Beliskna wrote:Hi all,
Could someone please explain the difference between tatoe and tatoeba please. Also what would it mean to say:
tatoeba ne namida ga koboreru hi ni ha
*doesn't know why but always gets irked when non-native Japanese speakers type ha instead of wa* tatoeba is "for example" and is pretty well a set expression. Here it means "say, for instance on days when the [lit. overflow] tears pour out..."
tatoe, on the other hand, is sort of an emphasizer for
temo/demo, like
tatoe doko ni itemo "no matter where you are."
And what is the purpose of the ne in the sentence
Just like you can say
kyou wa ne or
watashi wa ne, it just kinda buys time in the sentence and gets the listener to pay more attention. It doesn't really mean much of anything.
I would also be grateful for answers to:
1. What does sono mean in sono senaka
2. What does jime mean as in hitorijime
1.
sono means "that." You'll often hear words like this in songs to refer to the singer's object of affection.
2.
jime comes from the word
shimeru meaning "to hold" or "to constitute." Thus
hitorijime is "one person hold" or "monopoly."