🌟Would you like to take Mochi sensei's class?🌟 You can take Mochi sensei's 1:1 class (send me DM via insta @mochi.sensei.japanese) or online Japanese course from only $4.99 / month! www.patreon.com/user/membership?u=49978610 Please join!🥰
As a beginner Japanese learner, I'm thrilled to find that the sentence structure is essentially the exact same as my native language, Bengali. Makes learning so much easier.
You've solved the riddle of sentence structure for me. Japanese sentence structure makes me try to talk in small sentences, but with what you've shared, I can now "think" and finally start to "talk" in more complete sentences. Thank you so very much, Mochi-Sensei! Your way of breaking down sentence structure is very easy and I will continue to practice with the lesson and sentence instructions you have given.
I was struggling with thr sentence pattern and was feeling so lost that's why I used to talk with short simple sentences, after this video I feel like I can start talking with longer sentences and be confident. ありがとうございますMochiーせんせい 🙏❤
Why was this never taught in any of my Japanese books or courses????? You just saved me so much stress and time!!! 😭😭 thank you!!!!! Why do teachers and books make it sooo complicated when there’s a basic formula you can use??? ❤️❤️❤️
As someone who is just beginning to study Japanese, I say "Domo arigatou gozaimasu, sensei!" to you Mochi-senpai. This video alone has been more helpful than many I have seen over the last few years.
The sentence structure is fluid, but native speakers of Japanese will expect these elements in this order. This is very useful for making yourself understood.
Thank you! As someone who has been learning Japanese for a year, I still struggle with putting together sentences in the right order. I feel like this video has given me the exact insight that I needed to level up. :)
Mind blown! I've been studying Japanese for about a year and sentence structure has been the most difficult part for me, but with this video I finally understand! ありがとう
Just recently found your videos and I really like how you slowly work through the lessons. I am still struggling to read the Japanese at all, but I have been using an app to learn many words and beginning my journey. Even having trouble reading the Japanese here, I believe just hearing you and trying to mimic how you say the words is helping me a lot. I am planning a trip to Japan in Aug/Sept of this year and am trying to learn as much as possible before I go. Arigatou gozaimasu.
This is very helpful, Mochi-Sensei! ありがとうございました! I got all three questions correctly! I've just started learning Nihongo this month and this makes me feel so motivated to continue!
As someone who has been learning for over a year now, I promise you it'll be tough at times, but it'll be just as rewarding when you do get there. Just remember that you're doing something incredible, and that's why it takes an incredible amount of time and patience. Also, do yourself a favour and *really* learn hiragana ASAP if you haven't already. The more you familiarise yourself with hiragana, the quicker you'll learn.
this was a god send! thank you so much for clearing this up for me. when i looked up the subject before they usually just go over SOV and thats it. i loved this
yoo this is really helpful :) i’m going to tokyo next summer and i’ve only been focusing on input learning, i’m starting output learning for japanese and i’m so glad i found your video
This video is incredibly helpful!... And well done! 😍 The template laid out makes the entire language learning experience seem less intimidating. ありがとうございます!✌️
Mochi sensei, thank you so much for the lesson. This video helps me to understand to build sentences in Japanese easily. But, I'm still struggling with particles. When we should put に after places, and when to put で? Thank you sensei
This was definitely helpful for me. It gave me more structure when creating sentences. Instead of having to juggle everything in my head, I can focus on the order you provided. My only request is that you lower the volume of the music in the background as it makes it harder to listen to you. Thank you! Subscribed.
Dude, having a cute girl teach me Japanese is super helpful. It really helps me overcome my ADHD, not even a joke. What I could definitely use is vocabulary, kanji, and the kanji stroke order. It can be really difficult to get the stroke order right with just a picture, particularly with the complex kanji.
