How to Understand EVERY Japanese Sentence With ONE Simple Trick

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  • čas přidán 1. 06. 2024
  • If you don't understand these 2 sentences, you'll never understand Japanese because these are the ONLY two types of sentences in Japanese. By breaking down Japanese grammar structure into the 3 Engine Structure as proposed by Cure Dolly Sensei, we can understand EVERY Japanese sentence as one of these two sentences.
    The 3 Engine Structure of Japanese proposes that there are only 2 types of sentences in Japanese. An "A does B" sentence, or an "A is B" sentence.
    It is called the 3 Engine structure as all sentences can only end in one of three ways:
    - う stem ending sentences are verb sentences. Meaning they are always "A does B"
    - だ ending sentences are noun+copula sentences. Meaning they are always "A is B"
    - い ending sentences are always i-adjectives. Meaning they are always "A is B"
    Understanding that Japanese can only have 2 types of sentences and knowing how to see each sentence as one of the three engines, allows you to understand ANY Japanese sentence by breaking them down to their core.
    Credits to Cure Dolly Sensei (RIP):
    / @organicjapanesewithcu...
    🎬 Timestamps:
    00:00 Introduction
    00:51 What are "Logical Clauses"
    01:34 Introducing the "A car" and "B engine"
    02:39 The 2 types of sentences & 3 engines
    03:46 A does B sentence (verbs 動詞)
    05:00 A is B sentence (noun+copula 名詞)
    07:55 Na-adjectives aren't adjectives
    09:04 A is B (i-adjectives イ形容詞 【形容詞 & 助動詞】)
    Get 1 Month of Migaku for FREE with this affiliate link:
    migaku.com/signup?code=Juls&l...
    👨‍👧‍👦 Our Public Discord Server:
    / discord
    🎵 Music Credits (links to Google Docs):
    bit.ly/JulsMusic
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    dova-s.jp/bgm/play11930.html
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    How I learned Japanese:
    • How I learned Japanese

Komentáře • 88

  • @JouzuJuls
    @JouzuJuls  Před 2 lety +46

    ❗New video on the て-form just came out, click here to watch now! czcams.com/video/HAdmKhVjVs8/video.html ❗
    I MADE A MISTAKE! Important note about i-engine sentences. 9:04
    I said in the video that I am specifically referring to 形容詞。
    Except some things like たい & ない are not 形容詞。
    I also called たい "helper adjectives" but there's more to it than that.
    Furthermore, I also said たい is not a verb, but that's only half true.
    What I should have said was _イ形容詞_ which would have cleared a lot of things up。
    i-ending sentences need an イ形容詞 at the end.
    イ形容詞 includes:
    - All 形容詞 (adjectives, examples at 9:57)
    - 補助形容詞 (helper adjectives, eg. ほしい & ない)
    - 複合形容詞 (compound adjectives, eg. やすい)
    - 助動詞 (helper VERBS. Ignore the Japanese name, treat them as adjectives)
    ^ Eg. たい
    Both 補助形容詞 & 複合形容詞 are just types of 形容詞。
    Again, you need an イ形容詞 at the end of an i-engine sentence, NOT a JUST 形容詞。
    11:50 is misleading because not everything on this list is a "Helper Adjective".
    Certainly in English we can say this, but TECHINICALLY speaking, it is NOT a "Helper Adjective" (補助形容詞), it is a "Helper Verb" (助動詞).
    I think we should still refer to all of these as "Helper Adjectives" in the English way as that makes understanding it a lot easier.
    We don't have to see all these as 3 different categories- including one "helper verb" which doesnt act like a verb, we can just say they are all 1 thing. Helper Adjectives.

  • @mrk131324
    @mrk131324 Před 26 dny +77

    What gets when learning Japanese is not the grammar but the vocabulary. When I listen to Japanese I understand the structure of the sentence very well, but one you miss the meaning of the engine the whole thing escapes you.

