A is not B, but/and...
When we want to put these negative forms into て-form, *all we need to do is drop the last い of ない and add くて.
So:
~くない → ~くなくて
~じゃない → ~じゃなくて
(↑ An exception to this rule is ~では[じゃ]ありません, as it doesn't end in ~ない. In this case, we could just change it to ~ではなくて or ~じゃなくて.)
An example:
天気が良くなくて残念でした。
てんき が よくなくて ざんねん でした。
Unfortunately, the weather was bad. // The weather was bad, which was disappointing.
Literally: "weather + が + not good (and) + disappointing + でした (=was)."
I'm not sure if we mentioned this before, but if you want to write いい (good) using kanji, it's 良い. However, the reading with kanji is typically よい, not いい. |
Let's say that your friend Nagisa is picking you up at your house so that you can go to lunch together. You're walking out to the street, and you see a car parked right in front of your house, so you ask:
これがなぎさの車?
これ が なぎさ の くるま?
This is your car?
Literally: "this + が + Nagisa + の + car?"
Nagisa corrects you, saying:
ううん、これじゃなくてあれ。
ううん、 これ じゃなくて あれ。
No, not this one, that one.
Literally: "no, + this + isn't (and) + that (over there)."
Make sense?
I hope so because this lesson is over! *_*
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