✨ Basic Meaning
🎯 Primary Function
📋 Grammar Structure
🎭 Usage Contexts
Used with です for polite/formal settings (e.g., 寒いです). Conjugations must be polite.
Used in their plain form (without です) when speaking to close friends or family (e.g., 寒い).
Used formally in polite writing with です, or in plain form in essays, stories, or textbook definitions.
Very common in all spoken contexts, often followed by です or conversational particles.
💡 Common Applications
📌 Important Points
⚠️ Common Mistakes
🏛️ Cultural Context
🔍 Subtle Differences
📝 Conjugation Notes
I-adjectives are unique because they inflect (conjugate) themselves. The conjugation stem is formed by dropping the final ‘い’. * **Plain Past Positive:** drop い + かった (e.g., 寒かった) * **Plain Past Negative:** drop い + くなかった (e.g., 寒くなかった) * **Polite forms** are created by adding です after the plain conjugated form (e.g., 寒かったです, 寒くないです).
🔊 Pronunciation Tips
When an i-adjective is followed by です (e.g., 寒いです), the ‘い’ in です is often whispered or dropped in casual speech, making it sound like ‘samui des.’
🧠 Memory Tips
Remember the rule: ‘I have to take the I out to conjugate.’ Think of the ‘い’ as the trigger for the change. If you are describing the quality *now* (present positive), the ‘い’ stays. If you change the tense or polarity, the ‘い’ goes and is replaced by a suffix.
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