@syllst/ja 0.2.7 → 0.2.8

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Files changed (78) hide show
  1. package/dist/index.d.ts +24 -80
  2. package/dist/index.d.ts.map +1 -0
  3. package/dist/index.js +121 -54
  4. package/dist/index.js.map +1 -0
  5. package/dist/index.umd.cjs +128 -0
  6. package/dist/index.umd.cjs.map +1 -0
  7. package/dist/syllabi/dialogue/index.d.ts +2 -5
  8. package/dist/syllabi/dialogue/index.d.ts.map +1 -0
  9. package/dist/syllabi/essentials/index.d.ts +2 -5
  10. package/dist/syllabi/essentials/index.d.ts.map +1 -0
  11. package/dist/syllabi/food/index.d.ts +2 -5
  12. package/dist/syllabi/food/index.d.ts.map +1 -0
  13. package/dist/syllabi/hiragana/index.d.ts +2 -5
  14. package/dist/syllabi/hiragana/index.d.ts.map +1 -0
  15. package/dist/syllabi/katakana/index.d.ts +2 -5
  16. package/dist/syllabi/katakana/index.d.ts.map +1 -0
  17. package/dist/syllabi/numbers/index.d.ts +2 -5
  18. package/dist/syllabi/numbers/index.d.ts.map +1 -0
  19. package/dist/syllabi/travel/index.d.ts +2 -5
  20. package/dist/syllabi/travel/index.d.ts.map +1 -0
  21. package/package.json +5 -2
  22. package/dist/shared.js +0 -26
  23. package/dist/syllabi/dialogue/index.js +0 -43
  24. package/dist/syllabi/dialogue/lessons/lesson-01.mdx.js +0 -181
  25. package/dist/syllabi/dialogue/lessons/lesson-02.mdx.js +0 -193
  26. package/dist/syllabi/dialogue/lessons/lesson-03.mdx.js +0 -169
  27. package/dist/syllabi/dialogue/lessons/lesson-04.mdx.js +0 -182
  28. package/dist/syllabi/dialogue/lessons/lesson-05.mdx.js +0 -176
  29. package/dist/syllabi/dialogue/lessons/lesson-06.mdx.js +0 -167
  30. package/dist/syllabi/dialogue/lessons/lesson-07.mdx.js +0 -168
  31. package/dist/syllabi/dialogue/lessons/lesson-08.mdx.js +0 -200
  32. package/dist/syllabi/essentials/index.js +0 -39
  33. package/dist/syllabi/essentials/lessons/lesson-01.mdx.js +0 -207
  34. package/dist/syllabi/essentials/lessons/lesson-02.mdx.js +0 -205
  35. package/dist/syllabi/essentials/lessons/lesson-03.mdx.js +0 -212
  36. package/dist/syllabi/essentials/lessons/lesson-04.mdx.js +0 -192
  37. package/dist/syllabi/essentials/lessons/lesson-05.mdx.js +0 -213
  38. package/dist/syllabi/essentials/lessons/lesson-06.mdx.js +0 -241
  39. package/dist/syllabi/food/index.js +0 -43
  40. package/dist/syllabi/food/lessons/lesson-01.mdx.js +0 -170
  41. package/dist/syllabi/food/lessons/lesson-02.mdx.js +0 -178
  42. package/dist/syllabi/food/lessons/lesson-03.mdx.js +0 -189
  43. package/dist/syllabi/food/lessons/lesson-04.mdx.js +0 -180
  44. package/dist/syllabi/food/lessons/lesson-05.mdx.js +0 -164
  45. package/dist/syllabi/food/lessons/lesson-06.mdx.js +0 -179
  46. package/dist/syllabi/food/lessons/lesson-07.mdx.js +0 -193
  47. package/dist/syllabi/food/lessons/lesson-08.mdx.js +0 -188
  48. package/dist/syllabi/hiragana/index.js +0 -47
  49. package/dist/syllabi/hiragana/lessons/lesson-01.mdx.js +0 -171
  50. package/dist/syllabi/hiragana/lessons/lesson-02.mdx.js +0 -160
  51. package/dist/syllabi/hiragana/lessons/lesson-03.mdx.js +0 -151
  52. package/dist/syllabi/hiragana/lessons/lesson-04.mdx.js +0 -158
  53. package/dist/syllabi/hiragana/lessons/lesson-05.mdx.js +0 -169
  54. package/dist/syllabi/hiragana/lessons/lesson-06.mdx.js +0 -174
  55. package/dist/syllabi/hiragana/lessons/lesson-07.mdx.js +0 -173
  56. package/dist/syllabi/hiragana/lessons/lesson-08.mdx.js +0 -159
  57. package/dist/syllabi/hiragana/lessons/lesson-09.mdx.js +0 -176
  58. package/dist/syllabi/hiragana/lessons/lesson-10.mdx.js +0 -199
  59. package/dist/syllabi/katakana/index.js +0 -37
  60. package/dist/syllabi/katakana/lessons/lesson-01.mdx.js +0 -196
  61. package/dist/syllabi/katakana/lessons/lesson-02.mdx.js +0 -210
  62. package/dist/syllabi/katakana/lessons/lesson-03.mdx.js +0 -214
  63. package/dist/syllabi/katakana/lessons/lesson-04.mdx.js +0 -216
  64. package/dist/syllabi/katakana/lessons/lesson-05.mdx.js +0 -259
