This feature requires an Active Premium subscription. Sign in or register for a 7-Day Free Trial today. Click link for more info.
This feature requires an Active Basic subscription. Sign in or register for a 7-Day Free Trial today. Click link for more info.
 
By Type:

Ascending Descending
By Month:

Ascending Descending
By Keyword:

Ascending Descending

Search Results 

Learn Japanese with JapanesePod101.com! You have arrived at a fast-food restaurant to meet your friend for dinner in Japan, and you’re starving for a hamburger. Your friend already has his, and it looks delicious since it is loaded with lots of toppings. You want one with the works, too, but you notice that the staff keeps all the condiments behind the counter. If you want more than just a plain burger, you’re going to have to ask in Japanese for what you want!

In this lesson, you’ll learn how to ask whether someone has something. Our Japanese conversation takes place at a restaurant and is between a customer and a shop clerk. The speakers are speaking formal Japanese. You’ll also learn how to say the names of condiments in Japanese. Visit us at JapanesePod101.com, where you will find many more fantastic Japanese lessons and learning resources! Leave us a message while you are there!


Learn to Speak Japanese at JapanesePod101.com! Today we continue our story about Wasabi-chan. All the wasabi in Izu is missing and our intrepid heroine sets out for a wasabi-batake (wasabi field) to see if she can spot the culprit. Our grammar point is the construction -te kuru, used in this case to show doing an action and then coming back (last week was -te iku). After listening, stop by JapanesePod101.com and be sure to leave us a post!


Red monsters, blue monsters, and flying beans, oh my! Itune in to see what is going on with Setsubun in Japan! You don’t want to miss today’s edition of Japanese Culture Class.

Premium Members Subscription Help
icon for podpress Premium Lesson Checklist
Free Content Subscription Help
icon for podpress Audio | Play | Popup

Learn Japanese at JapanesePod101.com! Reading recipes and following directions are essential in any language. So today we’re going to learn how to make one of Japan’s most famous finger foods, kara age (fried chicken). The best part about this is it’s a real recipe, so you can try to use it at home! We’ll be getting a truckload of vocabulary today, so you don’t want to miss out on the PDF and Review track. After listening, stop by JapanesePod101.com and be sure to leave us a post!


Learn Japanese with JapanesePod101.com! You have always had a tendency to procrastinate, especially when it comes to chores that you don’t want to do. So now that you moved into a new apartment in Japan, you’ve promised yourself that you’re going to be more diligent about housework. You wrote up a chore chart in Japanese and bought gold stars to give yourself when you complete your tasks. You figure that if this system works for kids in Japan, maybe it will work for you.

In this lesson, you’ll learn how to use the Japanese suffixes -gachi and -gimi, which both indicate tendency. Our Japanese conversation takes place on television, and an announcer is reading the news in Japanese. The announcer is speaking both formal and informal Japanese. Visit us at JapanesePod101.com, where you will find many more fantastic Japanese lessons and learning resources! Leave us a message while you are there!

Grammar: , , | Function: | Topic: