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QuackingShoe wrote:In the future, it's useful to use google for this sort of thing. Type whatever it is between quotation marks, "". To use your example, 便利ならしい has 8 results. 便利らしい has 47,400.
It's a lot faster (and frequently more accurate) than trying to extrapolate any given usage from a grammar guide.
Javizy wrote:I'd recommend this series of books for all your grammar reference/learning needs. The latter two have loads of points you probably don't even know exist, it is almost overwhelming to flick through the things
ochazuke wrote:Javizy wrote:I'd recommend this series of books for all your grammar reference/learning needs. The latter two have loads of points you probably don't even know exist, it is almost overwhelming to flick through the things
Which one specifically would you recommend? I've got the master series for san-kyuu, and its entry on rashii is quite pitiful. It only has examples for noun+rashii. No verb+rashii nor na-adj+rashii.
I guess I could have assumed the conjugation for the na-adj was the same as the noun, but I hate assuming things such as that, much less relying on google search result numbers without context.
Javizy wrote:The basic volume covers everything on JLPT 3+4 plus a bit more. There's also some useful stuff in the 'characteristics of Japanese Grammar' section and the appendices.
The follow-up volumes have hundreds of grammar points from JLPT 2, and I'm guessing 1, although I haven't studied for it and the book isn't JLPT-geared. The advanced volume has a number of points covered in the upper intermediate lessons, as well as stuff you can still use in conversation, so don't be so put off by "advanced" in the title.
It really depends how you study. One thing I like doing is reading manga and books, so I like to be able to look up and learn whatever I come across, rather than limiting myself, and that's what these dictionaries allow me to do.
As for the quality of the entries, they are very comprehensive, and more detailed than anything else I've come across. You'll probably be able to learn something about points you already believe you know well. One of the best things about it is the comparisons of related expressions, for example, under the ようだ entry, そうだ、だろう、らしい and ようだ are compared.
Javizy wrote:Ah, seems my search values weren't saved in the URL. The books are called A Dictionary of Basic/Intermediate/Advanced Japanese Grammar by Seiichi Makino.
ochazuke wrote:QuackingShoe wrote:In the future, it's useful to use google for this sort of thing. Type whatever it is between quotation marks, "". To use your example, 便利ならしい has 8 results. 便利らしい has 47,400.
It's a lot faster (and frequently more accurate) than trying to extrapolate any given usage from a grammar guide.
hmm, err, thanks,...but I think I know how to use the internet already.
WalterWills wrote:There's no need for that...
If you had actually done that then you wouldn't have needed to ask the question.
ochazuke wrote:Not that it did matter, but I did search other sources and had exhausted all of them.