You don’t need to learn Kanji! stroke order. It’s a waste of time. If you wanna learn to write kanji, as long as they look the way they should, it’s fine. Most people don’t write kanji anymore but type it on a keyboard so just recognizing kanji is enough. Saves you tons of time as a beginner or intermediate learner
Really nice explanation that helps a lot. However I've noticed that native Japanese streamers (or just It's about the content that I consume) always put "WHEN" on a first place (since Japanese sentence is correct as long as the verb is the last) even if there is a topic present. There is actually a good explanation - the topic is dropped a lot of the time so you naturally "drop the topic" as your first action, but then in the middle of sentence forming you can mind "Oh, I'm talking about this now..." and add the topic in the middle. So it's happens naturally - "when" (if present) and the anything else, verb last :). Also colloquial speech is rather a flow, usually there is NO "pause" after verb and as "beginner" you tend to miss it blending information with wrong verb (from a second sentence), so よ and ね helps a lot to separate "sentences", but not always. Since then you start facing almost all the time complex sentences with pattern "X because of Y" etc. :(
Very nice and useful. But for me the difficulties start with sub-phrases that explain/describe the various components. For instance, "I read a book, which I found very entertaining, in the library that is open from Tuesday to Friday". Maybe you could expand your video further into this direction.
Hi! For the last sentence: Today, I ate pasta at the restaurant with Tom. I answered it as: 今日トムとレストランでパスタを食べました。This order should be okay as long as I place the particles in its corresponding order, correct? Thank you for your videos!!! I truly apperciate them!
This video was extremely useful so may I ask to consider one more specific on the usage of "を"? I find it very confusing, and I don't know if I have to trust the apps (and online translators). As an example, in English they say "I bought two pairs of gloves", but in Japanese the "two" comes after the particle "手袋を2つ買いました". The reverse order of the sentence is driving me nuts ... 🙂
WOWWWWW!!! this is the revelation of my week... Been doing that but without noticing the structure... always felt I was playing a lottery game with part of the sentence... ありがとう +++ Question : I am often confuse with KARA and MADE and where to put it in the sentence... with your structure will you consider that as a "where" ?
So, thank you for the video. I do have a question though because it seems that sometimes I've seen the 'base' form of a verb in the middle of a sentence rather than at the end. I don't know if that means the base verb is being treated like a noun, or if there's another reason. But it has confused me a few times. Any idea why this would happen?
Sensei Mochi, Is わたしは necessary for every sentence? Will it still be a complete sentence if I said すしを 食べる? I feel like saying わたしは a lot sounds almost robotic. ありがとうございます。
This is actually something I was going to leave as it's own comment, but then I saw yours and it's the perfect place to respond. No. Absolutely not! In fact, in most real world conversation, you WOULDN'T say (or even write!) watashi/boku/ore wa/ha, as this is unnecessary effort and anyone who is conversational or fluent in Japanese will simply assume/understand from the context of the conversation. For an example of when it isn't important: ぼくはみずをのみます (Boku ha mizu wo nomimasu) I will drink water ---You can remove the boku ha and it still means the same thing, because generally it's taken for granted that I'm talking about myself. It can also be taken as a suggestion to drink water, but you'll understand the context in real conversation. For an example of when it IS important: かれはぼくのくるまをなおすしている (Kare ha boku no kuruma wo naosu shiteiru) He is fixing my car ---Because the second sentence doesn't begin with _me_ being the "main actor" of the sentence, I specifically state who IS the main actor. I then reference myself because it's _my car_ that he's fixing, and if I fail to say it's my car, it becomes "he is fixing [a] car." Just remember this golden rule: relax a little, it's okay. If you only talk like a textbook, you'll come off as rigid and robotic.
@@KipperStudios Thank you for clarification. I am going to Japan next year ( first time and as a solo traveler ) and I feel Boku is appropriate when introducing myself because I don’t know anyone in Japan, but also when I check into my Hotel is when I think it’s appropriate.
@@JA_0143 Absolutely. If you're in a formal setting/conversation, you still want to use the pronoun for formalities sake, it's in casual conversation that dropping it is encouraged to be more natural. Just like any other language, you just need to ask yourself "How do I want to present myself?"
