Japanese sentence structure is very different from English, but it's not hard to master. Japanese is SOV, which means that the subject comes first, followed by object or objects and the sentence ends with the verb: ジンボはリンゴを食べる。 じんぼはりんごをたべる。
How do you form a complex sentence in Japanese?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=atrXobsqUCo
What is the order of a Japanese sentence?
Japanese is an SOV language, which means that the basic word order in a sentence is S (subject) O (object) V (verb). English, on the other hand, is an SVO language with the order of S (subject) V (verb) O (object). Japanese: 私は本を読みます。7 Aug 2020
Does sentence order matter in Japanese?
Many of you have probably heard this before but to review, here's how the myth goes. An English sentence must consist of at least a subject, verb, and object in that order. However, in Japanese, the order must be subject, object, then verb.19 Oct 2017
Hello/good day konnichiwa (こんにちは) What is your name? o namae wa? (おなまえは)
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I am watasha wa desu (わたしは…です) Excuse me/I'm sorry sumimasen (すみません)
No, that's not right chigai-masu (ちがいます) Yes, exactly sō desu (そうです)