  65. package/dist/syllabi/numbers/index.js +0 -37
  66. package/dist/syllabi/numbers/lessons/lesson-01.mdx.js +0 -190
  67. package/dist/syllabi/numbers/lessons/lesson-02.mdx.js +0 -194
  68. package/dist/syllabi/numbers/lessons/lesson-03.mdx.js +0 -197
  69. package/dist/syllabi/numbers/lessons/lesson-04.mdx.js +0 -215
  70. package/dist/syllabi/numbers/lessons/lesson-05.mdx.js +0 -227
  71. package/dist/syllabi/travel/index.js +0 -41
  72. package/dist/syllabi/travel/lessons/lesson-01.mdx.js +0 -156
  73. package/dist/syllabi/travel/lessons/lesson-02.mdx.js +0 -175
  74. package/dist/syllabi/travel/lessons/lesson-03.mdx.js +0 -177
  75. package/dist/syllabi/travel/lessons/lesson-04.mdx.js +0 -181
  76. package/dist/syllabi/travel/lessons/lesson-05.mdx.js +0 -162
  77. package/dist/syllabi/travel/lessons/lesson-06.mdx.js +0 -179
  78. package/dist/syllabi/travel/lessons/lesson-07.mdx.js +0 -194
@@ -1,213 +0,0 @@
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- const n = `---
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- type: lesson
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- id: japanese-essentials-lesson-05
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- title: "だい 5 か — レストランと たべもの"
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- description: "Restaurant & Food: メニュー, ordering patterns, いただきます"
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- order: 5
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- parentId: japanese-essentials
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- difficulty: beginner
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- cefrLevel: A1
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- categories:
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- - food
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- - restaurant
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- - practical
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- metadata:
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- estimatedTime: 35
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- prerequisites:
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- - japanese-essentials-lesson-04
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- learningObjectives:
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- - id: obj-ja-ess-05-order
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- description: "Order food and drink at a restaurant"
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- skill: situational-response
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- - id: obj-ja-ess-05-food-vocab
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- description: "Recognize common food and drink vocabulary"
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- skill: word-recognition
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- - id: obj-ja-ess-05-dining-phrases
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- description: "Use essential dining phrases including いただきます and ごちそうさま"
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- skill: word-production
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- ---
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-
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- # だい 5 か (Lesson 5) — Restaurant & Food
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-
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- ## Introduction
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-
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- Eating out in Japan is a wonderful experience. Whether at a ramen shop, a sushi counter, or a family restaurant, the same key phrases apply. Japanese restaurants often have plastic food displays outside (しょくひんサンプル), picture menus, and ticket vending machines (けんばいき) — all designed to make ordering easy even without language skills. With a few key phrases, you can enjoy any meal.
