𝔼ℝ𝔹𝕊:
» 好きな(すきな): to like
» 見える(みえる): to see
» 行く(いく): to go
ℙℍℝ𝔸𝕊𝔼𝕊:
» そう: that’s right
» たぶん: maybe
» うん: yes (casual)
» 本当(ほんとう): seriously? / really?
» はい: yes
» やばい: that’s crazy / that’s cool
Keep reading

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Word of the Day
애완동물 - Pet
Examples:
애완동물 키워본 적 있어요? - Have you ever had a pet?
어느 애완동물가게 가세요? - Which pet store do you go to?
애완동물 있어요 - (I) have a pet
Schürzenjäger
noun
literally: apron-chaser
meaning: oldfashioned word for fuckboy
Weekly Verb
달리다 - To run
Conjugation:
달렸어요 - Past
달려요 - Present
달리고 있어요 - Present progressive
달릴 거예요 - Future
やかん 🍵 kettle 🍰
🍵
例「れい」(example):
お茶のためのやかんを見つける。
お「ちゃ」のためのやかんを「み」つける。
I will find a kettle for tea.
are verbs and adjectives conjugated the same? 「食べかった」「かわいかった」? my books make it seem that way.
They’re not conjugated the same. Their pattern is somewhat similar, but there are some fairly large differences as well.
Verbs & い-Adjectives
These are conjugated similarly, but not the same. Here’s an example of the る verb たべる and かわいい, like in your example above:
たべる かわいい present/future tense
たべた かわいかった past tense
たべない かわいくない negative tense
たべなかった かわいくなかった negative past tense
たべて かわいくて て-form
As you can see, they don’t follow the exact same rules. い-Adjectives, while similar in conjugation, follow their own rules because of the い that’s attached at the end. That final い becomes く in some instances, while it becomes かった in the past tense form. Here are some other common adjectives:
はやい おもしろい
はやかった おもしろかった
はやくない おもしろくない
はやくなかった おもしろくなかった
はやくて おもしろくて
Nouns & な-Adjectives
Contrary to what is above, nouns and な adjectives conjugate in the exact same ways. For example:
いぬです きれいです present/future tense
いぬでした きれいでした past tense
いぬではない きれいではない negative tense
いぬではなかった きれいではなかった negative past tense
いぬで きれいで て-form
Of course, the above です can become だ and so on. This is true for both nouns and な-adjectives.
I hope this was helpful 🥰

