Archive for August, 2008

Aug2008 30

Do as the Japanese do, and prepare yourself to admire the most beautiful moon, 中秋の名月, the full moon in mid-autumn.

banner-moonviewing.jpg

This text is aimed at advanced beginners and intermediate learners, letting you know more about Japanese culture, at the same time as you learn kanji and new words.

In the text, the pronunciation and translation of words in kanji is hidden, so that you have the chance to practise the vocabulary. If you make a selection over the hidden text, it will appear. All hidden words are also listed in the vocabulary section.

Moon Viewing is an Old Tradition

moon-ikebukuro.jpgIn the 旧暦 (), 春 () is January, February and March, 夏 () is April, May and June, 秋 () is July, August and September, and 冬 () is October, November and December. Furthermore, the three months of each season have names containing the three words 初 (), 中 () and 晩 (). In 秋, for example, July is 初秋 (), August is 中秋 () and September is 晩秋 (). A full moon in August has the special name 中秋の名月(). Even though the moon may not be full that particular night, it is celebrated on the 9th of September, which corresponds to the 15th of August in the old calendar.

You can see a 満月 () several times in a year as you know, and it’s said that the one in the autumn looks the most beautiful. Maybe it’s because Japanese 秋 has dry and clear air. You might not do anything special on the night of the 9th of September, but still a clear sky and complete 満月 are welcomed. For some reason, you want to confirm how the 月 () looks.

Vocabulary

  • 旧暦 (きゅうれき – kyuureki – old calendar)
  • 春 (はる – haru/shun – spring)
  • 夏 (なつ – natsu/ka – summer)
  • 秋 (あき、シュウ – aki/shuu – autumn)
  • 冬 (ふゆ – fuyu/tou – winter)
  • 初 (しょ – sho – early, beginning)
  • 中 (なか – naka – mid-, middle)
  • 晩 (ばん – ban – late, ending)– the primary meaning of this kanji is “evening”, so it’s also used for “endings” of things.
  • 初秋 (しょしゅう – shoshuu – July)
  • 中秋 (ちゅうしゅう – chuushuu – August)
  • 晩秋 (ばんしゅう – banshuu -  September)
  • 中秋の名月(ちゅうしゅうのめいげつ – chuushuu no meigetsu – harvest moon in mid-autumn)
  • 月 (つき – tsuki – moon) (another reading is ゲツ, getsu, which is primarily used in compound words)
  • 満月 (まんげつ – mangetsu – full moon)

Seasonal food

dango.jpgYou might prepare some things for the night. On the table near the window, you arrange すすき (), and some food like 団子 (). This is a sticky Japanese sweet made of rice powder, and recently lots of supermarkets have small mountains of 団子 for お月見 (). Originally 里芋 () was used for お月見, but this seems to have been replaced nowadays by other round food like 団子 and fruits like 梨 (). You admire the beautiful 月 (), preferably 満月 of course, and at the same time also the 月 should be able to “see” those things on the table. So, you open the curtain on the night of お月見. If the night is warmer, you can open the window. It’s quite comfortable to feel the soft wind while hearing the singing of autumn’s insects under the 月.

By the way, the 9th of September is one of five Japanese  節句 (). There were lots of 節句 derived from customs in China, but only five 節句 were given official status in 江戸時代 (), it’s said. The dates of the five 節句 are the 7th of January, the 3rd of March, the 5th of May, the 7th of July and the 9th of September. Originally people used to do some things to drive away bad things like illness during each 節句, like floating hina dolls downstream at the end of Hinamatsuri. But apparently only some of these customs remain.

Vocabulary

  • すすき (susuki – Japanese pampas grass)
  • 団子 (だんご – dango – (sweet) dumpling)
  • お月見 (おつきみ – otsukimi – moon viewing)
  • 里芋 (さといも – satoimo – taro)
  • 梨 (なし – nashi – Japanese pear)
  • 節句 (せっく – sekku – seasonal celebration)
  • 江戸時代 (えどじだい – Edo period)

Kaguya-hime

Speaking of お月見, there is a story that 月 reminds us of. The story is about a beautiful girl called かぐや姫 (), and it’s also said this is the first Japanese SF story. Once upon a time, an old couple got a pretty baby girl from a bamboo. They cherished her as their true child, but she grew up impossibly fast, and after avoiding many men who wanted her for a wife, she got back to the moon because she was a moon person. The story is dramatic and sad, and has given inspiration to many people, it seems. The story often has 平安時代 () illustrations, so such gorgeous pictures and the mystery of the moon make the story more fascinating, I think.

Vocabulary

  • かぐや姫 (かぐやひめ – kaguya-hime – Princess Kaguya)
  • 平安時代 (へいあんじだい – heian jidai – Heian period),

Notes

  • 名月 – めいげつ – meigetsu

名月 seems to be translated as “harvest moon”, but when saying 中秋の名月, I think there is a better translation. The kanji 名 can also mean “famous, excellent, great”, not only “name”. So, 中秋の名月 can be “excellent moon in mid-autumn”, I think. The second kanji, 月, can mean month as well as moon, and its pronunciation changes in combinations with other kanji.

