The Handbook of Japanese Verbs
S**H
I should have bought this a long time ago
I got this book about 3 days ago and I already finished it. I took Japanese in college (it was my major in undergrad). Looking back, this book would have come in handy. I’ve used multiple Japanese language programs and textbooks such as Genki, Tobira, Situational Functional Japanese (while studying abroad) as well as commercial programs such as Berlitz and many others. I’ve been studying Japanese informally since graduating so it could be that I’ve had time for some of those grammar concepts I learned to marinate, but I’m pretty confident that this verb book is just really good. (It is for those of us who are ‘verb-challenged,’ the book’s words, not mine.) This is one of those books that you can repeatedly refer back to and use as you learn more Japanese (if you’re a beginner or if you just want to review). While a lot of the forms and terms may seem confusing to a beginner, beginners should keep in mind that a book like this can be used over a long period of time. The verbs covered in this book are basically what you’ll find in Genki 1 & 2. For some reason, I found the explanations and example sentences in this book much more thorough than previous textbooks. But that could be that all the material was review for me. Either way, I wish I would have purchased this a long time ago.One thing I noticed missing from this book was the じゃない (ja nai) conjugations that Genki uses (this book only provided ではdewa)).This book uses a mix of romaji (in really huge letters) and Japanese (kanji and kana-hiragana and katakana) all together. I’m not anti-romaji (anymore) so that didn’t bother me, but I do prefer the Japanese characters. I think the inclusion of both is a good approach.The title of this book is a little misleading. This isn’t simply a dictionary (if it was, I probably wouldn’t have read it all); it’s more of a reference book with exercises for you to practice. It gives you a little bit of time to practice each concept after seeing it in a few sentences, so it’s not an extensive workbook. It is very concise and well organized, which I appreciated.One thing I really (really) liked were the English translations next to the Japanese inside the conjugation charts. The charts demonstrate the あいうえお aiueo conjugations, which include most of the basic conjugations (minus the the more complex tenses such as causative and causative-passive). Passive and potential are basically grouped together. But causative and passive have their own conjugation charts. Honorific/Humble/Respectful language is mentioned here and there, but I don’t believe there is a set section for it. (I think Genki does a better job just because it has charts for respectful language.)The introduction and first part of the book tell you what you will learn in the book (conjugation-wise) and the second part of the book is for different grammar points associated with each conjugation. I really like how this is organized as you can focus on learning one conjugation and what it can be used for instead of jumping around from tense or conjugation to conjugation learning one use here and there only to have to go back and learn a new use for an old conjugation form from a few chapters ago (Genki cough cough). Not that there isn’t merit to the other way, but this way is better for focusing on grammar.Each usage has about 3 examples each and after being introduced to a few different grammar points associated with the conjugation, there’s a short fill-in-the-blank activity where you’ll have to write in the correct conjugation/usage based on the English translation and Japanese sentence (available in romaji and Japanese characters). This is basically the formula for the rest of the book.In the back are the answers to all the exercises and a few indexes. One index is by Japanese sentence patterns (with English translations! for quick searches), one is for basic Japanese verbs (regular I verbs aka う -u verbs, then regular II verbs aka る -ru verbs, then irregular verbs aka する -suru and くる -kuru) and an English index for Japanese verbs found throughout this book (verbs by their English translations). As most if not all kodansha books, there’s also a list of other books you may want to purchase at the end of the book. Overall, I would highly recommend this book as a supplement to whatever program, course or series you are using to learn Japanese.
J**2
very useful adunct to a typical textbook
I had a couple of years classroom study in Japanese, many years ago, and have been learning on my own for the last year. This book, and Kamiya's other manual on pattern sentences, have been useful especially as integrative works that bring together lots of scattered information approached differently in textbooks. I think it would be less successful as a first-learning tool, but I'm not in a position to judge. The verb handbook is a very nice reference and summary of verb groups and conjugations, and clarifies the systems by which the various forms are derived. Short exercises with answers let you know whether you've really "got it".
E**G
So many great grammar books from Kodansha and Kamiya!
Great book! I wish there was a kindle version too! I would totally buy it! One with OCR so I can search the books for words while I am practicing grammar in daily life. Until then, I'm going to buy my own scanner so I can scan all of my grammar books for various languages and have them all with me and searchable when I am out in the field practicing these languages.Love this book! Thank you! :) I have too many books to carry with me! GET KINDLE! :) Until then I'll scan it myself! THANKS!
M**8
Decent book, but...
Too much romaji for my liking. I'm not sure how much I'll use this book, since I'm trying to only read things in Japanese. This is probably better for someone just beginning.
B**S
Handy and helpful book!
I love this book, however, it does not have a list of verbs and it's conjugations. What this book does do is clearly explain when to use each verb condition and gives you examples of such. It is very clear in explaining everything. I suggest buying 600 Basic Japanese Verbs book in order to complement this book. They work really well together since the 600 verbs is what it is: verbs listed in a chart with it's conjugations.
J**T
FANTASTIC!
I love this book. I will learn in depth how to handle Japanese verbs correctly. I also have Japanese Verbs at A Glance. Both books are super charged with information. The only problem is that I can't decide which one I should use first. I ask you Japanese learners for your suggestions. Thank you.
J**G
Great reference material
Perfect pocket size so easy to carry around with you.
T**T
Invisible fence replacement battery
Worked perfect as a replacement for our invisible fence system. They fit, they work powerful on deterrent. Will order again.
F**E
Ótimo
Ótimo complemento no aprendizado do japonês. Meu segundo livro dessa autora. São bem didáticos. Tem kanji, furigana, romaji. Recomendo!
G**R
BEST VERB JAPANESE BOOK
All you need to know about Japanese verbs is here! Everything! From tenses to auxiliaries, to transitives and even to collocations!
S**R
A small error
Please fix this省くはがす励ます励むIt's been printed two times
D**D
Indispensable para estudiantes de lengua japonesa
Lo compré para regalar y, tras hojearlo, me parece uno de los mejores libros sobre verbos japoneses para estudiantes. Claro y conciso. Perfecto tanto para los que se inician en el estudio del japonés como para repaso para aquellos que ya tienen cierto nivel. Otra gran publicación de Kodansha.
A**R
The most useful book I have found so far
This book will show you how to conjugate verbs, use them in sentences, and provides more insight into sentence structures - it contains grammar, unlike a lot of other books that simply show you the Dictionary form of the verb and then use it in a sentence that you can't decode easily. Highly recommend this book if you are serious about learning Japanese verbs and forms.
Trustpilot
2 weeks ago
1 day ago