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Treating verbs and state-of-being like adjectives
Have you noticed how, many forms of verbs and the state-of-being conjugate in a similar manner to i-adjectives? Well, that is because, in a sense,
they are adjectives. For example, consider the sentence: "The person who did not eat went to bank." The "did not eat" describes the person and
in Japanese, you can directly modify the noun 'person' with the clause 'did not eat' just like a regular adjective. This very simple realization will
allow us to modify a noun with any arbitrary verb phrase!
Using state-of-being subclauses as adjectives
The negative, past, and negative past conjugations of nouns can be used just like adjectives to directly
modify nouns. However, we cannot do this with the plain non-past state-of-being using 「だ」. (I told you this was a pain in the butt.)
You cannot use 「だ」 to directly modify a noun with a noun
like you can with 「だった」、「じゃない」、and 「じゃなかった」.
You can, however, have a string of nouns placed together when they're not meant to modify each other. For example, in a phrase such as
"International Education Center" you can see that it is just a string of nouns without any grammatical modifications between them. It's not an
"Education Center that is International" or a "Center for International Education", etc., it's just "International Education Center".
In Japanese, you can express this as simply 「国際教育センタ」 (or 「センター」). You will see this chaining of nouns in many combinations.
Sometimes a certain
combination is so commonly used that it has almost become a separate word and is even listed as a separate entry in some dictionaries.
Some examples include: 「登場人物」、「立入禁止」、or 「通勤手当」. If you have difficulties in figuring out where to separate the
words, you can paste them into the WWWJDICs Translate Words in Japanese Text
function and it'll parse the words for you (most of the time).
Examples
Here are some examples of direct noun modifications with a conjugated noun clause. The noun clause has been highlighted.
(1) 学生じゃない人は、学校に行かない。
- Person who is not student do not go to school.
(2) 子供だったアリスが立派な大人になった。
- The Alice that was a child became a fine adult.
(3) 友達じゃなかったアリスは、いい友達になった。
- Alice who was not a friend, became a good friend.
(4) 先週に医者だったボブは、仕事を辞めた。
- Bob who was a doctor last week quit his job.
Using subordinate verb clauses as adjectives
Verbs clauses can also be used just like adjectives to modify nouns. The following examples show us how this will allow us to make quite detailed and
complicated sentences. The verb clause is highlighted.
Examples
(1) 先週に映画を見た人は誰?
- Who is person who watched movie last week?
(2) ボブは、いつも勉強する人だ。
- Bob is a person who always studies.
(3) 赤いズボンを買う友達はボブだ。
- Friend who buy red pants is Bob.
(4) 晩ご飯を食べなかった人は、映画で見た銀行に行った。
- Person who did not eat dinner went to the bank she saw at movie.
Japanese Sentence Order
Now that we've learned the concept of subordinate clauses and how they are used as building blocks to make sentences, I can go over how Japanese sentence
ordering works. There's this myth that keeps floating around about Japanese sentence order that continues to plague many hapless beginners to Japanese.
Here's how it goes.
The most basic sentence structure in English can be described as consisting of the following elements in this specific order: [Subject] [Verb] [Object].
A sentence is not grammatically correct if any of those elements are missing or out of order.
Japanese students will tell you that Japanese, on the other hand, while frothing at the mouth, is completely backwards!! Even some Japanese teacher might tell you
that the basic Japanese sentence order is [Subject] [Object] [Verb]. This is a classic example of trying to fit Japanese into an English-based type of thinking.
Of course, we all know (right?) that the real order of the fundamental Japanese sentence is: [Verb].
Anything else that comes before the verb doesn't have to come in any particular order and nothing more than the verb is required to make a complete sentence.
In addition, the verb must always come at the end.
That's the whole point of even having particles so that they can identify what grammatical function a word serves no matter where it is in the sentence.
In fact, nothing will stop us from making a sentence with [Object] [Subject] [Verb] or just [Object] [Verb]. The following sentences are all complete and correct
because the verb is at the end of the sentence.
Grammatically complete and correctly ordered sentences
(1) 私は公園でお弁当を食べました。
(2) 公園で私はお弁当を食べました。
(3) お弁当を私は公園で食べました。
(4) 弁当を食べた。
(5) 食べた。
So don't sweat over whether your sentence is in the correct order. Just remember the following rules.
Japanese sentence order
A complete sentence requires a main verb that must come at the end. This also includes the implied state-of-being.
例) 食べた 例) 学生(だ)
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