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-
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- ## At the Restaurant
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-
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- :::vocabulary-set{id="ja-restaurant" title="Restaurant Vocabulary"}
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-
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- ::vocab-item{id="menyu" word="メニュー" pronunciation="menyuu" meaning="menu"}
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-
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- ::vocab-item{id="chuumon" word="ちゅうもん" pronunciation="chuumon" meaning="order"}
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-
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- ::vocab-item{id="kaikei" word="かいけい" pronunciation="kaikei" meaning="bill / check"}
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-
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- ::vocab-item{id="osakini" word="おさきに" pronunciation="osaki ni" meaning="excuse me for going ahead (before eating)"}
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-
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- ::vocab-item{id="tabe-hooudai" word="たべほうだい" pronunciation="tabe houdai" meaning="all-you-can-eat"}
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-
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- ::vocab-item{id="nomi-hooudai" word="のみほうだい" pronunciation="nomi houdai" meaning="all-you-can-drink"}
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-
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- :::
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-
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- ## Food Vocabulary
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-
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- :::vocabulary-set{id="ja-food" title="Common Foods"}
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-
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- ::vocab-item{id="ramen" word="ラーメン" pronunciation="raamen" meaning="ramen noodle soup"}
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-
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- ::vocab-item{id="sushi" word="すし (寿司)" pronunciation="sushi" meaning="sushi"}
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-
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- ::vocab-item{id="tempura" word="てんぷら (天ぷら)" pronunciation="tenpura" meaning="tempura (battered and fried)"}
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-
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- ::vocab-item{id="gohan" word="ごはん (ご飯)" pronunciation="gohan" meaning="rice / meal"}
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-
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- ::vocab-item{id="mizu" word="みず (水)" pronunciation="mizu" meaning="water"}
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-
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- ::vocab-item{id="ocha" word="おちゃ (お茶)" pronunciation="ocha" meaning="tea (green tea)"}
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-
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- ::vocab-item{id="biiru" word="ビール" pronunciation="biiru" meaning="beer"}
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-
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- :::
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-
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- ## Ordering Phrases
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-
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- | Japanese | Pronunciation | Meaning |
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- |----------|---------------|---------|
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- | 〜をください | ~ wo kudasai | Please give me ~ |
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- | 〜をひとつください | ~ wo hitotsu kudasai | Please give me one ~ |
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- | 〜はありますか | ~ wa arimasu ka | Do you have ~? |
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- | おすすめはなんですか | osusume wa nan desu ka | What do you recommend? |
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- | これをください | kore wo kudasai | I'll take this one please |
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- | おなじものをください | onaji mono wo kudasai | The same thing, please |
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-
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- ## The Dining Ritual
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-
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- Two phrases are essential at every Japanese meal:
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-
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- :::vocabulary-set{id="ja-dining-ritual" title="Dining Ritual Phrases"}
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-
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- ::vocab-item{id="itadakimasu" word="いただきます" pronunciation="itadakimasu" meaning="I humbly receive (said before eating)"}
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-
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- ::vocab-item{id="gochisousama" word="ごちそうさまでした" pronunciation="gochisousama deshita" meaning="Thank you for the meal (said after eating)"}
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-
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- :::
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-
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- **いただきます** is said before eating, hands pressed together. It expresses gratitude to the food, the animal or plant, the cook, and everyone involved in bringing the meal to you.
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-
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- **ごちそうさまでした** is said after finishing. You say it to the cook or restaurant staff, acknowledging their effort.
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-
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- ## Dietary Needs
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-
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- | Japanese | Pronunciation | Meaning |
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- |----------|---------------|---------|
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- | わたしは〜がたべられません | watashi wa ~ ga taberaremasen | I cannot eat ~ |
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- | アレルギーがあります | arerugii ga arimasu | I have an allergy |
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- | ベジタリアンです | bejitarian desu | I am vegetarian |
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- | からいのはだいじょうぶですか | karai no wa daijoubu desu ka | Is spicy food okay? |
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-
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- ## Sample Conversation
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-
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- > きゃく: すみません、ちゅうもんおねがいします。
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- > (Customer: Excuse me, I'd like to order please.)
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-
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- > てんいん: はい、なにになさいますか。
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- > (Staff: Yes, what would you like?)
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-
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- > きゃく: ラーメンをひとつと、みずをください。
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- > (Customer: One ramen and water, please.)
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-
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- > てんいん: かしこまりました。
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- > (Staff: Certainly.)
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-
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- [Food arrives]
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-
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- > きゃく: いただきます!
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- > (Customer: Thank you for this meal!)
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-
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- ## Useful Restaurant Phrases
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-
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- | Japanese | Pronunciation | Meaning |
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- |----------|---------------|---------|
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- | かいけいをおねがいします | kaikei wo onegai shimasu | Check please |
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- | べつべつにしてください | betsu-betsu ni shite kudasai | Separate bills please |
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- | おいしい! | oishii | Delicious! |
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- | からい | karai | spicy |
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- | あまい | amai | sweet |
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- | しょっぱい | shoppai | salty |
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-
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- ## Cultural Note: Ticket Machines (けんばいき)
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-
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- Many ramen shops, curry houses, and popular restaurants use food ticket vending machines at the entrance. You:
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- 1. Look at the button pictures to choose your dish
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- 2. Insert money or tap a card
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- 3. The machine prints a ticket
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- 4. Hand the ticket to staff when you sit down
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-
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- This system makes ordering very simple even without Japanese.
