hi! I started learning Japanese not a long ago and I'm trying to learn the grammar now. I'm very confused with ている | てある and the て "form", can someone explain how it all works in "simple words"?
(Sorry if this is not the right place to ask about this kind of thing)
"You will always be a sexless weeb.". How do you say that in niptongue?
Jeremiah Taylor
konnichiwa D U D E
Blake Allen
grammar is a meme just watch anime until it makes sense
Xavier Sullivan
...
Daniel Green
I'm fapping furiously to boku no pico te iru The police are diligently searching for me te aru
was that so fucking hard, faggot
faggot
Juan Turner
teiru und tearu are Verlaufsform. te-form is used for all kinds of shit. learn more.
Samuel Collins
Here's how I understand it: 店が閉まっている -> "The store is closed", a mere statement of fact. 店が閉まってある -> "The store has been closed", implies that the store has been closed as a result of an action. Here you can pretty much infer that the owner closed the store.
Jacob Price
I'm between n3 and n2 but I'll try to help て has a million different uses. You'll see it all the time If you see say a window open but you don't know why it's open you say >窓が開いている。 But if you're talking about a window that is open for a reason you say 窓が開けてある。 You also have to memorize 自動詞 and 他動詞 forms of verbs
Colton Sullivan
How do you type those characters?
Zachary Nelson
this てある form you talk about doesn't really exist. It's just adding the verb ある at the end of a sentence, in which case it's like です.
-ている is like -ing in english, it means an action is taking place right now.
Benjamin Wright
>店が閉まってある It should be 閉めてある 閉まる is a 自動詞 verb and can't be used with てある
Luke Gomez
>自動詞 verb retard
Jacob Bell
google "wikipedia hiragana", copy and paste from the table
Nathan Allen
I see. Makes sense
Angel Rivera
Windows has this thing called IME. You type a word using latin letters and press space and it turns it into the character you typed
hi user! I started learning Japanese a very long time ago, so please take this very simple advice.
Do not worry about てある at all. Just pretend it doesn't exist until you actually start seeing it in the wild, which will be much less often than your textbook would have you believe. Hope that helped.