    • @gustavomartins5599
      @gustavomartins5599 Před 23 dny +3

      that is because you probably already have a good grammar understanding. To understand Japanese we need both: vocabulary and a decent grammar knowledge (doesn't matter if we learn it by pure practice or studying the theory, but we need to know it).

    • @cnydo
      @cnydo Před 13 dny +1

      @@gustavomartins5599 not Japanese but almost any popular language needed both vocab and grammar to understand

  • @malty776
    @malty776 Před měsícem +172

    Kiryu teaching japanese

  • @analog_ape
    @analog_ape Před 25 dny +66

    The trick: study Japanese daily for 3 year

    • @osuplaeyurreallygood
      @osuplaeyurreallygood Před 12 dny +1

      that's not a long time lol

    • @afloatcashew6828
      @afloatcashew6828 Před 2 dny

      @@osuplaeyurreallygood 3 years is a long time to be daily and consistent. Depending on the hours per day that's long enough to be really competent in most areas.

  • @richrollin4867
    @richrollin4867 Před 21 dnem +9

    You certainly won’t understand every Japanese sentence by applying one simple trick - unless that trick is to learn about 10,000 words, the entire grammar set - combined with enough real world experience to apply your knowledge in real time.

  • @terribadda2912
    @terribadda2912 Před 6 dny +3

    I miss Dolly sensei, i hope she's resting well

  • @OpuYT
    @OpuYT Před 2 lety +69

    Cure Dollys Videos contributed so much to my grammar understanding
    No other grammar ressource comes close in my opinion
    The way she explains why japanese works how it works through the underlying logic in such short videos
    I miss you Cure Dolly Sensei, Rest in Peace 🙏

    • @JouzuJuls
      @JouzuJuls  Před 2 lety +35

      Same. I hope to be able to spread her messages further since I know her original reach was limited due to her appearance and voice. I've also figured out some things that Cure Dolly never got a chance to say before she passed so hopefully I get the chance to share them too (once I've done enough research!).

    • @vanshika9920
      @vanshika9920 Před 2 měsíci +6

      Cure Dolly sensei u will ALWAYS be famous❤

    • @batgirlp5561
      @batgirlp5561 Před měsícem +3

      ​@@JouzuJulsI hope you do as well. Her videos are amazingly helpful. ❤

    • @HelloWorld-up4of
      @HelloWorld-up4of Před 24 dny +5

      we ALL miss her. It was a GIGANTIC loss...

  • @pokeylope6108
    @pokeylope6108 Před 27 dny +20

    Often, the most simplistic explanation of complicated things are the best to use.
    Simplifying the complex requires deep understanding of the complex.

  • @kaeliblebreton9185
    @kaeliblebreton9185 Před dnem

    Currently studying to take N1 but I found myself revising videos like these to review the basics and I’m loving it! I wish I had videos like these when I was starting out with studying Japanese ❤

  • @Dahnvincente13
    @Dahnvincente13 Před 16 dny +3

    I’m so happy you know who cure dolly is! I thought of her when you put the train carts in your grammar lesson! That felt nostalgic! あと、長い時間に日本語を勉強しているけど、まだ日本語の使い方が下手だと思もいます。笑 動画を作ってくれてありがとうございます😊

  • @linaamy583
    @linaamy583 Před 18 dny +1

    Thanks for pointing me towards Cure Dolly sensei's lessons, I was getting discouraged after learning Japanese vocabulary/sentences for 2 years and still not getting any better at understanding how they're made, I think I'm at day 3 of going through her lessons and I think I'm finally getting it 😢

  • @weeklyfascination
    @weeklyfascination Před měsícem

    Great explanation!

  • @151monka
    @151monka Před 23 dny +1

    This video is amazing. I get the feeling I will be loving your content. Learning grammatical structure is something I love.

