My greatest hope is that てform makes conjugation of verbs easier, sometimes it is difficult to know which particle to use. It seems like it opens up a more natural form of communication which is not so formal, and is probably the hallmark of a foreign speaker, formality. I also found a website that I think will be helpful in learning てform.
Almost every show where they speak Japanese I’ve seen on theてりび I can hear someone using the てform.
My greatest achievement today was getting MS Word 2010 set-up to type in Japanese after getting some unreliable information from the internet. Microsoft’s site actually. That said an East Asian language pack was only available for users of Windows 7 Ultimate, and that I would need to purchase a language pack for $25.00. The solution actually turned out to be much simpler, and cheaper. Free actually. Nothing better than free. Just add the Japanese keyboard layout through Regional Languages in the control panel and switch between languages on the task bar. Thanks Microsoft.
All this after going through the steps to set-up my netbook on the wireless network here at home and sharing the CD-ROM on my desktop since my netbook doesn’t have a CD-ROM to install the language files for Word 2007 (which I know has the language packs) that I thought we’re installed during a recent SSD upgrade. I love computers, after they decide to do what you want them to anyway :)
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