Lesson 3.1
Dialogue 1
Michael is checking apartment listings.
Honda: Ii apaato, arimasu ka. Are there any good apartments?
いいアパート、ありますか。
Michael: Sukunai desu nee. Very few.
すく
少ないですねえ。
……
Honda: Kono apaato wa dou desu ka? How about this apartment?
このアパートはどうですか。
Michael: Sou desu nee. Chotto takaku naidesu ka. Let’s see. Isn’t it a little expensive?
たか
そうですねえ。ちょっと高くないですか。
Vocabulary
apaato あぱあとアパート apartment
arimasu あります there is/are, exists
sukunai すくない少ない be few, there are few
dou どう how
sou desu nee そうですねえ Let me see, I’m thinking
takai たかい高い expensive
takakunai たかくない高くない is not expensive
+manshon まんしょんマンション condominium
+ ie いえ家 house, home
+heya へや部屋 room
+ikaga いかが how (polite)
+ooi おおい多い be a lot, there are a lot
+yasui やすい安い cheap
+ookii おおきい大きい large, big
+chiisai ちいさい小さい small
+atarashii あたらしい新しい new
+furui ふるい古い old
Grammar Notes
3-1-1 Adjective Sentences
All adjectives in Japanese end in –i (Non Past), -katta (Past), and -ku. takai expensive
takaku nai not expensive
To make the Past form, change –i to –katta. For the negative form, change nai to nakatta.
takakatta was expensive
takaku nakatta was not expensive
To make a formal style adjective sentence, add desu.
Takai desu. It’s expensive. Takaku nai des. It’s not expensive. Takakatta desu. It was expensive. Takaku nakatta desu. It was not expensive.
In Lessons 1 and 2 verb sentences and noun sentences were introduced. With the adjective sentences introduced in this lesson you have now seen all three Japanese sentence types. The chart below shows the forms that have been introduced so far.
Table 4. Examples of affirmative and negative non-past types of verb, noun, and adjective sentences in Japanese.
|
Non-past – Affirmative |
Non-Past – Negative |
Verb Sentence |
Wakarimasu. |
Wakarimasen. |
Noun Sentence |
Nihon desu. |
Nihon ja nai desu. |
Adjective Sentence |
Takai desu. |
Takaku nai desu. |
Table 5. Affirmative and negative past types of verb, noun, and adjective sentences in Japanese.
Past – Affirmative |
Past – Negative |
Past – Affirmative |
Verb Sentence |
Wakarimashita. |
Wakarimasen deshita. |
Noun Sentence |
Nihon deshita. |
Nihon ja nakatta desu. |
Adjective Sentence |
Takakatta desu. |
Takaku nakatta desu. |
The adjective ii has special forms. This is the only exception in the entire class of adjectives.
Ii desu. – It’s good.
Yoku nai desu. – It’s not good.
Yokatta desu. – It was good.
Yoku nakatta desu. – It wasn’t good.
Yoku is one of the most commonly used adverbs and was already introduced in Lesson 1 as in
yoku wakarimasu, yoku tabemasu, etc. Yokatta desu nee is a common response to good news.
3-1-2 Adjective + Noun
In Lesson 2, you saw two ways of extending a noun into a noun phrase. One way is to modify a noun by another, as in the sequence /X no Y/ in the phrase Amerika no kaisha ‘American company.’ Another example is the kono-sono-ano-dono group that precedes a noun, as in ano kaisha ‘that company’. These two ways can be combined as in kono Amerika no kaisha ‘this American company.’
Adjectives can directly modify a noun to make a noun phrase (no need for the particle no).
takai keitai expensive cellphone
takaku nai keitai cellphone that is not expensive
It’s possible to combine more than one adjective or other modifying elements to extend a noun phrase.
chiisai takai keitai small, expensive cellphone
kono Amerika no chiisai takai keitai this small, expensive American cellphone
Note that all the modifying elements occur before the main noun, and that the particle no must be attached to a noun modifier wherever it occurs. The order of modifying elements is rather free, unlike in English, where there are certain restrictions.
chiisai takai kono Amerika no keitai this small, expensive American cellphone
kono watashi no keitai this cellphone of mine
watashi no kono keitai this cellphone of mine
3-1-3 arimasu ‘there is X’
The verb arimasu means ‘there is’ or ‘I have’. It indicates inanimate existence such as objects, plants, ideas, events, etc. A different verb is used for people and animals and will be introduced later. There are two negative forms for arimasu: arimasen and nai desu. The latter is less formal.
