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To say in Japanese that you used to ~ verb, (at fairly regular intervals and at some point
in the past) use the following construction:
The following examples will help you grasp today’s JPPGG construction. After you get a
feel for how this grammar is made, just keep plugging new verbs into the verb area in
Base TA and then continue playing by making your own unique and interesting
sentences. And don’t forget to practice saying all your newly created sentences out-loud.
Drilling and killing, or plugging and playing words into the constructions in this way is
bound to improve your Japanese conversation skills quickly. You’ll be adding yet another
grammar principle to your Japanese language arsenal, for your benefit and use at any
time you see fit. Keep plugging and playing until your friends tell you they can’t stand
how much you practice your Japanese or until they say stop. But even if you start
bugging people because you practice too much just keep telling yourself that the practice
that I am doing will surely cause me to improve. Just keep practicing the grammar
constructions and saying to yourself new sentences of your own creation until your
friends or you go to sleep, whichever comes first. You want to get better at Japanese,
don’t you? Don’t bicker just do quicker! Here are some nice examples with an occasional
ghetto phrase sprinkled in here or there to spice up the flavorful fun, so that you can have
a good time studying Japanese. Once again the construction is as follows:
Watakushi ga motto wakai koro, jitensha de yoku gakko ni itta mono desu.
{As for I, in the more young time, by bike often school went thing is.}1
1
Given here in its’ literal translation; its easy to see why not to translate literally as can be seen from the
corruption madness of its form and sound.
b. Putting the verb into its past tense -TA form ending gives you itta.
c. Insert iku, verb(base TA) or in this case itta into the construction and
d. you have your new sentence
2. He used to cheat, but the teacher busted him, and now he is a good boy.
Kare wa mae yoku kanningu2 shita mono desu keredomo sensei ni barete
shimatte ima orikosan ni natta no da.
2
From the English adjective cunning.
3
Non-polite plain form of the copula desu = da.
4
See JPPGG© Ghetto Grammar #88: ‘Verbing’ –verb (base TE) + iru or the Japanese Gerund.
Christmas to speak. Makurasuki sensei lays it down, so that you can pick it up, in an easy
to understand manner while demonstrating the most effective way to learn Japanese The
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