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-
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- ## Key Points
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-
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- 1. **いただきます before every meal**: This is culturally important and greatly appreciated
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- 2. **ごちそうさまでした when done**: Say it to staff as you leave
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- 3. **すみません to get attention**: Then ちゅうもんおねがいします
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- 4. **〜をひとつください**: Add a number before ください for quantities
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-
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- ## Practice Exercises
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-
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- :::exercise{id="ja-ess-05-ordering" type="fill-in-blank" title="Placing an Order" skill="situational-response" objectiveId="obj-ja-ess-05-order"}
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-
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- **Question:** You want to order one sushi and two ramen. Complete the sentence:
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-
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- すしを ___ と、ラーメンを ___ ください。
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-
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- **Answer:**
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- すしを **ひとつ** と、ラーメンを **ふたつ** ください。
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-
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- **Explanation:** ひとつ (one) and ふたつ (two) are native Japanese counters used for general objects. The pattern [item] を [number] ください is the standard ordering format.
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-
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- :::
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-
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- :::exercise{id="ja-ess-05-food-match" type="matching" title="Food Vocabulary" skill="word-recognition" objectiveId="obj-ja-ess-05-food-vocab"}
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-
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- **Question:** Match each food word to its meaning
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-
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- - ごはん
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- - おちゃ
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- - てんぷら
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-
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- **Answer:**
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-
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- - ごはん → rice / meal
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- - おちゃ → tea (green tea)
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- - てんぷら → tempura (battered and fried dishes)
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-
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- **Explanation:** ごはん literally means "cooked rice" but is also used to mean "a meal" in general (e.g., あさごはん = breakfast, ひるごはん = lunch, ばんごはん = dinner).
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-
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- :::
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-
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- :::exercise{id="ja-ess-05-dining-ritual" type="multiple-choice" title="Dining Ritual" skill="word-production" objectiveId="obj-ja-ess-05-dining-phrases"}
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-
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- **Question:** What do you say just before you start eating?
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-
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- **Options:**
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- - ごちそうさまでした
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- - いただきます
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- - おやすみなさい
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- - よろしくおねがいします
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-
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- **Answer:** 2
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-
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- **Explanation:** いただきます is always said immediately before starting to eat. It expresses humility and gratitude for the meal. ごちそうさまでした is said after finishing the meal, thanking those who prepared and served it.
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-
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- :::
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-
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- ## What's Next
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-
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- In Lesson 6, you will learn daily conversation patterns — talking about weather, time, and asking simple questions.
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- `;
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- export {
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- n as default
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- };
@@ -1,241 +0,0 @@
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- const n = `---
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- type: lesson
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- id: japanese-essentials-lesson-06
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- title: "だい 6 か — にちじょう かいわ"
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- description: "Daily Conversations: weather, time, simple questions and responses"
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- order: 6
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- parentId: japanese-essentials
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- difficulty: beginner
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- cefrLevel: A1
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- categories:
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- - conversation
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- - daily-life
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- - basics
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- metadata:
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- estimatedTime: 35
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- prerequisites:
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- - japanese-essentials-lesson-05
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- learningObjectives:
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- - id: obj-ja-ess-06-weather
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- description: "Talk about the weather using basic vocabulary"
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- skill: word-production
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- - id: obj-ja-ess-06-time
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- description: "Ask and tell the time"
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- skill: word-recognition
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- - id: obj-ja-ess-06-small-talk
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- description: "Carry out simple small talk exchanges"
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- skill: dialogue-comprehension
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- ---
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-
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- # だい 6 か (Lesson 6) — Daily Conversations
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-
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- ## Introduction
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-
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- Daily conversation in Japanese often revolves around a small set of topics — the weather, how you are feeling, what time it is. These are the small exchanges that build relationships and make you feel at home in Japan. Mastering these patterns gives you the foundation for longer conversations.
