Question
Updated on
18 Jul 2020
- Spanish (Spain)
-
English (US)
-
Japanese
Question about Japanese
que tiene de diferencia "ga arimasu" de "ga imasu"
lo mismo con "kono sono y asoko" de kore, sore y "are"
que tiene de diferencia "ga arimasu" de "ga imasu"
lo mismo con "kono sono y asoko" de kore, sore y "are"
lo mismo con "kono sono y asoko" de kore, sore y "are"
Answers
18 Jul 2020
Featured answer
- Japanese
“arimasu” (formal) means “exist” referrinh to inanimate things. Like TV, Book, Tree, Park, etc.
“Imasu” means exist reffering to animate thing like human, animal etc.
Both “arimasu” and “imasu” work as Predicate in the sentence and use particle “Ga” before predicate.
Noun GA (IMASU/ARIMASU)
This sentence is used to indicate the existence or presence of a thing(s) or person (s)
I.e
INU ga IMASU (there is a dog)
HON ga Arimasu (there is a book)
Read more comments
- Japanese
- Japanese
- Spanish (Spain)
- Japanese
"ga arimasu" es generalmente usado por algo y "ga imasu" por alguien.
- Japanese
kono sono son como este ese.
La diferencia es la distancia.
kore > sore >are
kono > sono > asoko
kore y kono indican mas cercano.
- Japanese
“arimasu” (formal) means “exist” referrinh to inanimate things. Like TV, Book, Tree, Park, etc.
“Imasu” means exist reffering to animate thing like human, animal etc.
Both “arimasu” and “imasu” work as Predicate in the sentence and use particle “Ga” before predicate.
Noun GA (IMASU/ARIMASU)
This sentence is used to indicate the existence or presence of a thing(s) or person (s)
I.e
INU ga IMASU (there is a dog)
HON ga Arimasu (there is a book)
- Japanese
This is called KO-SO-A-DO
KOno (this ~ near w speaker)
SOno ( that~ far from speaker but near with partner speak)
Ano ( that~ (over there) far both from speaker and partner)
DOno quest form
.
KOko (here~ place near speaker)
SOko (there~ place near partner speak)
Asoko (there~ (place over there) far from both speaker and partner)
DOko quest. Form
.
Kore (this (thing near speaker)
SOre (that (thing near partner speak)
Are (that ~ (thing over there)
DOre quest form
.
- Spanish (Spain)
- Japanese
Los articulos pospositivos como wa, ni, mo, etc son usado antes de imasu y arimasu, segun el contexto.
- Japanese

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