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⚠️ This is a hard one to understand/use⚠️
森「もり」forest (natural forest) 🌲
森林「しんりん」forest (mostly used in technical terms, not on a daily basis)
林「はやし」forest (a grove, trees planted by humans)🌳
🌲 森には大きな木があります。
「もり」には「おお」きな「き」があります。
The (natural) forest has big trees.
🌳林は小さいです。
「はやし」は「ちい」さいです。
The (man-made) forest is small.
⚠️ using any of these will make sense, however its probably safest to use 森⚠️
Since I somehow always have problems learning months and days in a language I thought I might make a post about it to help me and others. It’ll be written in English, German and Spanish. Enjoy it and happy learning!
Months
January • Januar • Enero
February • Februar • Febrero
March • März • Marzo
April • April • Abril
May • Mai • Mayo
June • Juni • Junio
July • Juli • Julio
August • August • Agosto
September • September • Septiembre
October • Oktober • Octubre
November • November • Noviembre
December • Dezember • Diciembre
Days
Monday • Montag • Lunes
Tuesday • Dienstag • Martes
Wednesday • Mittwoch • Miércoles
Thursday • Donnerstag • Jueves
Friday • Freitag • Viernes
Saturday • Samstag • Sábado
Sunday • Sonntag • Domingo
Terms
second • Sekunde, die • segundo, el
minute • Minute, die • minuto, el
hour • Stunde, die • hora, la
day • Tag, der • día, el
week • Woche, die • semana, la
month • Monat, der • mes, el
year • Jahr, das • año, el
decade • Jahrzent, das/Dekade, die (less used) • década, la
weekend • Wochenende, das • fin de semana, el
German Vocab - Winter!
(a bit early but I’m excited okay?)
Nouns
der Schnee - Snow der Winter - Winter das Eis - Ice die Kälte - Cold die Decke - Blanket der Handschuh - Glove ( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°) der Schlitten - Sled der Kranz - Wreath der Kamin - Fireplace das Glatteis - Black ice die Heiße Schokolade - Hot chocolate Die Jacke - Jacket die Schlittschuhe - Ice skates der Weihnachtsmarkt - Christmas market der Mantel - Coat das Rentier - Reindeer die Schneeflocke - Snowflake die Glocke - Bell der Schal - Scarf Die Tanne / der Tannenbaum - Pine tree Weihnachten - Christmas Chanukka - Hanukkah der Keks - Cookie die Zuckerstange - Candy cane
Verbs
Schmelzen - To melt Eislaufen / Schlittschuh fahren - To ice skate Frieren - To freeze Einen Schneemann bauen - To build a snowman Rutschen - To slip, fall Schneien = To snow Feiern - To celebrate Tauen - To thaw Weihnachten feiern - To celebrate christmas Baken - To bake Schaufeln - To shovel Kerzen anzünden - To light candles Schenken - To gift Umarmen - To hug
Adjectives / Adverbs
Kalt - Cold Frostig - Frosty Gemütlich - Cozy Kühl - Cool Eiskalt / eisig - Freezing Glänzend - Shiny, sparkling Eingefroren - Frozen Taub - Numb
I’m thinking about making one that is specifically Christmas later on… If you find a mistake or have a better translation, please tell me!
If you want me to make a specific vocab list for you, just ask!
Hello! I was just wondering what the difference between こと,たり and て were and when to use each one for connecting more than 1 verb in a sentence e.g... 見ることと。。。 食べたり、。。。します 行って。。 Thanks so much!!
Hi! This is going to be a bit long because all 3 of these are different grammar points I’ll have to explain. Hold tight! 👩🏼🏫
VERB + こと
In Japanese, in order to use a verb like a noun you have to use こと after that verb. You may also use の, but this is more casual so don’t mix it in with formal Japanese. To be safe, stick with こと as it is always accepted.
This would appear in this instance: 趣味はテレビを見ることと泳ぐことです。It may also appear in something like ピザと馬と日本語を勉強することが好きです。You’ve essentially turned the verb into a noun. Its “formal” title is called nominalization – which is the act of turning something into a noun.
Other cases you may see this: 食べたことがある. ことがある is a grammar point that basically translates to “something happens.” When used with the past tense form of a verb before こと, it becomes “something that has/hasn’t happened.” So you can say, 抹茶を食べたことがない which means “I have not eaten matcha.” In this case, の doesn’t replace こと because ことがある is a set grammar structure that exists all over Japanese.
〜たり〜する
This grammar point has some relation to the て-form way of connecting verbs, but it crops up ALL over Japanese speech because it is like you’re basically saying “this [but other stuff too] happened.”
If someone says, “先週末は何をしましたか?” you can respond with, “友達と遊んだり買い物したりしました” which says that you played with friends and shopped, but you didn’t do it in that specific order and you may have done other stuff as well.
〜たり〜する is something often used by Japanese people because it gives them a little bit of freedom. So you wouldn’t necessarily use this one to list verbs so much as to list things that you did!
て
Probably the most important thing to know how to use in Japanese is the て form of a verb. When connecting sentences, the て form is a great way to do it. But when listing verbs: be careful. The て form has the nuance of this happened and then this happened and then this happened. Where 〜たり〜する has less structure, て has all the structure.
If you say 友達と遊んで買い物して帰ってきました then you’re saying you went out with friends, shopped, and then came home. You didn’t do anything else and you did it in this order. It’s a little more restrictive, and listing verbs this way presents a sort of order that 〜たり〜する takes away.
て is useful when connecting sentences or when you want to drop a sentence’s tense for the sake of being more casual, but when it comes to connecting verbs, it isn’t always used because it is a bit more restrictive. It’s great for connecting sentences though, and it’s commonly used in that form!
I hope this helps and if you have any more questions, please don’t hesitate to ask ❤️
Verb bomb (A.k.a I was just given a butt load of verbs to memorize and this is some of them in a compilation)
(Me trying to absorb all the kanji and vocabulary ^^^)
わかります わかって : to understand
ちがいます ちがって : to differ (from)
行きます 行って : to go
かえります かえって : to return
ききます きいて : to listen
きます きて : to come
おきます おきて : to get up
かいます かって : to purchase
かきます かいて : to write
します して : to do
すいます すって : to smoke; to breathe in
たべます たべて : to eat
ねます ねて : to sleep
のみます のんで : to drink
みます みて : to look
やすみます やすんで : to rest
よみます よんで : to read
合います 会って : to meet
あげます あげて : to give
おくります おくって : to send
おしえます おしえて : to teach
かします かして : to lend
かります かりて : to borrow
くれます くれて : to give
ならいます ならって : to learn
もらいます もらって : to receive
あります あって : to be; to have; etc. (objects)
います いて : to be; to have…(people, animals)
おわります おわって : to finish
だします だして : to take out
あそびなす あそんで : to play
およぎます およいで : to swim
とります とって : to take; to grab
むかえます むかえて : to go out to meet
さんぽします さんぽして : to take a walk
しょくじします しょくじして : to eat a meal
かいものします かいみのして : to shop
しんせいします しんせいして : to apply (app.)
おねがいします おねがいして : request; please
そうじします そうじして : to clean
でんわします でんわして : to call (phone)
せんたくします せんたくして : to do laundry
べんきょうします べんきょうして : to study 📖
(I did this pretty quickly, so if there are any mistakes I’ll be sure to correct them later ☺️)

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hey! in your previous ask, i was wondering why it is 図書館に行く and not 図書館へ行く? thank you!
In the case of direction, に and へ are interchangeable. But へ cannot be exchanged for に in any other situation.
For example:
⭕️ 図書館に行く。⭕️ 図書館へ行く。
⭕️ 五時に夜ご飯を食べる。❌ 五時へ夜ご飯を食べる。
Oftentimes, when time and/or another に-requiring grammar point are used in the same sentence as direction, へ will be used for the direction verb: 五時に図書館へ行く instead of 五時に図書館に行く. This is in part because Japanese grammar doesn’t like when particles are repeated in the same sentence, so へ can function in place of に for direction.
Hope this answers your question!
Easy reading practice:
秋のコーディネートはこれでばっちりだね♪
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秋 (あき) → autumn, fall
コ一ディネ一ト → coordinate, coordination
ばっちり → perfect
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Very commonly on SNS you’ll see japanese people tagging their daily outfits as #コ一ディネ一ト or #コ一デ.
In this post Purin is talking about his new fall style! How cute!