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Breakdown of 〜kai
story of a building
階
A wall surrounds all stories of a building. That's why the roof isn't considered a story.
Usages of 〜kai
一階ikkai
first floor; ground floor
二階nikai
second floor
三階sankai
third floor
四階yonkai
fourth floor
五階gokai
fifth floor
六階rokkai
sixth floor
七階nanakai
seventh floor
八階hakkai
eighth floor
九階kyuukai
ninth floor
十階zyukkai
tenth floor
私 の オフィス は 五階 に あります。watasi no ofisu ha gokai ni arimasu.
My office is on the fifth floor.
エレベーター で 六階 に 行って ください。erebeetaa de rokkai ni itte kudasai.
Please go to the sixth floor by elevator.
八百屋 は 一階 に あります。yaoya ha ikkai ni arimasu.
The greengrocer is on the ground floor.
八階 まで エスカレーター が あります。hakkai made esukareetaa ga arimasu.
There is an escalator up to the eighth floor.
何階nankai
what floor
私 の 会社 は この ビル の 三階 に あります。watasi no kaisya ha kono biru no sankai ni arimasu.
My company is on the third floor of this building.
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“How do verb conjugations work in Japanese?”
Japanese verbs conjugate based on tense, politeness, and mood. For example, the polite present form adds ‑ます to the verb stem, while the past tense uses ‑ました. Unlike English, Japanese verbs don't change based on the subject — the same form works for "I", "you", and "they".
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