The が is used to indicate which noun (or noun phrase) is the object of the sentence in Japanese. (I don't know if there is an equivalent in English, though.) For example, in the sentence: "I want soda", the subject "I" and object "soda" is already implied because that is how English sentences are set up. However in Japanese, they use particles like "は" and "が" to to indicate the subject and object, respectively. If we used the same particles in an English sentence, it would be: "I wa(は) want soda ga(が)" with the "が" clarifying that soda is the object of the sentence. I hope that made sense.
Thanks for the Lesson, どうもありがとうございます。🙏
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何が欲しいんですか?
I don't understand what the role of が is
The が is used to indicate which noun (or noun phrase) is the object of the sentence in Japanese. (I don't know if there is an equivalent in English, though.) For example, in the sentence: "I want soda", the subject "I" and object "soda" is already implied because that is how English sentences are set up. However in Japanese, they use particles like "は" and "が" to to indicate the subject and object, respectively. If we used the same particles in an English sentence, it would be: "I wa(は) want soda ga(が)" with the "が" clarifying that soda is the object of the sentence. I hope that made sense.
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