  • 月 – つき – tsuki – moon, month
  • 満月 – まんげつ – mangetsu – full moon
  • 月曜日 – げつようび – getsuyoubi – Monday

Each of Japanese month’s name has this kanji also:

  • 1月 – いちがつ – ichigatsu – January
  • 2月 – にがつ – nigatsu – February
  • 3月 – さんがつ – sangatsu – March
  • 4月 – しがつ – shigatsu – April
  • 5月 – ごがつ – gogatsu – May
  • 6月 – ろくがつ – rokugatsu – June
  • 7月 – しちがつ – shichigatsu – July
  • 8月 – はちがつ – hachigatsu – August
  • 9月 – くがつ – kugatsu – September
  • 10月 – じゅうがつ – juugatsu – October
  • 11月 – じゅういちがつ – juuichigatsu – November
  • 12月 – じゅうにがつ – juunigatsu – December

By Shizu

And edited by the StudyJapanese.org Team

Aug2008 15

Wouldn’t it be useful to have a Dictionary always at hand when you study Japanese? The free application zKanji can be installed on your own PC to support your studies.

zkanji_thumb.png What is zKanji

There is a free program named zKanji, available at http://zkanji.sourceforge.net/. It has built-in word and kanji dictionaries, and an optional (but highly recommended) database of sentence examples. It is extremely versatile when used as a study tool, helping with issues such as verb and adjective conjugations and finding out which particles are used with a verb, as well as the more obvious issues of vocabulary acquisition and learning to read kanji.

This article will give some tips on ways you can use zKanji to promote your Japanese language learning.

The Dictionary

The dictionary in zKanji can be used in two different modes; Full Size and Popup.

zkanji-all-thumb.jpg

Full Size Mode

If you start the program normally, there will be three windows on the screen, one of which is the dictionary (the other two are the kanji window, and the study groups window).

Popup

If you click the minimize button on any of these windows, all three disappear and an icon for zKanji appears in your system tray. When zKanji is minimized, you can use the dictionary as a small popup window in the lower right hand corner of your screen. (You can adjust its size as needed.) This helps when you want to look at something else at the same time– like the chat box at the StudyJapanese web site. You can make the popup visible by right clicking on the zKanji icon in the sytem tray and selecting either “Japanese to English” or “English to Japanese.” (You can also configure keyboard shortcuts, like Ctrl+Alt+J and Ctrl+Alt+E to carry out these commands.) In the image below, the zKanji icon is the icon in the system tray which is a white box containing part of the red kanji in handwritten style, and the popup dictionary is the window above the system tray. [Note: The image has not yet been updated, and shows an older version of the icon.]

Activities in the Dictionary

Here are some learning activities you can do with the dictionary.

Learn Hiragana

When the dictionary is in Japanese to English mode, it will convert roomaji (Roman letters) into hiragana as you type them into the Search window. If you type in words you are familiar with in roomaji, this is an easy way to see what they look like spelled in hiragana. It can also be used in place of an IME (input method)– you can copy and paste the hiragana which appear in the Search window into another program (e.g. the StudyJapanese chat box). In the image below, the white text highlighted with blue is the result of typing “wakarimashita” or “wakarimasita.”

wakarimashita.jpg

Practice Conjugating Verbs and Adjectives

First make sure that the inflection (“Inf”) button is toggled on (it will be blue) and that you are in Japanese to English mode. Now if you type an inflected word into the Search window, such as “wakarimashita” (わかりました), the dictionary will not only select the verb “wakaru” (分かる, わかる) in the results list, it will also tell you that the inflection you have typed in is the polite past (at the beginning of the meaning column– see image above). Similarly, if you type in “hanasemasen”, it will tell you that this is the potential, polite negative form of the verb “hanasu”, meaning “to speak” (see image below), and if you type in “tanoshikatta”, it will tell you that this is the (plain) past form of the adjective “tanoshii”, meaning “enjoyable” or “fun”. If you type in a wrong spelling, such as “kitte” when you really meant “kite”, you will find out that you have conjugated a different verb than you intended to, or that you have written something which is not a correct spelling of a conjugation of any verb.

Check which particles go with a verb

Is it “nihongo o wakarimasu” or “nihongo ga wakarimasu”? If you’re not sure, type “wakarimasu” or “wakaru” into the Search window. Make sure that the examples (“Ex”) button is toggled on and that you have installed the examples database file. You can now step through many example sentences containing forms of the verb wakarimasu, and see what particles occur just before it (the form of “wakaru” will always appear in red). Press the forwards triangle button to get to the next sentence. You will find that “ga” often occurs, as does “wa”, and (less often) “to”, but that “o” never appears. (See the example sentence in the image with わかりました (wakarimashita) highlighted in blue.)

