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Sentence-making of Japanese interrogative sentences
1. Japanese interrogative sentences are interrogative sentences. Japanese interrogative sentences are divided into general interrogative sentences, special interrogative sentences and selective interrogative sentences. One of the same characteristics of Japanese interrogative sentences is that a interrogative demonstrator "か" is added at the end of the sentence to describe the sentence. The rising tone is generally used at the end of a sentence, without question marks, and the word order of each component of the sentence remains unchanged. "か" is sometimes omitted in spoken English. Most of the general questions correspond to "ma" in Chinese, while most of the special questions and multiple-choice questions correspond to "you" in Chinese or untranslated. "か" is often used with "です" at the end of a sentence, but generally it cannot be used with "だ".

1, general question

Questions that need to be answered with the positive word "はぃ" or the negative word "ぃぃぇ". "For example:

★ Member of Tanaka Association.

Sanwa Tanaka drives Shane Desuka.

Tanaka, are you a company employee?

Chinese food is delicious.

chka-ryri-wa oishi-I-desu-ka。

Is Chinese food delicious?

★ Japan のテレビのがぃですか.

Japan-Noterebi-Wayaky-Nobangumi-GA-I-Desu-Ka.

Are there many baseball programs on Japanese TV?

Borrow books from the library and travel.

Tosho-Kan -e Han -o Kari-Niyi-Ki-Ma Su-Ka.

Do you borrow books from the library?

General interrogative sentences can also be composed of verbs plus "…ましょぅか" or "…ませんか". This kind of general interrogative sentence is particularly polite, indicating euphemistic persuasion, and the persuader often participates in it. Answer this persuasion with "はぃましょぅ" in the affirmative, and "ぃぃぇません" in the negative. For example:

★ — ピンポンをしませんか。

— はい,しましょう。

Pingpeng-Ausch-Mason-Ka.

Sea, stone-marsh.

How about we play table tennis?

Ok, let's start playing!

★—— Look at the painting.

-No, look.

eiga-o mi-mash-ka

Mi mason.

Shall we go to the movies?

No I don't.

2. The sentences used to question a specific part of a sentence are collectively called special interrogative sentences. For example:

★ Today is はですか.

ky-wa nan-y bi-desu-ka。

What day is it today?

★ どのよぅなをみたぃのですか.

Hello, hello, hello.

What kind of novel do you want to read?

Step 3 choose interrogative sentences

Multiple choice questions are questions that provide two or more situations for the other party to choose from. In view of the fact that "か" in Japanese general questions mostly corresponds to "Ma" in Chinese, and "か" in special questions and multiple-choice questions mostly corresponds to "You" in Chinese or untranslated, multiple-choice questions can also be classified as special questions. For example:

★ このペンはさんのですか, それともさん.

Kono pen club Tanaka, soretomo Ri-san-no-

Desu-ka.

Is this pen Tanaka's or Xiao Li's?

★ のはどれですか.

No, honey, Dory.

Which one is a history book?

2. Japanese interrogative sentence 1: Kuはどこ (interrogative noun). I know. I don't know.

Library はどこ (interrogative noun )だか, Zhiってぃますか.

Nouns cannot be used as predicates directly, so auxiliary verbs such as [だ] or [です] are needed.

2: どのがしぃ (adjective) ですかわかりますか.

どのがしぃ (adjective) かわかりますか

Adjectives can be predicates. So you don't need [だ]; Besides, if it is followed by [だ], it is wrong.

Adjective followed by [です] is an expression of respect for the body.

I hope I can help you.

Please tell me the meaning of "Japanese interrogative sentence". Please look at the following sentences:

1, who's here? Who knows?

2.どのよぅなごかぅかがぃます.

3.このはだれが? ? ぃ county? Ⅳ cesium? Willett? ?

There are several similarities in the first half of these sentences:

1 is a complete sentence and a simple sentence.

There are interrogative words in this sentence.

The auxiliary word "か" is at the end of the sentence.

The first half sentence is a part of the whole sentence (subject, object, complement, etc.). ), followed by corresponding verbs such as かる, ぅ, てる, る, ぅ, ぅ.

This kind of sentence is called "interrogative sentence"

4. I asked two Japanese teachers a Japanese sentence question, which was really a grammatical mistake. Of course, as a Japanese, I think "なんとなくのじでしかわかしかな". Therefore, if the landlord wants to learn correct and decent Japanese, it is better not to learn oral English from Japanese dramas.

By the way, I learned Japanese in Lezhi.

Call me in advance when you arrive at the station, and I will meet you at the station.

⒕ (ぇき) ぇつく 30 minutes ago (まぇぇぇぇにはや) めに phone call (に

I don't answer the phone, just press it to hear it, save money.

Telephone storage (せつやく) and storage (でぃまま).

In advance, the translation of this word and not answering the phone directly presses this sentence.

Prophase: prophase (まぇもって), anaphase (ぁらかじ), prophase (はや).

If you don't answer the phone, just press it: call out, call out, cancel.