Noga Funeral Home Obituaries. (The rules for te-form are more complex. ピアノを弾く【ひ
(The rules for te-form are more complex. ピアノを弾く【ひく】。 I play the piano. を and が are case markers and the choice between them depends on the other part of the sentence; whether a verb that assigns a を argument is used, or a verbal nominal adjective (such as 好き that takes が for object marking 1), or a stative clause. ピアノを弾く【ひく】のが好き【すき】です。 I like playing the piano. (I searched for t Dec 20, 2013 · How about this: 彼女たちは 日本語を 勉強したことが あります。 Kanojo-tachi wa nihon-go o benkyō shita koto ga arimasu. ) In particular, の Listening to the first Pimsleur Japanese audiobook and I'm having a hard time recognizing the words its saying. ピアノを弾く【ひく】ことが好き The nominalisation occurs with just の. Someone told me that these aren't actually particles, but they're separate particles put together. Are the following phrases exactly the same in terms of meaning? And are they all correct in terms of grammar? Can I use them interchangably? tokyo e iku tokyo e iku n tokyo e iku no da t As Derek mentioned in his postscript, both こと and の are nominalizers that can turn a verb into a noun. Are the following phrases exactly the same in terms of meaning? And are they all correct in terms of grammar? Can I use them interchangably? tokyo e iku tokyo e iku n tokyo e iku no da t Someone told me that these aren't actually particles, but they're separate particles put together.
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