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February 7th, 2006 | help Need help?

Learn Japanese with JapanesePod101.com! Learn how to talk about telling time in Japanese! Today we cover all the basics of clock time. Tired of making arrangements on the hour? Today we introduce you to minutes, and open up a whole new realm of possibilities! You don’t want to miss today’s episode, as you’ll be using this everyday!

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Voice Actors: Sakura, Natsuko | Hosts: Sakura
Category: Beginner Lessons |
Grammar: , , | Function: , | Topic: | Politeness Level:
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This entry was posted on Tuesday, February 7th, 2006 at 4:38 am and is filed under Beginner Lessons. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

31 Responses to “Beginner Lesson #31 - What Time is it Now?”

avatar japanesepod101.com says:

Today’s location is Niigata・にいがた・新潟 is the capital of Niigata Prefecture, the largest city located on the Sea of Japan. :grin:

http://www.city.niigata.niigata.jp/e_page/e_index.html

Has anyone been to Niigata?

avatar Marcos says:

Hello again nice friends from japanesepod101!
I have been practicing my Japanese a little bit at home,since I don’t attend any Japanese school here where I live. I am kind of self taught person,and it has always been so even with my English. I have always liked Japanese language,specially listening to songs,anime and so forth. I am also a big fan of computer games,speacially action,strategy,rpg and adventure games. Japan is really cool when it comes to games. I remenmber I used to buy lots of magazines when I heard a new console or game was released in Nihon -it was really sugoi! Unfortunately,here it was almost impossible to learn Japanese. With limited resource is really tough to learn. Japan is also famous for Robotics. I work in the technology field and I am always in tune with what is happening in the States and Nihon. So, I really love Nihon and the States. I have many friends in my town who are now living and working in Nihon. Believe or not, they went there without learning Japanese. I think it’s nice to study Japanese,but without friends we cannot get anywhere. I don’t need to stress how important you guys are. Everyone here at this site is like a big family,always posting useful information,important links…its really nice! And you guys, Peter-san,Sakura-san,Kazunori-san,Nats-san and now Yuko-san, are the best! I would like to post a link here as well. I really like to listen to these pocasts on culture in Japan. I don’t understand them very well yet,but I love listening!
The texts are in Japanese. I hope you folks like them. Matta :razz:

avatar Peter says:

JapanesePod101.com is proud to present our newest edition to the website, the Travel Center! Please check it out and let us know what you think! :grin:
よろしくお願いします!

avatar Jonas says:

Marcos-san; thanks for the link :) Listening to some of it now. Voiceblog.jp seems to have lots of different podcasts (not educational, but in japanese… so… well… educational :P )

Peter-san; You forgot to mention Susukino under Sapporo! Thats where I spent most of my free time during my 6 months up there, hehe. (Susukino is a mix of roppongi and kabukicho :cool: )

avatar Sarah says:

Konnichiwa! I just wanted to say that I think japanesepod101 is great! I got a bit of a late start and am trying to catch up, but the survival phrases have been very helpful and entertaining. I had the opportunity to visit Japan last April for only one week (I am a graduate student and my laboratory sent me to RIKEN brain science institute to learn and teach techniques) and I was fascinated by the people and the culture. My Japanese was quite terrible, but the people were so polite and helpful that I never felt embarassed or overly confused. I wish I had your help before my first visit, but I will definitely be prepared for the next trip, which will hopefully involve more travel and less work! Thanks again and I look forward to the future podcasts! :smile:
Sarah

avatar Gevorg says:

God ! I understood today’s lesson before Peter translated it in English !!
This is really helping me ^^ !
Thank you !!

avatar Gevorg says:

And also, I got my new Kanji Practice Book !
It’s called “Kanji No Renshiyuu” ! I’m so excited about it ^^ !

avatar John says:

Great lesson, as always.
It was good to learn how to count minutes. Here’s some others to know:
- Half (as in “half past”): han (はん、半);
eg: “Ichi ji han desu.” (It’s 1:30.)
- AM: gozen (ごぜん、午前)
- PM: gogo (ごご、午後)
So, if you wanted to say “It’s 1:30 p.m.” you would say “Gogo ichi ji han desu.” (午後 一時 半 です。) Right?
Keep up the good work! ありがとう,
-john

avatar Matthew says:

Wooo hooo. I finally caught up. I’ve been doing 2 or 3 lessons a day on my commute, and I finally got there. Feeling quite pleased with myself … Just thought I’d share that with you all.