  • @PirateOfTheNorth
    @PirateOfTheNorth Před 23 dny

    I really appreciate your videos

  • @tishayat
    @tishayat Před 17 dny +1

    I now have a deeper understanding and I can see clearly now. This may be the video that someone needs to get past grammar slumps

  • @bastiang6173
    @bastiang6173 Před 24 dny +1

    Wow. That video really connected some loose ends in my Japanese knowledge!

  • @LB-yg2br
    @LB-yg2br Před 11 dny

    Actually they only have one sentence: the kind that comes out of their mouth. Once you understand that one thing then you are golden. Brilliant!!!

  • @skippychurch2965
    @skippychurch2965 Před měsícem +8

    Curedolly. RIP

    • @LionKimbro
      @LionKimbro Před 22 dny +1

      I came here to say exactly this.

  • @speedboiiii2722
    @speedboiiii2722 Před rokem +15

    Dollys approach really resonates with me and I stay far away from the typical textbooks, but do you know of any formal literature that also teaches this approach?

    • @JouzuJuls
      @JouzuJuls  Před rokem +9

      Yup! Cure Dolly learned her method from Dr. Jay Rubin who wrote the book, "Making Sense of Japanese", that should count as formal literature!

  • @adsim92
    @adsim92 Před 4 měsíci +6

    Going through a bunch of your old videos, after seeing your latest and how good it is.
    Have you considered making the slides you show in the video available on google drive or something? Would be nice to have them local so I can review them when I can't necessarily watch the video.
    Anyway, this is great stuff as usual.

    • @JouzuJuls
      @JouzuJuls  Před 4 měsíci +5

      Thank you very much for checking out my other videos as well! Hope this makes my newest video a lot clearer too!
      .
      I've actually never considered releasing the slides until now.
      .
      I'll probably make the slides downloadable for channel members or Patreon supporters (when I launch it), thanks for the suggestion!

  • @patrickrobinson317
    @patrickrobinson317 Před 25 dny

    GREAT Lesson !!! 😊Thank you for making it.
    Patrick from Bethesda, Maryland, USA

  • @jeromeentredicho
    @jeromeentredicho Před 23 dny +2

    Wow. Just wow!

  • @kathrynkhoo4685
    @kathrynkhoo4685 Před 2 lety +2

    ooo the last part of the video re-using the crepe sentence from the 1st video made it really click and cleared up the confusion I had from the 1st video much wows

    • @JouzuJuls
      @JouzuJuls  Před 2 lety +2

      You're welcome! The way textbooks teach "conjugation" where 食べたい is considered one single entity is really quite confusing isn't it.

  • @matthew_scarbrough
    @matthew_scarbrough Před 8 dny

    上手 (じょうず) -- I would translate that as _adept_ or _expert_ rather than saying, "someone that is skilled-at but a noun." Like, there won't always be a good word in English for it, but I think if you introduce a less common word that is a noun in English, overtime it can help people accept that we don't always have those words and then gradually do it automatically rather than running to English for a direct translation.

  • @mke_gal
    @mke_gal Před 18 dny

    This was super helpful. Thank you! Now, though, I'm wondering about the whole が・は thing. If 「は」marks the topic of the sentence, when would I say さくらが歩いた vs さくらは歩いた? I learned that 「が」gives more emphasis to the person's name, versus to the rest of the sentence, such as in 「A:誰が歩いた?B:さくらが歩いた」but of course there is much more to this debate.

  • @ShinRyuuji
    @ShinRyuuji Před měsícem

    Ok so I understand the video from my 6 months of studying Japanese. But could you use some more examples using the other particles and more complex sentences? that would be really helpful

  • @keeyama
    @keeyama Před měsícem +4

    This reminds me of cure dolly!!

  • @laithtwair
    @laithtwair Před 22 dny +1

    When would you use である to connect a noun/na adjective to another noun instead of な?