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-
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- ## Asking How Someone Is
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-
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- :::vocabulary-set{id="ja-how-are-you" title="How Are You Expressions"}
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-
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- ::vocab-item{id="ogenki-desu-ka" word="おげんきですか" pronunciation="o-genki desu ka" meaning="How are you? (Are you well?)"}
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-
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- ::vocab-item{id="genki-desu" word="げんきです" pronunciation="genki desu" meaning="I am fine / I am well"}
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-
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- ::vocab-item{id="maamaa-desu" word="まあまあです" pronunciation="maamaa desu" meaning="So-so / Not bad"}
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-
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- ::vocab-item{id="sukoshi-tsukaremashita" word="すこしつかれました" pronunciation="sukoshi tsukaremashita" meaning="I am a little tired"}
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-
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- :::
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-
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- ## Weather Vocabulary
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-
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- :::vocabulary-set{id="ja-weather" title="Weather Words"}
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-
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- ::vocab-item{id="hare" word="はれ (晴れ)" pronunciation="hare" meaning="sunny / clear sky"}
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-
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- ::vocab-item{id="kumori" word="くもり (曇り)" pronunciation="kumori" meaning="cloudy"}
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-
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- ::vocab-item{id="ame" word="あめ (雨)" pronunciation="ame" meaning="rain"}
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- ::vocab-item{id="yuki" word="ゆき (雪)" pronunciation="yuki" meaning="snow"}
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-
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- ::vocab-item{id="kaze" word="かぜ (風)" pronunciation="kaze" meaning="wind"}
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-
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- ::vocab-item{id="atsui" word="あつい (暑い)" pronunciation="atsui" meaning="hot"}
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- ::vocab-item{id="samui" word="さむい (寒い)" pronunciation="samui" meaning="cold"}
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-
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- ::vocab-item{id="suzushii" word="すずしい (涼しい)" pronunciation="suzushii" meaning="cool / refreshing"}
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-
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- :::
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-
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- ## Weather Phrases
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- | Japanese | Pronunciation | Meaning |
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- |----------|---------------|---------|
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- | きょうはいいてんきですね | kyou wa ii tenki desu ne | Nice weather today, isn't it? |
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- | あめがふっています | ame ga futte imasu | It is raining |
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- | さむいですね | samui desu ne | It's cold, isn't it? |
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- | あついですね | atsui desu ne | It's hot, isn't it? |
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- | てんきよほうは? | tenki yohou wa? | What's the weather forecast? |
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-
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- ## Telling Time
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-
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- | Japanese | Pronunciation | Meaning |
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- |----------|---------------|---------|
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- | いまなんじですか | ima nanji desu ka | What time is it now? |
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- | 〜じです | ~ ji desu | It is ~ o'clock |
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- | いちじです | ichi ji desu | It is 1 o'clock |
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- | ごじはんです | go ji han desu | It is 5:30 |
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- | ごぜん | gozen | AM / morning |
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- | ごご | gogo | PM / afternoon |
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-
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- ### Hours and Half Hours
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- | Time | Japanese | Pronunciation |
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- |------|----------|---------------|
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- | 1:00 | いちじ | ichi ji |
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- | 2:00 | にじ | ni ji |
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- | 3:00 | さんじ | san ji |
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- | 6:30 | ろくじはん | roku ji han |
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- | 9:15 | きゅうじじゅうごふん | kyuu ji juu go fun |
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- | 12:00 | じゅうにじ | juuni ji |
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-
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- ## Simple Small Talk Patterns
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- :::vocabulary-set{id="ja-small-talk" title="Small Talk Phrases"}
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-
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- ::vocab-item{id="nihon-wa-dodesuka" word="にほんはどうですか" pronunciation="nihon wa dou desu ka" meaning="How is Japan (for you)?"}
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-
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- ::vocab-item{id="tanoshii" word="たのしい!" pronunciation="tanoshii" meaning="Fun! / Enjoyable!"}
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-
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- ::vocab-item{id="suki-desu" word="すきです" pronunciation="suki desu" meaning="I like it"}
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-
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- ::vocab-item{id="muzukashii" word="むずかしい" pronunciation="muzukashii" meaning="difficult"}
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-
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- ::vocab-item{id="omoshiroi" word="おもしろい" pronunciation="omoshiroi" meaning="interesting / fun"}
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-
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- :::
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-
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- ## Common Daily Exchanges
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- | Situation | Japanese | Meaning |
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- |-----------|----------|---------|
124
- | Passing a neighbor | こんにちは、いいてんきですね | Hello, nice weather |
125
- | Someone asks おげんきですか | はい、げんきです。あなたは? | Yes, I'm fine. And you? |
126
- | Someone offers you food | いただきます! | I'll have some, thank you! |
127
- | Leaving work/school | おつかれさまでした | Good work today (to colleagues) |
128
- | Arriving at someone's home | おじゃまします | Excuse me for intruding |
129
-
130
- ## Social Phrases
131
-
132
- | Japanese | Pronunciation | Meaning |
133
- |----------|---------------|---------|
134
- | おつかれさまでした | otsukaresama deshita | Good work / You must be tired (to colleagues) |
135
- | おじゃまします | ojama shimasu | Excuse me for disturbing / intruding |
136
- | ただいま | tadaima | I'm home |
137
- | おかえり | okaeri | Welcome home |
138
- | いってきます | ittekimasu | I'm heading out (lit. I'll go and come back) |
139
- | いってらっしゃい | itterasshai | Have a safe trip / See you later |
140
-
141
- ## Sample Weather Conversation
142
-
143
- > Aさん: きょうはいいてんきですね!
