✨ Basic Meaning
🎯 Primary Function
📋 Grammar Structure
🎭 Usage Contexts
Used in business reports or professional updates to describe trends (e.g., sales trending down).
Very common in daily life to describe one’s health or feelings.
Found in diaries, news reports (regarding economic trends), and literature.
Commonly used to express “I feel like…” or “I’m a bit…” without being too definitive.
💡 Common Applications
📌 Important Points
⚠️ Common Mistakes
🏛️ Cultural Context
🔍 Subtle Differences
📝 Conjugation Notes
気味 (gimi) behaves like a Na-adjective (気味な, 気味に) or can end a sentence with ‘da’ or ‘desu’. It is most commonly attached to the stem of a verb or a noun.
🔊 Pronunciation Tips
The ‘g’ in ‘gimi’ is sometimes pronounced with a nasal ‘n’ sound (bikion) in some dialects, but standard ‘g’ is perfectly fine.
🧠 Memory Tips
Think of ‘gimi’ as ‘give me’ a feeling. ‘Kaze-gimi’ = ‘Give me a feeling of a cold.’ Or link it to ‘kimochi’ (feeling) since it starts with ‘ki’.
I’m a software engineer based in Japan, with experience in developing web and mobile applications. I’m passionate about technology, especially in DevOps, AI, and app development using platforms like AWS, Flutter, and Node.js. My goal is to build a website that shares knowledge about the Japanese language and IT, helping everyone learn and grow more easily in the digital era.