Tuesday is Japanese lesson day for me. I have a one hour lesson once per week. Ironically today’s lesson did not go so well. Chapter 5 of Minna no Nihongo, for all those with the same text book as me :smile:

Funny - sometimes I think I’m making real progress, and sometimes I feel like I’m treading water. Anyone out there got any study tips for when things go a bit sour?

Jaa ne

Mat

avatar MintyFresh says:

Just to throw my two cents in.

Japan is +8 hours GMT.
Japan does no observe daylight savings.

when - itsu.
Morning - asa
Noon - shougo.
lunch time - hiruyasumi.
evening - yuugata
night - your
From 10 o’clock - Juu-ji kara desu.
Until 6 P.M. - Gogo roku-ji made desu.

Minty

avatar JP says:

Hi Minty,

maybe you meant:

night=yoru

Great Podcast once again guys!!!

I’ve been listening to all of the 30 lessons since last night over and over and i’ve been getting the “GIST”(right Peter? =)) of it.

And today, I’m up to the 31st!!!

Ganbatte!!!

avatar MintyFresh says:

Thanks for correction, I knew I should have but a disclaimer on that…..

By the way, Japanesepod101 as of today has produced exactly 100 pages of pdfs and 10 hours 43 minutes and 1 second of audio and video.

Huge round of applause,

Minty

avatar Jonas says:

As long as you guys are adding words, here is another one thats used alot; 午前中・ごぜんちゅう・gozenchuu. It means “throughout the morning” or “during the morning”.
Example usage:
>今日学校ないの? kyou gakkou nai no?
>いや、あったけど午前中だけ。 iya, atta kedo gozenchuu dake.

Jonas

avatar Scott says:

I don’t know what it was, but something in the way Peter said, “It’s funny because it’s true” about Kazunori being late caused me to laugh hysterically on the commute between classes today. I got quite a lot of weird glances on the bus over it. :oops:

avatar chanun says:

Minasan,
Thanx for yet another great lesson!
By the way, it’s 午後 一時 半 here in Bangkok :razz:

avatar Ormo says:

MintyFresh says
“…Japan is +8 hours GMT.
Japan does no observe daylight savings…”

In the summer Japan is 8 hours ahead of the United Kingdom which is using BST (British Summer Time, GMT+1). In the winter it is 9 hours ahead of the United Kingom which is then using GMT as its winter time.
So Japan time is +9 hours GMT… But it doesn’t observe DST just like you said. :)

avatar Ormo says:

Is it possible to download the video version from this website? I don’t use iTunes but listen on my Pocket pc which is video friendly…

avatar Marcos says:

Hey guys!
You are welcome Jonas. Lots of useful information here. Thanks folks for posting these useful infortion :razz: see ya :wink:

avatar Marcos says:

I couldn´t download the video without installing Itune first. Itune is a pretty good software. So, I am afraid you have to install it and subscribe to japanesepod101 before downloading the video.

avatar japanesepod101.com says:

Responses coming soon! Today we working on producing 2 full lessons! :shock: もうすこし待って下さい。. :wink:

avatar Steve says:

Hello :-)
I enjoyed the podcast…as I normally do. But for once, just like Gevorg-san, I actually understtod what was said before the translation, which juts goes to show what a great job you guys are doing.
なんじですか
いちじです
Aaaaaaaargh! 私はとてもおそいです!!!!!

avatar Peter says:

Marcos-san 久々!Long time! (with good friends even one day is a long time!) Great to hear from you! :grin: Yes, we have so much more in store, and it is so great to see your motivation. One of the best English speakers I ever met was Japanese self taught guy, who used to speak to his tv! He was really good! :wink: I would often say my actions out loud to practice my Japanese, in fact I still do! My favorite is Kangaerou (think!) when talking to oneself. I used to speak to myself in the polite form, until I found out I should be using orders! :shock:

Sarah-san, welcome and thanks for the post! It will be great when you come back next time fluent! :wink: Yes, working here is a bit on the rough side, while travel is on the great side! Definately make it back! :grin:

Gevorg-san, GREAT JOB! :grin: Tell us more about the new book. How many characters?