144
- > (A: Nice weather today, isn't it!)
145
-
146
- > Bさん: そうですね。でも、あしたはあめだそうです。
147
- > (B: Yes, it is. But apparently it will rain tomorrow.)
148
-
149
- > Aさん: そうですか。さむくなりますね。
150
- > (A: Is that so? It will get cold then.)
151
-
152
- > Bさん: ええ。かさをもってきたほうがいいですよ。
153
- > (B: Yes. You'd better bring an umbrella.)
154
-
155
- ## Cultural Note: ね (ne) and よ (yo)
156
-
157
- Two small sentence-ending particles make your Japanese sound much more natural:
158
-
159
- - **ね (ne)**: Seeks shared agreement. "It's cold, isn't it?" (さむいですね) invites the listener to agree — it is a bonding expression.
160
- - **よ (yo)**: Asserts information the speaker knows but thinks the listener does not. "It will rain, you know" (あめですよ) is a friendly heads-up.
161
-
162
- Using these particles is one of the quickest ways to make your Japanese sound less textbook-stiff.
163
-
164
- ## Key Points
165
-
166
- 1. **Weather small talk is universal**: きょうはいいてんきですね starts countless conversations
167
- 2. **ね invites agreement**: Add it to observations to sound natural
168
- 3. **いま なんじですか asks the time**: Reply with [number] じです
169
- 4. **はん = half past**: ごじはん = 5:30, さんじはん = 3:30
170
-
171
- ## Practice Exercises
172
-
173
- :::exercise{id="ja-ess-06-weather-match" type="matching" title="Weather Vocabulary" skill="word-production" objectiveId="obj-ja-ess-06-weather"}
174
-
175
- **Question:** Match each weather word to its meaning
176
-
177
- - はれ
178
- - くもり
179
- - ゆき
180
-
181
- **Answer:**
182
-
183
- - はれ → sunny / clear
184
- - くもり → cloudy
185
- - ゆき → snow
186
-
187
- **Explanation:** Japanese weather vocabulary is used extensively in small talk. はれ (sunny) and くもり (cloudy) are the most common, while ゆき (snow) and あめ (rain) describe precipitation.
188
-
189
- :::
190
-
191
- :::exercise{id="ja-ess-06-time-reading" type="fill-in-blank" title="Telling Time" skill="word-recognition" objectiveId="obj-ja-ess-06-time"}
192
-
193
- **Question:** How do you say these times in Japanese?
194
-
195
- 1. 3 o'clock
196
- 2. 7:30
197
- 3. What time is it now?
198
-
199
- **Answer:**
200
-
201
- 1. **さんじです** (san ji desu)
202
- 2. **しちじはんです** (shichi ji han desu) or **ななじはんです** (nana ji han desu)
203
- 3. **いまなんじですか** (ima nanji desu ka)
204
-
205
- **Explanation:** Hours use the number + じ (ji). はん means "half past." なんじ (what o'clock) is the question form for asking the time.
206
-
207
- :::
208
-
209
- :::exercise{id="ja-ess-06-daily-exchange" type="multiple-choice" title="Daily Exchange" skill="dialogue-comprehension" objectiveId="obj-ja-ess-06-small-talk"}
210
-
211
- **Question:** You arrive home and your family says おかえり. What is the natural response?
212
-
213
- **Options:**
214
- - いってきます
215
- - いただきます
216
- - ただいま
217
- - おやすみなさい
218
-
219
- **Answer:** 3
220
-
221
- **Explanation:** ただいま is said by the person arriving home, while おかえり (or おかえりなさい) is the response from those already inside. These paired expressions are deeply embedded in Japanese family life and used every day.
222
-
223
- :::
224
-
225
- ## Congratulations!
226
-
227
- You have completed the Japanese Essentials syllabus! You now have a survival toolkit for real-life Japanese situations — greetings, polite expressions, shopping, directions, dining, and daily conversation. Keep practicing by using these phrases in real or simulated situations every day.
228
-
229
- **Review the 6 lessons:**
230
- 1. Greetings & Introductions
231
- 2. Polite Expressions
232
- 3. Shopping & Numbers
233
- 4. Asking Directions
234
- 5. Restaurant & Food
235
- 6. Daily Conversations
236
-
237
- **Next steps:** Try the Japanese Numbers syllabus to build your counting and time-telling skills, or explore Hiragana to start reading the Japanese script.
