Legend: * Colloquial ** Vulgar △ Dialectal and colloquial † Literary (obsolete in speech)...
talk:<span class="searchmatch">About</span> <span class="searchmatch">Japanese</span>/<span class="searchmatch">Conjugation</span> freely. I’d like to show the relevant forms in each verb entry and the entire table in Wiktionary:<span class="searchmatch">About</span> <span class="searchmatch">Japanese</span> and Appendix:Japanese...
The classification is very informative to <span class="searchmatch">Japanese</span> learners, but it doesn't seem to be necessary when you are writing an article just for a word definition...
orthography it should use, and what <span class="searchmatch">Japanese</span> templates need Old <span class="searchmatch">Japanese</span> versions to be made. I'm going to start an <span class="searchmatch">About</span> page, but I'd really like input...
This is an archive of topics from Wiktionary talk:<span class="searchmatch">About</span> <span class="searchmatch">Japanese</span> that, as of April 25, 2006, had no posts since February 16, 2006. Those topics were archived...
this one, since it is <span class="searchmatch">Japanese</span> 101 terminology, and this entry (which is really just a word pronunciation, albeit in <span class="searchmatch">Japanese</span>) will be of zero value...
transformation, have different classes of gender- and proximity-affected <span class="searchmatch">conjugations</span>, etc., etc. Think of it like a language made up of nothing but prefixes...
practices are acceptable: 1) use Inflection heading, 2) use Declension or <span class="searchmatch">Conjugation</span> depending on part of speech. The first practice reduces the number of...
October 2020 (UTC) I agree that <span class="searchmatch">Japanese</span> adjectives are very like a verb, but there is a big distinction in <span class="searchmatch">conjugation</span> and forms both morphologically...
me quite uneasy, when the OJP reflex is Old <span class="searchmatch">Japanese</span> 前 (*mape1), considered to be a compound of Old <span class="searchmatch">Japanese</span> 目 (ma, “eye”, combining form for standalone...