John-san, thanks for the extra info! Definately some really useful info in there! Everyone, please check it out. :grin:

Matthew-san, in my book the worse Minna no Nihongo lessons go, the better your Japanese is getting! :wink: Great job on catching up! As for some advice, definately find a Japanese study partner. Offer exchange lessons, 30min/30min English/Japanese, that will add much more incentive! :grin: Let us know how it turns out.

MintyFresh-san, thanks for the post and the update! Wow, we didn’t even realize it! Thanks for letting us know. :grin:

JP-san, great to hear! :grin: Wow, that is impressive!! We had to up our production to 2 today! Trying to keep ahead of you. :wink: Keep the posts coming!

Scott-san, thanks for the great post and story! We live for those. You know, personally I find Sakura and Natsuko hyterical too! And the same thing has happened to me many times! You’re not alone. :wink:

チャナンさん,こんにちは!

Ormo-san, were working on getting the videoes on the site, please hang on a bit longer. よろしく!

Marcos-san, always a pleasure! How did you like the videoes?

Steve-san, great job to you too!よかった!

avatar Marcos says:

Thanks, Peter. The videos were really fantastic! Also, today’s lesson was awesome. mata :razz:

avatar Peter says:

Ormo-san, thanks! Still working on it. :grin:

Marcos-san, as always thanks! Glad to hear you liked them! :wink:
Any requests? :grin:

avatar Monica says:

Hi, I love Japanese Pod so much! I just have a few question!

First, is Japan on a 24-hr clock or a 12-hr clock? Someone told me that they were on army time, but I wasn’t sure if that was right.

Also, I love coming on this site to sit down and listen to the podcasts, but I like to listen on the way to school too. The problem is that on iTunes, there are only a few podcasts that we can upload, and they are random, such as begginer lessons, part 2, and things like that. I was wondering why there are only a couple podcasts on there, and how I can I get more?

Keep it up! Thanks a lot!

avatar Monica says:

Hi guys! I love JapanesePod so much! I just have a few questions.

Is Japan on army time? Like a 24-hr clock rather than 12-hr? Someone told me that, but I wasn’t sure if it was true.

Also, I like to listen to the podcasts on here, but I also listen on the way to school by putting them on my ipod. The problem is that on iTunes, there are only a few podcasts on there, and some of them are random, for example, there is a part 2 of a beginner lesson there, but no part 1… I was just wondering why that is, and how I can pick which ones to put on my ipod…

Thanks, and keep up the good work!

avatar markystar says:

yup. we use a 24 hour clock here. but in reality, you see both kinds of clocks.
for example, they say both 4:00 and 16:00 (4時 and 16時, respectively). however, i think 4時 is more common.

to get the other podcasts, check here:
http://www.japanesepod101.com/downloads/#myfeed

the best way to subscribe is using the My Feed option, so you can easily choose which lesson you want (for example, just Newbie Lessons or Beginner Lessons or just Video Vocab, etc…)

avatar Lucy says:

Hi I absolutely love your podcasts, I listen to them every single day! :)
Anyways I was just wondering why you used “arigatou gozaimashita” in this podcast instead of “arigatou gozaimasu”

Thanks,
Lucy

avatar 一 (ハジメ) says:

Lucyさん,

I am a beginner, so I hope this explanation is at least not wrong, but perhaps incomplete. The end of “gozaimasu” is the present (actually non-past) polite form. “gozaimashita” is the past tense. It is used in situations, for example, when people are parting. I am done, thank you very much.

For example, when someone brings you something in a restaurant you might say “arigatou gozaimaus”. After you have paid the bill and you are leaving, you might say “argiatou gozaimashita”, thank you, that *was* very nice. Of course, the end of that phrase is inferred by the fact that you used “mashita” (past tense) instead of “masu” (non-past polite).

I hope that clears it up at least a little bit.

がんばって。 よろしくお願いします。

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