  • @goldeer7129
    @goldeer7129 Před rokem +4

    It makes me happy to see Sakura again

  • @richardsonrichly8456
    @richardsonrichly8456 Před 12 dny

    Currently in that weird phase where i understand alot of words in a sentence but cant understand whats been said

  • @AngelFreak_
    @AngelFreak_ Před 17 dny

    Respectfully, where did you read/learn that the -tai suffix is an adjective? I've been taking Japanese lessons for the past 2 years and I've always been taught it's a verb form. Thanks in advance and thanks for taking the time to make these videos.

    • @thecrackstreetboys4012
      @thecrackstreetboys4012 Před 13 dny

      To see proof of this, just look at the way it functions and conjugates further. It is, in every way, exactly like an i-adjective-including the part where it ends in i!

  • @indigomarj
    @indigomarj Před 20 dny

    Hi I cannot click or find the link to your first video (the one you were referring to at the start)

  • @NikiruSan
    @NikiruSan Před 26 dny +2

    Is it only in low quality on my device?

  • @shanebrady7647
    @shanebrady7647 Před 19 dny +3

    This was INCREDIBLY useful. Subscribed 👍

  • @elrobercone
    @elrobercone Před 27 dny

    Excellent. Fast for me 'cos English isn't my natural language, but it doesn't matter.

  • @jquirkeable
    @jquirkeable Před měsícem +4

    Didn't Cure Dolly do this same presentation?

    • @Dead-EyeMetal
      @Dead-EyeMetal Před měsícem +3

      Like it says in the video description and a bunch of comments, you mean?

  • @TeamWnJ
    @TeamWnJ Před 2 lety

    Oh, I just realized. 3:53 動詞 is ど↑うし not what I said, ど↓うし

  • @Salaryman_
    @Salaryman_ Před měsícem +1

    I’m gunna need to watch this every week for months 😂

    • @thegahd
      @thegahd Před 24 dny

      I suggest grabbing a sheet of paper and just start mapping out what he´s talking about and make your own overview. Remember you shouldn´t try to have all this memorized asap, just use it on your way to understanding more and check with sentences you don´t understand in your overview and you can figure them out. Over time it becomes natural. 頑張ってください!

  • @caramellesweggose
    @caramellesweggose Před měsícem +2

    How does it work for questions like "where is the cat?" Are they A is B?

    • @JouzuJuls
      @JouzuJuls  Před měsícem +1

      Yes, it would be A is B! 猫はどこだ would be "as for cat, it is where".
      Similarly 彼は誰だ would be "as for him, he is who".

    • @caramellesweggose
      @caramellesweggose Před měsícem

      @@JouzuJuls thanks!

  • @Griffdog21
    @Griffdog21 Před rokem +17

    Why is no one talking about how this man's drip goes insane

    • @JouzuJuls
      @JouzuJuls  Před rokem +8

      Stealing that Dragon of Dojima look

  • @b.l.a.c.k.s.t.a.r
    @b.l.a.c.k.s.t.a.r Před 6 dny

    This guy got the Kazuma Kiryu drip

  • @LutaKura
    @LutaKura Před rokem +3

    I don't even know what "adjectives" "verbs" or "nouns" mean, i could never remember what those are even on my native language. What do i do...