238
- `;
239
- export {
240
- n as default
241
- };
@@ -1,43 +0,0 @@
1
- import { createContentLoader as n } from "../../shared.js";
2
- const r = {
3
- id: "ja-food",
4
- title: "たべもの (Japanese Food)",
5
- description: "Japanese food vocabulary, restaurant ordering, ingredients, cooking, and food culture",
6
- language: "ja",
7
- locale: "ja-JP",
8
- lessonCount: 8,
9
- difficulty: "beginner",
10
- cefrLevel: "A1",
11
- icon: "vocabulary",
12
- version: "0.1.0"
13
- };
14
- async function t(e) {
15
- switch (e) {
16
- case 1:
17
- return import("./lessons/lesson-01.mdx.js");
18
- case 2:
19
- return import("./lessons/lesson-02.mdx.js");
20
- case 3:
21
- return import("./lessons/lesson-03.mdx.js");
22
- case 4:
23
- return import("./lessons/lesson-04.mdx.js");
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- case 5:
25
- return import("./lessons/lesson-05.mdx.js");
26
- case 6:
27
- return import("./lessons/lesson-06.mdx.js");
28
- case 7:
29
- return import("./lessons/lesson-07.mdx.js");
30
- case 8:
31
- return import("./lessons/lesson-08.mdx.js");
32
- default:
33
- throw new Error(`Lesson ${e} not found`);
34
- }
35
- }
36
- const o = n(r, t), a = o.loadLesson.bind(o), i = o.loadAllLessons.bind(o), c = o.getAvailableLessons.bind(o);
37
- export {
38
- r as config,
39
- c as getAvailableLessons,
40
- i as loadAllLessons,
41
- a as loadLesson,
42
- o as loader
43
- };
@@ -1,170 +0,0 @@
1
- const n = `---
2
- type: lesson
3
- id: japanese-food-lesson-01
4
- title: "だい 1 か — にほんの たべもの"
5
- description: "Japanese Cuisine Overview: iconic dishes, food categories, and eating culture"
6
- order: 1
7
- parentId: japanese-food
8
- difficulty: beginner
9
- cefrLevel: A1
10
- categories:
11
- - food
12
- - culture
13
- - vocabulary
14
- metadata:
15
- estimatedTime: 30
16
- prerequisites: []
17
- learningObjectives:
18
- - id: obj-ja-food-01-dishes
19
- description: "Name at least 8 iconic Japanese dishes"
20
- skill: word-recognition
21
- - id: obj-ja-food-01-categories
22
- description: "Categorize Japanese food into main types"
23
- skill: word-production
24
- - id: obj-ja-food-01-culture
25
- description: "Understand basic Japanese food culture and etiquette"
26
- skill: situational-response
27
- ---
28
-
29
- # だい 1 か (Lesson 1) — Japanese Cuisine Overview
30
-
31
- ## Introduction
32
-
33
- Japanese cuisine (にほんりょうり) is one of the most varied in the world, ranging from delicate raw fish to hearty noodle soups. This lesson introduces the most iconic Japanese dishes you will encounter.
34
-
35
- ## Iconic Japanese Dishes
36
-
37
- :::vocabulary-set{id="ja-food-01-iconic" title="Iconic Japanese Dishes"}
38
-
39
- ::vocab-item{id="sushi" word="すし" pronunciation="sushi" meaning="Sushi — rice topped with fish or other ingredients"}
40
-
41
- ::vocab-item{id="sashimi" word="さしみ" pronunciation="sashimi" meaning="Sashimi — thinly sliced raw fish"}
42
-
43
- ::vocab-item{id="ramen" word="ラーメン" pronunciation="raamen" meaning="Ramen — wheat noodles in broth"}
44
-
45
- ::vocab-item{id="tempura" word="てんぷら" pronunciation="tenpura" meaning="Tempura — lightly battered and deep-fried seafood or vegetables"}
46
-
47
- ::vocab-item{id="tonkatsu" word="とんかつ" pronunciation="tonkatsu" meaning="Tonkatsu — breaded and fried pork cutlet"}
48
-
49
- ::vocab-item{id="udon" word="うどん" pronunciation="udon" meaning="Udon — thick wheat noodles in broth"}
50
-
51
- ::vocab-item{id="soba" word="そば" pronunciation="soba" meaning="Soba — thin buckwheat noodles"}
52
-
53
- ::vocab-item{id="yakitori" word="やきとり" pronunciation="yakitori" meaning="Yakitori — grilled chicken skewers"}
54
-
55
- :::