As we have seen so far, nai desu is part of the negative forms for noun and adjective sentences. Arimasen can substitute for nai desu in these forms and sounds a little more elegant.
Sumaho ja nai desu.→ Sumaho ja arimasen. It’s not a smartphone.
Takaku nai desu.→ Takaku arimasen. It’s not expensive.
Similarly, the Past form arimasen deshita can substitute for nakatta desu.
Sumaho ja nakatta desu. → Sumaho ja arimasen deshita. It wasn’t a smartphone.
Takaku nakatta desu.→ Takaku arimasen deshita. It wasn’t expensive.
The chart below shows all the forms including these alternatives.
Table 6. All the past forms of “arimasen” – affirmative and negative – as a verb sentence, noun sentence, and adjective sentence.
|
Affirmative – Non-past |
Negative – Non-past |
Verb Sentence |
Arimasu. |
Nai desu. Arimasen. |
Noun Sentence |
Nihon desu. |
Nihon ja nai desu. Nihon ja arimasen |
Adjective Sentence |
Takai desu. |
Takaku nai desu. Takaku arimasen. |
|
Affirmative – Past |
Negative – Past |
Verb Sentence |
Arimashita. |
Nakatta desu. Arimasen deshita. |
Noun Sentence |
Nihon deshita. |
Nihon ja nakatta desu. Nihon ja arimasen deshita. |
Adjective Sentence |
Takakatta desu. |
Takaku nakatta desu. Takaku arimasen deshita. |
Table 7. All the non-past forms of “arimasen” – affirmative and negative – as a verb sentence, noun sentence, and adjective sentence.
Note the difference between the following sentences.
Kaisha ja arimasen / Kaisha ja nai desu. It’s not a company. (Identity)
Kaisha wa arimasen / Kaisha wa nai desu. There is no company. (Existence)
Drills and Exercises
A.
Listen to the audio. Following the first two model exchanges, respond to each cue.
たか
Cue: 高いですか。 Takai desu ka. Is it expensive?
やす
Response: いえ、安いですよ。 Iie, yasui desu yo. No, it’s cheap, I assure you.
やす
Cue: 安いですか。Yasui desu ka. Is it cheap?
たか
Response: いえ、高いでよ。 Iie, takai desu yo. No, it’s expensive, I assure you.
B.
Cue: いいですか。Ii desu ka. Is it all right?
Response: いいえ、あまりよくないです。 Iie, amari yoku desu. No, it’s not very good.
やす
Cue: 安いですか。Yasui desu ka. Is it cheap?
やす
Response: いいえ、あまり安くないです。Iie, amari yasuku desu. No, it’s not very cheap.
C.
Cue: アパートですか。Apaato desu. Is it an apartment?
Response: いいえ、アパートじゃありません。
Iie, apaato ja arimasen. No, it’s not an apartment.
やす
Cue: 安いですか。 Yasui desu ka. Is it cheap?
やす
Response: いいえ、安くありません。Iie, yasuku arimasen. No, it’s not cheap.
D.
Cue: あれ、高かったですか。
Are, takakatta desu ka. Was that expensive?
Response: いえ、高くなかったですよ。
Ie, takaku nakatta desu yo. No, it wasn’t.
Cue: あれ、新しかったですか。
Are, atarashikatta desu ka? Was that new?
Response: いえ、新しくなかったですよ。
Ie, atarashiku nakatta desu yo. No it wasn’t.
E. Say it in Japanese.
You’ve been asked your opinion about an apartment.
- Let me see…isn’t it big?
- It’s a little old. Aren’t there any new apartments?
- It’s not very expensive, but I wonder if it might not be small.
- I saw it yesterday. It was nice.
- There are many small apartments, but big ones are scarce, aren’t they?
F. Act in Japanese with a partner.
- Ms. Honda is checking apartment listings. Ask if there is anything good.
- Ms. Honda has recently moved into a new apartment. Find out how she likes it.
- At a store, you saw a nice bag, but it’s small. Get the attention of a clerk and ask if there is a big one.
- A co-worker just broke great news to you. Respond.
- Ms. Honda went to see an apartment yesterday. Ask her a) how it was, b) if it was good, c) if it wasn’t old.
- You’ve been asked about your a) apartment, b) school, c) company. Describe.