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wccrawford wrote:The book I'm reading for grammar (a manga guide to japanese, I think it was) says that 'no' in that position means the sentence is explaining something.
I may get this wrong, but here we go:
What color is that car? aoi desu. (not explaining, just stating.)
Why did you buy that car? aoi no desu. (explaining why.) Might also be 'aoi n desu' or 'aoi no'.
Please, somebody correct me if I've misunderstood.
rpgherogaz wrote:wccrawford wrote:The book I'm reading for grammar (a manga guide to japanese, I think it was) says that 'no' in that position means the sentence is explaining something.
I may get this wrong, but here we go:
What color is that car? aoi desu. (not explaining, just stating.)
Why did you buy that car? aoi no desu. (explaining why.) Might also be 'aoi n desu' or 'aoi no'.
Please, somebody correct me if I've misunderstood.
This does make sence to me. using the examples i have, it kind of makes it seem like a exclamation more than a explanation however, maybe it has some interogative feature?
Javizy wrote:It's a very soft explanatory/emphatic particle used by children or women. It works the same as 'n(o) da'. I'd explain it more, but I'd just reference the book I recommended, so you might as well buy it and read it straight from the source. You'll be punching in the dark with all sorts of grammar without this gem, and in a lot of cases it will be when you already think you know something inside out. I guarantee you'll learn something about even the most basic points by reading the explanations in this book.