56
-
57
- ## Food Categories
58
-
59
- :::vocabulary-set{id="ja-food-01-categories" title="Food Category Words"}
60
-
61
- ::vocab-item{id="ryouri" word="りょうり" pronunciation="ryouri" meaning="Cuisine / dish / cooking"}
62
-
63
- ::vocab-item{id="sakana" word="さかな" pronunciation="sakana" meaning="Fish"}
64
-
65
- ::vocab-item{id="niku" word="にく" pronunciation="niku" meaning="Meat"}
66
-
67
- ::vocab-item{id="yasai" word="やさい" pronunciation="yasai" meaning="Vegetables"}
68
-
69
- ::vocab-item{id="gohan" word="ごはん" pronunciation="gohan" meaning="Cooked rice / a meal"}
70
-
71
- ::vocab-item{id="menrui" word="めんるい" pronunciation="menrui" meaning="Noodles (general)"}
72
-
73
- :::
74
-
75
- ## Key Food Culture Points
76
-
77
- ### ごはん (gohan) — Rice and More
78
-
79
- The word ごはん literally means "cooked rice" but is also used to mean "a meal" in general:
80
-
81
- | Expression | Meaning |
82
- |------------|---------|
83
- | あさごはん | Breakfast (morning meal) |
84
- | ひるごはん | Lunch (noon meal) |
85
- | ばんごはん | Dinner (evening meal) |
86
-
87
- ### Eating Etiquette
88
-
89
- | Custom | Explanation |
90
- |--------|-------------|
91
- | いただきます | Said before eating — "I humbly receive" |
92
- | ごちそうさまでした | Said after eating — "It was a feast" |
93
- | はしを つかう | Using chopsticks — the standard utensil |
94
- | さらに もる | Serving food to others before yourself |
95
-
96
- ## Sample Conversation
97
-
98
- **A**: にほんの たべもので、なにが すきですか?
99
- (What Japanese food do you like?)
100
-
101
- **B**: すしが だいすきです!
102
- (I love sushi!)
103
-
104
- **A**: ラーメンは?
105
- (What about ramen?)
106
-
107
- **B**: ラーメンも すきです。とくに とんこつラーメンが おいしいです。
108
- (I like ramen too. Especially tonkotsu ramen is delicious.)
109
-
110
- ## Practice Exercises
111
-
112
- :::exercise{id="ja-food-01-match-dish" type="matching" title="Match Dish to Description" skill="word-recognition" objectiveId="obj-ja-food-01-dishes"}
113
-
114
- **Question:** Match each dish to its description
115
-
116
- - すし
117
- - ラーメン
118
- - てんぷら
119
-
120
- **Answer:**
121
-
122
- - すし → Rice topped with fish or ingredients
123
- - ラーメン → Wheat noodles in broth
124
- - てんぷら → Lightly battered deep-fried seafood or vegetables
125
-
126
- **Explanation:** すし, ラーメン, and てんぷら are three of the most recognized Japanese dishes worldwide. Each has a distinct preparation method.
127
-
128
- :::
129
-
130
- :::exercise{id="ja-food-01-gohan" type="fill-in-blank" title="Meal Names" skill="word-production" objectiveId="obj-ja-food-01-categories"}
131
-
132
- **Question:** Fill in the blank to complete each meal name:
133
-
134
- 1. あさ___ (breakfast)
135
- 2. ひる___ (lunch)
136
- 3. ばん___ (dinner)
137
-
138
- **Answer:**
139
-
140
- 1. あさ**ごはん**
141
- 2. ひる**ごはん**
142
- 3. ばん**ごはん**
143
-
144
- **Explanation:** ごはん means both "cooked rice" and "meal." Combined with time words, it forms the Japanese words for each daily meal.
145
-
146
- :::
147
-
148
- :::exercise{id="ja-food-01-etiquette" type="multiple-choice" title="Before or After?" skill="situational-response" objectiveId="obj-ja-food-01-culture"}
149
-
150
- **Question:** Which expression do you say BEFORE eating?
151
-
152
- **Options:**
153
- - ごちそうさまでした
154
- - いただきます
155
- - すみません
156
- - よろしくおねがいします
157
-
158
- **Answer:** 2
159
-
160
- **Explanation:** いただきます is said before eating to express gratitude for the meal. ごちそうさまでした is said after the meal to thank the cook or host.
161
-
162
- :::
163
-
164
- ## What's Next
165
-
166
- In Lesson 2, you will learn taste vocabulary — how to describe whether food is delicious, sweet, spicy, or bitter.
167
- `;
168
- export {
169
- n as default
170
- };