Casual Questions

“Actually I walk around with the Emmy wherever I go, but I’m very casual about it.” - Larry David

One last thing to cover quickly (get your journal / note taking blog out). There are a couple rules associated with asking questions when speaking casually. You know all about the whole か thing at the end of a sentence, and how that makes it a question, right? With casual form, some weirdness happens.

Here’s the general rule on asking questions with casual noun sentence enders.

だ = Remove だ altogether (you’ll see exceptions to this) and omit the か as well. At the end of the sentence, raise your voice like you’re asking a question.

だった = Remove the か and raise your voice like you’re asking a question.

じゃない = Remove the か and raise your voice like you’re asking a question.

じゃなかった = Remove the か and raise your voice like you’re asking a question.

Really, all you need to remember is:

With casual, you’ll want to drop the か and raise your voice like you’re asking a question. With だ, you’ll want to drop the だ most of the time as well. Theory is that since だ has the feeling you’re making a strong assertion (stronger than です, even), it doesn’t mix well with か (which shows you’re unsure about what you’re talking about). That’s why you remove the だ (and usually the か, as well).

If you don’t know what I mean about “raising your voice at the end of your sentence to make it a question,” take a look at these examples.

a えぇ? かれ は がくせい?
Eh? Is he a student?

a かれ は がくせい だった?
Was he a student?

a かれ は がくせい じゃない?
Isn’t he a student?

a かれ は がくせい じゃなかった?
Wasn’t he a student?

The whole “raise your voice to make a question” thing is actually a lot more like English than the whole か thing is, which is why I think you’ll have no trouble with it. Either way, in the next chapter (Casual Adjectives) you’ll get a lot of practice with both nouns and adjectives, so you’ll figure it out sooner rather than later.

By finishing this page, you know how to ask questions in casual form. Now we’ll round things out with adjectives (before getting to verbs, which is something completely different).

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