    • @JouzuJuls
      @JouzuJuls  Před rokem +10

      Don't worry man, I was literally in the same boat as you. I didn't know what nouns verbs or adjectives were either. Yet there I was a few months later able to re-explain what they are to other people! A little bit of work and you can do it too, if you give up on such a small hurdle, you aren't gonna make it in the long run anyway.
      .
      Take this chance as an opportunity! Instead of learning what "Nouns" and "Verbs" are- why not learn their Japanese names instead- which ACTUALLY tell you what they do?
      .
      名詞 [めいし] (Noun) - Literally means "name term". It means "objects" or "things". Something that you can put a name onto. "りんご (Apple)" "ジョン (John)" "金曜日 (Friday)" " 水 (Water)" "散歩 (a stroll)". All 名詞.
      .
      動詞 [どうし] (Verb) - Literally means "action term". It means "action" or "movement". Something that someone/something does. "あるく (walk)" "はしる (run)" "する (do)" "あそぶ (play)" "いく (go)". All 動詞.
      .
      形容詞 [けいようし] (Adjective) - Literally means "shape form term". It means something that "describes (shapes)" another thing. "おおき (big)" "ちいさい (small)" "あたらしい (new)" "ふるい (old)" "かしこい (smart)". All 形容詞.
      .
      Remember that what is considered a noun, verb, or adj in English is not necessarily the same in Japanese. Same vice versa. So when learning Japanese, it really doesn't matter what something is in English, it DOES matter to know what it is in Japanese.

    • @LutaKura
      @LutaKura Před rokem +1

      @@JouzuJuls wow thank you so much, the Japanese names actually make more sense

    • @JouzuJuls
      @JouzuJuls  Před rokem +4

      See ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ 😁
      .
      I learned most of Japanese grammar as Japanese grammar itself. It doesn't matter if you don't know what a "passive tense" or "continuous tense" is in English- the important part is that you understand Japanese... AS Japanese!
      .
      Good luck with your studies and I hope you'll stick around my channel for more videos like this!

    • @robinharwood5044
      @robinharwood5044 Před 24 dny

      Sue your school. JouzuJuls has just taught you what your primary school teachers should have taught you. Good luck with your Japanese learning!

  • @playalot86
    @playalot86 Před 6 dny

    Vocabulary vocabulary vocabulary

  • @TommyWashow
    @TommyWashow Před 23 dny

    kiryuchaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaan

  • @sahlibrahimi
    @sahlibrahimi Před 24 dny +1

    You look like a dragon

  • @Akunologia
    @Akunologia Před 12 dny

    Working at a Japanese call center, I can tell you japanese people do not understand 100% of japanese sentences. Its not really grammar or sentence patterns (although there are some terribly jumbled ones) thats the problem, but vocab, complicated procedures (ie lots of information that needs to be remembered), needless extra information, and when talking on the phone, the inability of people to speak clearly or calmly.
    Granted, 99% of sentences are understood, but its not 100%.

  • @sahlibrahimi
    @sahlibrahimi Před 24 dny

    Kiryu ?????????

  • @Its_just_me_again
    @Its_just_me_again Před 24 dny

    i was expecting the advice to use google translate :P

  • @dmesa539
    @dmesa539 Před 27 dny +1

    If you would allow me a suggestion, your message will come out more clearly, you'll make less mistakes and what you are trying to convey will be understood more easily, if you S L O W D O W N a bit. You speak way too fast, and your slides go by too quickly. Just a suggestion, from someone who's learning.

    • @gramsmith1366
      @gramsmith1366 Před 23 dny +1

      Ditto...good teachers speak slowly and repeat and repeat without boring the student
      I can't hear fast enough for this guy.

    • @chadparkhill4064
      @chadparkhill4064 Před 19 dny

      CZcams literally let's you slow down and speed up videos

  • @dazzhan9826
    @dazzhan9826 Před 20 dny +3

    Thank you for taking the time to make the video, but there's way too much talking. You're making it sound too scientific, and for beginners their brains will just switch off.

  • @MidnightBlue105
    @MidnightBlue105 Před 25 dny +5

    My bro it's not a simple trick if it takes 12minutes and several graphical charts and diagrams to explain

    • @bold-brick
      @bold-brick Před 25 dny

      No kiding

    • @tvtime2644
      @tvtime2644 Před 22 dny +2

      As someone who’s been speaking Japanese daily for almost 30 years now, this explanation makes my head spin. I mean, engines? Like what the hell is that about? That just makes it more confusing IMO.

  • @Ironclad404
    @Ironclad404 Před 23 dny +1

    This video has so stupidly inflated running time i wont bother with it. The author is travesty.