Joke Collection Website - News headlines - i am going to take a bath.

i am going to take a bath.

In Japanese, "I'm going to take a shower" means: ぉにります.

Lu Feng: It refers to bathrooms, bathrooms, bathtubs and places where you can take a bath.

にります: It means the verb "enter".

シャワ-refers, take a shower. シャワ -をびます. Let's take a shower with the lotus.

Extended data

According to the characteristics of language structure, Japanese belongs to adhesive language. SOV word order.

There are only two tenses in Japanese: the past tense and the present tense, and the future tense has been classified as the present tense by modern Japanese, because there is no obvious tense marker between the present tense and the future tense, which depends on the relationship between the verb type and the context.

As a basic structure, a typical Japanese sentence is subject-object-predicate.

In Japanese, unlike English, word order does not represent the grammatical function of nouns in sentences. Nouns don't change because of grammatical needs, just like in some languages. On the contrary, grammatical function is expressed by function words after nouns.

What matters is が(ga) and は(ha), and the auxiliary words are pronounced な, (O), に(ni) and の(no). The function word は (pronounced as wa when used as an auxiliary word) is particularly important because it marks the theme or theme of the sentence.

Non past tense:

(1) There is no such thing as a book. (Simplified)/This version is the same. (Polite style)

(Indicates a continuous action to be performed/repeated)

This book is not a book. (Simplified)/はをフんでぃます. (Polite style)

(indicating that it is in progress)

Baidu Encyclopedia-Japanese