How to differentiate between the potential form and passive form of ru-verbs in Japanese

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#Japanese #Japaneselanguage #Studyjapanese #Learnjapanese #japanesewords #normanvargas
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hey there mate... its been a while since i last commented on ur vid...

Ur vid really help me alot man. No music.. just subtitles and ur voice!! Ur voice.. the sound of the japanese sentence you.. the way u say it really loud and clear!!


It easy to follow through.. plus with an additional subtitles, e.g- english, romanji, katakan & hiragana and kanji... really helps me to understand more deeply and focusing one on one. Like u marked as same colour! 🤝🏻

For you mate, if. 'IF' u feel like something that make u feel to stop making short or long content.. dont let it

I downloaded ur vid mate. Almost 20 of ur vid shorts here in my gallery!!👍🏻

Now ur word "The Japanese word..." already stuck inside my head!! hahaha!! Thank you for ur content bud!! 🤝🏻🤝🏻

アリアーチャン
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Also nowadays is very common that people use れる to potencial form and られる to passive rorm like ending "u" verbs

gabrielgallardo
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Love the video, great and clear examples! The first time I learnt the passive voice in JP it was SO confusing

koalaeucalyptus
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In your first example sentence, isn’t it more natural to use が instead of を ? Because the cake is the actor of the main verb, it’s doing the “getting eaten”

Jona
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still say that verb conjugation is worse than Kanji

robshandl
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Wait, is that different from transitive-intransitive forms? I thought intransitive means passive, but intransitive wouldn't use the "wo" particle

davidtitanium
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Japanese syntax is so wack.
The cake, my little sister was eaten by.
Wow.

XOCailleachXO