- adjective; i-adjective (in Japanese)grammar
noun (common) (futsuumeishi)
Generated definitions (experimental)
- adjective
- i-adjective (in Japanese)
This term refers to words that describe qualities or states of being in the Japanese language, often modifying nouns directly and can change form based on tense or negation.
This specific type of adjective ends with the syllable "い" and can be conjugated to indicate tense or negation, distinguishing it from other types of adjectives in Japanese.
Generated collocations (experimental)
Wiktionary definitions (experimental)
Example sentences
14 results
There are two ways of using the infinitive as an adjective, 1. attributive, 2. predicative. Naturally 2. is a subject complement.
'-osity' is an abstract noun word ending created from the ending of an '-ous' adjective.
In English there are eight main parts of speech: noun, verb, adjective, adverb, pronoun, preposition, conjunction and finally interjection.
In Esperanto an adjective ends in "a." The plural is formed by adding "j."