Explore how any word is used in the context of a sentence

Not sure how to use the word “suki”? Follow the instructions above, typing “suki” into the Search box. If there are words you don’t know in an example sentence, position the mouse pointer over the word to get its pronunciation, and click on the word to go to its definition. Since you will still have the same example sentence showing, you can click on 好き to get back to more sentences for “suki.”

[I will add more learning activities, and descriptions of other parts of the zKanji program.]

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Article by tony

Aug2008 14

In the lesson on numbers (L105), you learned that different counting words (“counters”) need to be used for counting different kinds of things. To make things harder, these counters often undergo sound changes when combined with different numbers.

The list below gives some common counters, and how they are pronounced in combination with numbers from 1 to 10.

If you don’t know the specific counter for something, you can always use the generic counter “tsu” (see the section on this in L105). But this will sound strange if you are using them in place of one of the more common counters.

People

Counting People:

  • Pronunciations:  ri (only for one and two), nin (all other numbers)
  • One to ten: hitori, futari, sannin, yonin, gonin, rokunin, nananin or shichinin, hachinin, kyuunin, juunin
  • How many: nannin

Example

 

三人の学生
sannin no gakusei
three students

 

Counting Years of Age: 歳, 才

  • Pronunciations:  sai
  • One to ten: issai, nisai, sansai, yonsai, gosai, rokusai, nanasai, hassai, kyuusai, jussai
  • Exception: hatachi (twenty years old)
  • How many: nansai

Animals

Animals are counted with special words, often depending on the size of the animal.

Counting Small Animals:

  • Pronunciations: hiki, biki, piki
  • One to ten: ippiki, nihiki, sanbiki, yonhiki, gohiki, roppiki, nanhiki or shichihiki, happiki, kyuuhiki, juppiki
  • How many: nanbiki

Example

一匹の猫
ippiki no neko
one cat

Counting Birds, Rabbits, Frogs, etc. (flying or hopping animals):

  • Pronunciations:  wa, ba, pa
  • One to ten: ichiwa, niwa, sanba, yonwa, gowa, rokuwa or roppa, nanawa or shichiwa, hachiwa or happa, kyuuwa, juuwa or juppa
  • How many: nanba

Example

五羽の兎
gowa no usagi
five rabbits

Counting Horses, Cows, Large Animals:

  • Pronunciations:  tou
  • One to ten: ittou, nitou, santou, yontou, gotou, rokutou, nanatou, hattou or hachitou, kyuutou, juttou
  • How many: nantou

Example

四十頭の牛
yonjuttou no ushi
forty cows or forty head of cattle

Objects Classified by Shape

Many things are classified by their shape, this may for instance depend on if they are round, flat, cylindric or spheric.

Counting Flat Objects (paper, postage stamps, etc.):

  • Pronunciations: mai
  • One to ten: ichimai, nimai, sanmai, yonmai, gomai, rokumai, nanamai or shichimai, hachimai, kyuumai, juumai
  • How many: nanmai

Example

一枚の紙
ichimai no kami
a sheet of paper, one sheet of paper

Counting Long, Slender Objects (pencils, trees, rolls of film, etc.):

  • Pronunciations: hon, bon, pon
  • One to ten: ippon, nihon, sanbon, yonhon, gohon, roppon or rokuhon, nanahon, happon, kyuuhon, juppon
  • How many:nanbon

Example

八本のボールペン
happon no boorupen
eight ball-point pens

Counting Small Objects with Irregular Shapes:

  • Pronunciations: ko
  • One to ten: ikko, niko, sanko, yonko, goko, rokko, nanako, hachiko, kyuuko, jukko
  • How many: nanko

Example

六個のねじ
rokko no neji
six screws

Other counters

Some things have counters used only for that type of object, for instance books and magazines use the counter -satsu.

Counting Books, Magazines, etc.:

  • Pronunciations: satsu
  • One to ten: issatsu, nisatsu, sansatsu, yonsatsu, gosatsu, rokusatsu, nanasatsu, hassatsu, kyuusatsu, jussatsu
  • How many: nansatsu

Examples

二冊の辞書
nisatsu no jisho
two dictionaries

同じ本を二冊
onaji hon o nisatsu
two copies of the same book

Cupfuls of things to Drink:

  • Pronunciations: hai, bai, pai
  • One to ten: ippai, nihai, sanbai, yonhai, gohai, rokuhai or roppai, nanahai, hachihai or happai, kyuuhai, juppai
  • How many: nanbai

Example

二杯のお茶
nihai no ocha
two cups of (green) tea

Pairs of Footwear:

  • Pronunciations: soku
  • One to ten: issoku, nisoku, sansoku, yonsoku, gosoku, rokusoku, nanasoku, hassoku, kyuusoku, jussoku
  • How many: nansoku

Example

三足の靴
sansoku no kutsu
three pairs of shoes

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