Happy

April 21, 2010

by Nao

shiawa-se, sachi, saiwai, kō

The noun “shiawase” is happiness. “Shiawase” can be used as an adjective in casual expressions. When I feel relaxed, I come to feel like saying, “shiawasē,” stressing the last vowel “e”. You can use this expression in various moments ranging from trivial time for relaxing to extensive happy occasions. A more proper way of meaning “I’m happy” is shiawaseda, which is considered as an adjective verb.

fuku is also happiness. Fu means unhappiness.

In the phrases below, sachi is food.

“Umi no sachi” means seafood; yama no sachi” means food from the mountains. Umi is the sea. Read “u” like the “wu” sound. The particle “no” indicates belonging. When I memorized the word “of,” I grasped that “the A of B” is “B no A.”

Some letters’ concluding sentence is “gotakō wo oinorishimasu”, which means “best wishes.” The prefix “go” makes many words polite. Takō means great happiness. The word gotakō politely refers to “your great happiness.” The phrase “Oinorishimasu” means that I pray for something.

  1. Draw the horizontal stroke.
  2. Draw the vertical stroke crossing the previous stroke.
  3. Draw the longer horizontal line touching the previous stroke.
  4. Draw the dot with a small turn heading to the next stroke.
  5. Draw the sweeping stroke.
  6. Draw the horizontal line below it.
  7. Draw the horizontal line under the previous stroke.
  8. Draw the vertical stroke crossing the previous stroke.

Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out / Change )

Twitter picture

You are commenting using your Twitter account. Log Out / Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out / Change )

Connecting to %s

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 39 other followers