3.2 2 - Lesson Notes - Basic Greetings

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LESSON NOTES

Basic Japanese S1 #2
Basic Japanese #2: Basic Greetings

CONTENTS
2 Kanji
2 Kana
2 Romanization
2 English
3 Vocabulary
3 Sample Sentences
3 Grammar

# 2
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KANJI

1. こんにちは。

2. げんきですか。

3. げんきです。

KANA

1. こんにちは。

2. げんきですか。

3. げんきです。

ROMANIZATION

1. Konnichi wa.

2. Genki desu ka.

3. Genki desu.

ENGLISH

1. Hi./Hello

2. How are you?

CONT'D OVER

JAPANESEPOD101.COM BASIC JAPANESE S1 #2 - BASIC JAPANESE #2: BASIC GREETINGS 2


3. I'm fine.

VOCABULARY

Kanji Kana R omaji English

hello, good day


こんにちは こんにちは Kon'nichiwa (daytime greeting)

energetic, fine,
げんき げんき genki healthy; Adj(na)

最悪 さいあく saiaku the worst

まあまあ まあまあ māmā so-so

SAMPLE SENTENCES

皆さん、こんにちは。 げんきですか。
Mina-san, kon'nichiwa. Genki desu ka.

Hello, everybody. How are you?

彼とのデートは最悪でした。 ここのすしは、まあまあです。
Kare to no dēto wa saiaku deshita. Koko no sushi wa māmā desu.

The date with him was the worst. The sushi here is so-so.

GRAMMAR

T he f ocus of t his le sson is how t o say "Hi. How are you?" in Japane se .

こんにちは。/ Konnichi wa = Hi. / Hello


げんきですか。/ Genki desu ka. = How are you?
げんきです。/ Genki desu. = I'm fine.

JAPANESEPOD101.COM BASIC JAPANESE S1 #2 - BASIC JAPANESE #2: BASIC GREETINGS 3


こんにちは 。/ Konnichi wa.

Konnichi wa (こんにちは) is a general greeting that means "hi" or "hello." It also means
"good afternoon". But, you can use こんにちは any time of the day as a greeting.

げんきですか 。/ Ge nki de su ka.

Genki desu ka. (げんきですか) literally means "Are you healthy?" but it is used to mean
"how are you?"

Genki (げんき) means "healthy."


Desu (です) is a copula which is almost the same as "to be" in English.
ka (か) is a sentence-ending particle that can be used to make a question.

げんきです 。/ Ge nki de su.

To answer the question, "genki desu ka," you just say "genki desu" which means "I'm fine."

げんき ? vs げんき 。

In a casual conversation, you can say genki? with a rising intonation to ask someone "how
are you?" To answer this question, you can say genki without rising intonation to mean
"I'm fine." The only difference is the intonation.

Language T ip

When you want to answer "so so" to the question "how are you," you can say māmā (まあ
まあ) which means "so so." If you are not doing well at all, you can say saiaku (さいあく),
which means "I'm not doing good at all."

JAPANESEPOD101.COM BASIC JAPANESE S1 #2 - BASIC JAPANESE #2: BASIC GREETINGS 4

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