🌟Would you like to take Mochi sensei's class?🌟
You can take Mochi sensei's 1:1 class (send me DM via insta @mochi.sensei.japanese) or online Japanese course from only $4.99 / month! www.patreon.com/user/membership?u=49978610
Please join!🥰
I love the way how you teach. Very helpful! Arigatou sensei! ❤️
As a beginner Japanese learner, I'm thrilled to find that the sentence structure is essentially the exact same as my native language, Bengali. Makes learning so much easier.
great!😊
me too lol
I’m Pakistani and it’s the same as well
You've solved the riddle of sentence structure for me. Japanese sentence structure makes me try to talk in small sentences, but with what you've shared, I can now "think" and finally start to "talk" in more complete sentences. Thank you so very much, Mochi-Sensei! Your way of breaking down sentence structure is very easy and I will continue to practice with the lesson and sentence instructions you have given.
This is by far the best explanation to structure a sentence that I could find. ありがとうございました!
I was struggling with thr sentence pattern and was feeling so lost that's why I used to talk with short simple sentences, after this video I feel like I can start talking with longer sentences and be confident. ありがとうございますMochiーせんせい 🙏❤
Why was this never taught in any of my Japanese books or courses????? You just saved me so much stress and time!!! 😭😭 thank you!!!!! Why do teachers and books make it sooo complicated when there’s a basic formula you can use??? ❤️❤️❤️
As someone who is just beginning to study Japanese, I say "Domo arigatou gozaimasu, sensei!" to you Mochi-senpai. This video alone has been more helpful than many I have seen over the last few years.
The sentence structure is fluid, but native speakers of Japanese will expect these elements in this order.
This is very useful for making yourself understood.
Thank you, for this video .This has helped me out in sentence structure.
Very helpful.どうもありがとうございます。
Thanks sensei you are such a genius ❤
これを教えてくれてどうもありがとうございます もち先生
¡Gracias!
wow thank yooou!
first time to recieve this!❤️
Thank you! As someone who has been learning Japanese for a year, I still struggle with putting together sentences in the right order. I feel like this video has given me the exact insight that I needed to level up. :)
Thanks sensie it helped me so much 😊
Mind blown! I've been studying Japanese for about a year and sentence structure has been the most difficult part for me, but with this video I finally understand! ありがとう
Thank you for teaching me that was so useful you're the best ☺️
Thank you very much for this. I was never really told what the typical sentence order was, but now I know! You explained everything so well!
Just recently found your videos and I really like how you slowly work through the lessons. I am still struggling to read the Japanese at all, but I have been using an app to learn many words and beginning my journey. Even having trouble reading the Japanese here, I believe just hearing you and trying to mimic how you say the words is helping me a lot. I am planning a trip to Japan in Aug/Sept of this year and am trying to learn as much as possible before I go. Arigatou gozaimasu.
もちろんです。
Thank you so much for the tips in understanding nihongo sentences☺️
It helps me a lot to construct a sentence.
This is very helpful, Mochi-Sensei! ありがとうございました! I got all three questions correctly! I've just started learning Nihongo this month and this makes me feel so motivated to continue!
As someone who has been learning for over a year now, I promise you it'll be tough at times, but it'll be just as rewarding when you do get there.
Just remember that you're doing something incredible, and that's why it takes an incredible amount of time and patience. Also, do yourself a favour and *really* learn hiragana ASAP if you haven't already. The more you familiarise yourself with hiragana, the quicker you'll learn.
ganbatte kudasai💪🎉🔥✨
Thank you so much! I have yet to find an easy sentence structure video until now. This was really helpful!
this was a god send! thank you so much for clearing this up for me. when i looked up the subject before they usually just go over SOV and thats it. i loved this
Great tips. Keep it up, Mochi Sensei
This is the most and easiest to understand!!! Thank you sensei~!
yoo this is really helpful :) i’m going to tokyo next summer and i’ve only been focusing on input learning, i’m starting output learning for japanese and i’m so glad i found your video
This video is incredibly helpful!... And well done! 😍 The template laid out makes the entire language learning experience seem less intimidating. ありがとうございます!✌️
thank you so much😉
私はブラジル人です、そして日本で勉強したいです。
モチ先生のUA-camの内容を大好きです
いいと内容はありがとうございます。 ❤
This is the clearest explanation ever! I got them all right except I said 友達のうち instead of 友達のいえ!
Thank you for these tips, because I'm learning Japanese language and sentience structure.
great!😊
Oh thank you my lady, i've been looking for a video like this!
I got them correct, thank you sensei 🙂
great lesson
お疲れ様です! とても勉強になりました!
ありがとうございます✨
this is the best video i have found on this topic, thank you so much!!
Just beginning grammar lessons and this video is EXTREMELY helpful. Better than the book. Domo Arigato!
I really like your videos they are helping really good. Thanks a lot! どもうありがとうございます。😄
This is an awesome lesson! You break it into easy to understand chunks that build into each other. Also loved the quiz at the end 😀
thank you so much for watching!!!
This really made my life easier, now all I need to know is verbs and I think I should be alright 60%
thank you very much♡i was looking for a video like this👍
This video helped me a lot, thank you!
Brilliant! Thank You :D!!!!
This was so incredibly helpful omggg
I love this one!!!!
arigatou gozaimasu this helped me A LOT
The best , now I can easily put in sentences because I do understand the words structure, domo arigato
I am struggling with particle notation when I am compiling my sentences especially when I deal with time and location… This sort of helps.もち先生、ありがとう🙏
いえいえ、ありがとうございます😋
I will need to revise this several times to get used to it more, but overall it seems fairly easy to understand. Thank you so much! 😸
thank you always!!☺️
ありがとうございます先生
Mochi sensei, thank you so much for the lesson. This video helps me to understand to build sentences in Japanese easily. But, I'm still struggling with particles. When we should put に after places, and when to put で? Thank you sensei
This was definitely helpful for me. It gave me more structure when creating sentences. Instead of having to juggle everything in my head, I can focus on the order you provided. My only request is that you lower the volume of the music in the background as it makes it harder to listen to you. Thank you! Subscribed.
🎉enlightened.
I noticed that subject and location has the connecting words は and に respectively.
Thanks for showing the pattern, sensei.
my pleasure!
Dude, having a cute girl teach me Japanese is super helpful. It really helps me overcome my ADHD, not even a joke.
What I could definitely use is vocabulary, kanji, and the kanji stroke order. It can be really difficult to get the stroke order right with just a picture, particularly with the complex kanji.
thanks for watching☺️
Well, Matthew, do we really need stroke order in the computer age? :) IME does this job for us.
You don’t need to learn Kanji! stroke order. It’s a waste of time. If you wanna learn to write kanji, as long as they look the way they should, it’s fine. Most people don’t write kanji anymore but type it on a keyboard so just recognizing kanji is enough. Saves you tons of time as a beginner or intermediate learner
@@Dmitry_Timchenkono you don’t unless you wanna get into calligraphy. Even Sensei said it’s not necessary
Really nice explanation that helps a lot. However I've noticed that native Japanese streamers (or just It's about the content that I consume) always put "WHEN" on a first place (since Japanese sentence is correct as long as the verb is the last) even if there is a topic present. There is actually a good explanation - the topic is dropped a lot of the time so you naturally "drop the topic" as your first action, but then in the middle of sentence forming you can mind "Oh, I'm talking about this now..." and add the topic in the middle. So it's happens naturally - "when" (if present) and the anything else, verb last :). Also colloquial speech is rather a flow, usually there is NO "pause" after verb and as "beginner" you tend to miss it blending information with wrong verb (from a second sentence), so よ and ね helps a lot to separate "sentences", but not always. Since then you start facing almost all the time complex sentences with pattern "X because of Y" etc. :(
Thanks a lot for such an awesome video! ❤️☺️
my pleasure😆
Thank you
ありがとうもちせんせい
soo good! Loved it! beginner to pro here I come. lol
Thank you.
Mochi せんせい ありがとう 👏
Was easy to understand 😯 thank u 🙏🏿 ...... And like always I'm waiting for new vlogs 😆
thank you!
haha, have to take one then!😊
arigatou gozaimasu sensei
Sensei make like this
Very nice and useful. But for me the difficulties start with sub-phrases that explain/describe the various components. For instance, "I read a book, which I found very entertaining, in the library that is open from Tuesday to Friday". Maybe you could expand your video further into this direction.
okay!☺️✨
Holy crap i needed this so bad
Hi! For the last sentence: Today, I ate pasta at the restaurant with Tom. I answered it as: 今日トムとレストランでパスタを食べました。This order should be okay as long as I place the particles in its corresponding order, correct? Thank you for your videos!!! I truly apperciate them!
yes yes!! that is correct!👏💯
Ohayo Brilliant 👍🏽🏄♂️🌴😉✌🏽
ありがとうございました
みてくれてありがとうございます☺️
Would be perfect if you could include romanji for those of us who are more beginner and rely on it for the time being...😊
Kon'nichiwa, genkidesuka🙏🏻😊
Oaidekiteureshīdesu.
