Why in book's example is used 言葉(ことば) instead of 言語(げんご)?What is the real difference...
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Why in book's example is used 言葉(ことば) instead of 言語(げんご)?
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Why in book's example is used 言葉(ことば) instead of 言語(げんご)?
What is the real difference between the proper use of the words さむい and つめたい?Why did オレンジ replace 橙【だいだい】?How do specific characters get included in 囲み文字 and what are the meanings they convey?How figurative can 姿 be?On the two equivalents on maps of “you are here” (現在地{げんざいち} and 現在位置{げんざいいち})分類{ぶんるい} / 種類{しゅるい} / 類い{たぐい} ~ “kind” / “sort” / “type”Exact use of furigana?To learn English vocabulary, I ate a dictionary page-by-pageWhy 次第 instead of によって in this very example?Why would you use a verbs stem (as state-of-being) rather than the verb itself?
In みんなの日本語初級I book I've noticed the word ことば
as the meaning of language
(English, Japanese, Russian etc), but as I've got the most proper word for this type of language is 言語
。The first variant (which is used in the book) is more for some abstract language. Why this one is used here?
word-choice usage word-usage
New contributor
add a comment |
In みんなの日本語初級I book I've noticed the word ことば
as the meaning of language
(English, Japanese, Russian etc), but as I've got the most proper word for this type of language is 言語
。The first variant (which is used in the book) is more for some abstract language. Why this one is used here?
word-choice usage word-usage
New contributor
add a comment |
In みんなの日本語初級I book I've noticed the word ことば
as the meaning of language
(English, Japanese, Russian etc), but as I've got the most proper word for this type of language is 言語
。The first variant (which is used in the book) is more for some abstract language. Why this one is used here?
word-choice usage word-usage
New contributor
In みんなの日本語初級I book I've noticed the word ことば
as the meaning of language
(English, Japanese, Russian etc), but as I've got the most proper word for this type of language is 言語
。The first variant (which is used in the book) is more for some abstract language. Why this one is used here?
word-choice usage word-usage
word-choice usage word-usage
New contributor
New contributor
New contributor
asked 9 hours ago
Irina KovalchukIrina Kovalchuk
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言語 is more of an academic term, while ことば is more colloquial and accessible. 言語 is normally used with longer compound words. Functionally, though, they mean the same thing.
Although the example that you posted is technically academic, the use of furigana does indicate that it is designed either for younger Japanese or for non-native speakers. Hence, ことば is more accessible (as @tarkma has pointed out).
add a comment |
I think the word ことば is used here simply because it is an easier word. In the Japanese education system, the word 言語 is introduced in second grade according to this.
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言語 is more of an academic term, while ことば is more colloquial and accessible. 言語 is normally used with longer compound words. Functionally, though, they mean the same thing.
Although the example that you posted is technically academic, the use of furigana does indicate that it is designed either for younger Japanese or for non-native speakers. Hence, ことば is more accessible (as @tarkma has pointed out).
add a comment |
言語 is more of an academic term, while ことば is more colloquial and accessible. 言語 is normally used with longer compound words. Functionally, though, they mean the same thing.
Although the example that you posted is technically academic, the use of furigana does indicate that it is designed either for younger Japanese or for non-native speakers. Hence, ことば is more accessible (as @tarkma has pointed out).
add a comment |
言語 is more of an academic term, while ことば is more colloquial and accessible. 言語 is normally used with longer compound words. Functionally, though, they mean the same thing.
Although the example that you posted is technically academic, the use of furigana does indicate that it is designed either for younger Japanese or for non-native speakers. Hence, ことば is more accessible (as @tarkma has pointed out).
言語 is more of an academic term, while ことば is more colloquial and accessible. 言語 is normally used with longer compound words. Functionally, though, they mean the same thing.
Although the example that you posted is technically academic, the use of furigana does indicate that it is designed either for younger Japanese or for non-native speakers. Hence, ことば is more accessible (as @tarkma has pointed out).
answered 3 hours ago
BJCUAIBJCUAI
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I think the word ことば is used here simply because it is an easier word. In the Japanese education system, the word 言語 is introduced in second grade according to this.
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add a comment |
I think the word ことば is used here simply because it is an easier word. In the Japanese education system, the word 言語 is introduced in second grade according to this.
New contributor
add a comment |
I think the word ことば is used here simply because it is an easier word. In the Japanese education system, the word 言語 is introduced in second grade according to this.
New contributor
I think the word ことば is used here simply because it is an easier word. In the Japanese education system, the word 言語 is introduced in second grade according to this.
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answered 7 hours ago
tarkmatarkma
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Irina Kovalchuk is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
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Irina Kovalchuk is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
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