Learn Japanese on Your Own Terms at JapanesePod101.com! We return to our story about the famous pop idol, the Onigiri Prince. He’s out for a stroll with his lady friend, when 2 adoring fans spot him and ask for an autograph. Our grammar point is using plain past verb + koto ga aru. After listening, stop by JapanesePod101.com and be sure to leave us a post!
This entry was posted on Tuesday, April 15th, 2008 at 6:30 pm and is filed under Beginner Lessons (S3). 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.
Mina-san, have you met or stalked a celebrity? Did you ask for their autograph?
by the way, I’ve tried and tried and tried to learn how to make a nice, geometrical triangular onigiri and it’s always a total disaster. Those things are hard to make!
Met Steven Tyler while working at Urban Outfitters in Boston. I tried not to make a big thing of it because it had to have gotten a little old, plus I was on the clock.
Tokoro de, Japanesepod101 de Red Sox no daifan imasu ka?
病院に有名なフランス人の俳優に会ったことがあります。足を骨折したのです。
I was still in med school at the time, and the resident I was working with kept fawning over the actor, asking for pictures, autographs, etc… It was really very embarassing, as the actor was very nice with everything and the resident kept asking and asking… but as a student I couldn’t very well tell him to just stop…
I have some molds at home to make triangular おにぎり,but I’ve never tried. Is it really that difficult ?
「ねぇ、ダーリン」
I always slate unnecessary 和製英語, but that’s just great
When I went on field trip in elementary school, I was jealous because some of my class mates had triangular おにぎり. My mother always made round ones. As a result, I’m bad at making 三角おにぎり
my gf won’t even let me make onigiri cuz mine were so bad the first time
Here is the link for Onigiri molds.
http://www.konna.jp/shop/goods/A115.htm
Aren’t these cute?
Hello everyone ..
I heard that there is a lot of flower pollen going around in Japan right now. Is everyone alright with that ?
I would like to ask something.
I noticed that Peter san said とうとう (finally) in the lesson.
What is the different between とうとう and やっと ? Because they both means finally (if im not mistaken
)
Thanks
Peter san!
have been, have done、have gone, are in the past perfect tense????
Category: Beginner Lessons (S3) |
Grammar: koto ga aru, shita koto ga aru | Function: asking for an autograph | Topic: autographs, food, idols, onigiri, pop stars | Politeness Level: casual, honorific, Polite
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