Hope it's right 😅
I like your funny and helpful stuff ❤️
it's correct and thanks for watching✨
This video was extremely useful so may I ask to consider one more specific on the usage of "を"? I find it very confusing, and I don't know if I have to trust the apps (and online translators). As an example, in English they say "I bought two pairs of gloves", but in Japanese the "two" comes after the particle "手袋を2つ買いました". The reverse order of the sentence is driving me nuts ... 🙂
WOWWWWW!!! this is the revelation of my week... Been doing that but without noticing the structure... always felt I was playing a lottery game with part of the sentence... ありがとう +++ Question : I am often confuse with KARA and MADE and where to put it in the sentence... with your structure will you consider that as a "where" ?
happy to hear that!!!☺️
yes you can consider it as a "where"👍
Konbanwa Mochi Sensei 😉😊
こんばんは〜😊
Very good. But I only got the first two questions correct.
So, thank you for the video. I do have a question though because it seems that sometimes I've seen the 'base' form of a verb in the middle of a sentence rather than at the end. I don't know if that means the base verb is being treated like a noun, or if there's another reason. But it has confused me a few times. Any idea why this would happen?
Shouldn't there be some sort of particle after きょ
👍 🙏 👍
先生モチ,マチュピチュ(ペルー)に行ったことがありますか?
¿Has estado en Sensei Mochi, Machu Picchu (Perú)?
Doing this and making my own sentence makes it less dauntying to speak japanese
Sensei Mochi, Is わたしは necessary for every sentence? Will it still be a complete sentence if I said すしを 食べる? I feel like saying わたしは a lot sounds almost robotic. ありがとうございます。
This is actually something I was going to leave as it's own comment, but then I saw yours and it's the perfect place to respond.
No. Absolutely not! In fact, in most real world conversation, you WOULDN'T say (or even write!) watashi/boku/ore wa/ha, as this is unnecessary effort and anyone who is conversational or fluent in Japanese will simply assume/understand from the context of the conversation.
For an example of when it isn't important:
ぼくはみずをのみます (Boku ha mizu wo nomimasu)
I will drink water
---You can remove the boku ha and it still means the same thing, because generally it's taken for granted that I'm talking about myself. It can also be taken as a suggestion to drink water, but you'll understand the context in real conversation.
For an example of when it IS important:
かれはぼくのくるまをなおすしている (Kare ha boku no kuruma wo naosu shiteiru)
He is fixing my car
---Because the second sentence doesn't begin with _me_ being the "main actor" of the sentence, I specifically state who IS the main actor. I then reference myself because it's _my car_ that he's fixing, and if I fail to say it's my car, it becomes "he is fixing [a] car."
Just remember this golden rule: relax a little, it's okay. If you only talk like a textbook, you'll come off as rigid and robotic.
@@KipperStudios Thank you for clarification. I am going to Japan next year ( first time and as a solo traveler ) and I feel Boku is appropriate when introducing myself because I don’t know anyone in Japan, but also when I check into my Hotel is when I think it’s appropriate.
@@JA_0143 Absolutely. If you're in a formal setting/conversation, you still want to use the pronoun for formalities sake, it's in casual conversation that dropping it is encouraged to be more natural.
Just like any other language, you just need to ask yourself "How do I want to present myself?"
+1 abonné et bon courage
+1 follower and good luck :)
arigatoood!😊
honto ni argiatou... yak ni tatsu...
yokatta desu✨
यानी नि
i’m too slow for this
わかりません😔
Girl why are you out here teaching people “watashi” lmao you know damn well that isn’t used in conversation 🤣
Where you from...how are you😍😍😜🏍💇💑😭
i'm from Tokyo!🇯🇵