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Japanese Grammar Check . I Will Be Grateful If Someone Can Really Help.

Would someone (seriously) teach me japanese?

♡If possible, the BEST way to learn Japanese is from native speakers. That's how I learned. The reason I say this is because you will learn the correct pronunciation and native speaking style. If this is NOT available to you, take a class where speaking is used. Practicing the speaking part is important. There are many on line sites you can try as well:♡
http://yesjapan.com/.
http://www.freejapaneselessons.com/
http://www.csse.monash.edu.au/~jwb/wwwjd...
http://www.learn-japanese.info/
http://genki.yousei-ziploc.com/main.php
http://www.learn-japanese.net/webpages/1/
http://mysite.wanadoo-members.co.uk/nihongo/contents.html
http://www.japaneselearning.com/index.php?option=content&task=category§ionid=2&id=8&Itemid=27
http://www.japanippon.com/japanese/classroom.htm
http://www.kanachart.com/
http://www.kanjisite.com/
***There are so many.
Check the language exchange Network too:
http://www.sharedtalk.com/
♡Hope this helps, good luck learning Japanese!♡

Is "I greatly appreciate your help" grammatically correct?

Yes, it’s correct, but formal and a little bit old fashioned. More usual would be Thanks for your help, I appreciate it. Or if the ‘help’ is understood, simply Thanks, I appreciate it.I suppose that if you want to make your thanks more fulsome, then Thanks for your help, I greatly appreciate it is the obvious choice; though still formal, as well as being a bit of a mouthful. So you could shorten it a little with: Thanks for your help, greatly appreciated.Thanks (for your help) - much appreciated is shorter still, and would be my choice; in that I can’t think of anything else at the moment.You may now practice all this by thanking me for my help; it would be appreciated.

How do I say I'm very grateful in Japanese?

Hi, I'm a jujitsu student and I'll be leaving to go back to my country and have to say goodbye to my sensei in a week. I was hoping to say something like

"Thank you and I'm very grateful that you were looking out for me/taking care of me."

I know a little japanese but not enough to construct this sentence properly. All help will be appreciated and if you could phrase it in multiple ways, that would be very cool!

Question about Japanese grammar?

~te kure
This is a command.
~te kurete
This means that someone other than the speaker has done the action. I have to tell to you to be careful when using this, cause you cannot end a sentence in this form.
Ex: Kanojo wa hon wo agetekurete.. No, that doesn't make any sense at all.
There must be another sentence after that, since 'te' works like a conjunction.
And it is hard to use this form using the verb 'agete'
How about I change it in to 'help' (tasukeru), tasukeru+kureru+te form= tasukete kurete
Okay here is an example:
Watashi wo tasukete kurete, arigatai desu. (I am grateful that you helped me.)
~te kureta This is just a past form.

(ADVANCED)
The kind of root word in these is the word: 'kureru' which means the action if done by someone other than the speaker. The speaker is the receiver of the action, but not the one who did the action.
If you use it in a question, it would be a request.
Watashi wo tasuketekuremasenka? (Could you help me?)
Watashi wo tasuketekurenai?

This is confusing to use for an inquisitive sentence though! Sorry, I seem to have made it a bit complicating!

The below could be literally translated as (Could you 'not' help me?) Note that it has the words 'masen' or 'nai' which has the meaning of disagreement/denial.
Watashi wo tasuketekuremasenka?
Watashi wo tasuketekurenai?

Need help with some Japanese!!?

1)
"Oretachi mo omae no nakama da!"
"Wakaranai no ka?"
(+ How would you say "Did you forget?") "Wasureta no ka?"

2)
"Ma! Anta wa hontouni baka da!"
"MochiroN daijoubu da!"
(+ Where is honki used) ??? I don't see what you mean. You could say, "Anta wa honki de baka da!" and "Mochiron honki de daijoubu da!"

3)
"Koko no subete ga yarashii na!
(+ How would one say "I want to leave right now") "Imasugu detai/saritai"

'I did' e.g "I understood":
Wakari mashita - formal (pre masu form of the dictionary form + mashita (the past form of masu))
Wakatta desu- formal (katta past form of the dictionary form + desu)
Wakatta - informal (katta past form of the dictionary form)

'I didn't' e.g "I didn't know":
Shirimasen deshita - formal (masen negative form of the dictionary form + deshita (the past form of desu))
Shirana katta desu - formal (katta past form of the dictionary form + desu)
Shirana katta - informal (katta past form of the dictionary form)

'I wanted to' e.g "I wanted to help":
Tasuketakatta desu, or Tetsudaitakatta desu - formal (katta past form of the dictionary form + desu)
Tasuketakatta, or Tetsudaitakatta - informal (katta past form of the dictionary form)

'I couldn't' e.g "I couldn't help":
Tasukeraremasen deshita, or Tetsudaemasen deshita - formal
Tasukerarenakatta desu, or Tetsudaenakatta desu - formal (the potential past form of the dictionary form + desu)
Tasukerarenakatta, or Tetsudaenakatta. - informal (the potential past form of the dictionary form)

Hope this helps!

How to say "Sorry for my poor grammar" in Japanese?

すみません、わるい文保のため。
sumimasen, warui bunpo no tame
sorry for my poor grammar

日本語から英語翻訳が得意ではないので、頻繁に翻訳を参照して.
Nihongo kara eigo hon'yaku ga tokuide wanainode, hinpan ni hon'yaku o sanshō shite.
Not very good at translating japanese, so I often refer to a translator.

許してください誤解
Yurushitekudasai gokai
Please forgive me for misunderstanding

Check my japanese please?

1, asa nanoni keki o tabemashita
the consept here is right, noni, means although. but together with noun before this word, nanoni is used.
tabemasu - taberu (present tence)
tabemashita - past

2, asa, jyu ichi ji ni asagohan o tabemashita
to specify the time with in the period of time, (month, day, morning,,,,) "no" is used rather than "de".
de usually mark the place where something is happening, happened, or going to happen.
when "de" is used with "time", usually it marks the end of the time line where you(something) have(had) benn doing .
matsuri ha ashita de owari desu. ( the festival will be finished tomorrow.)

3, I think its good.

4, sen shu matsu ha uchini kaerimashita
kono-indicates "this" coming (weekend, in this example)
ga marks subject of the sentence, this example shows, its the "weekend" went to home.
this time, you want to talk about the last weekend,so the last week end becom the topic of the sentence. so "ha" is used instead.

5, I think its good.

good luck

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