Shun
あず? On the end of a verb, what kind of negative does azu make? For example, in the following sentence: 飲まず食わずで何とか帰り着いたのだった。 I'm guessing, but does this mean: "With nothing in the way of food or drink, he made it back." What does the azu mean? Is this strange grammar? ありがとうございます!
2012年8月11日 09:56
回答 · 10
3
ず=ない 飲まず=飲まない 食べず=食べない 読まず=読まない 行かず=行かない 買わず=買わない.... ect "飲まず食わず" is a phrase that we always use when we want to say "without drinking and eating". I think the sentence's translate is "Without eating and drinking, he barely made it back." You always ask very good questions! Those are good also for me to think about teaching Japanese. I hope you can understand my English though :)
2012年8月11日
2
Actually it's not -azu, you use the same stem form as for -nai and replace -nai with -zu: http://www.guidetojapanese.org/learn/grammar/negativeverbs2
2012年8月11日
2
飲まずで = without drinking 食わずで = without eating This is how you construct the "without ~ing" form in Japanese.
2012年8月11日
1
ず in 飲まず/食わず is the ren'yo kei form of the negative auxiliary "ぬ", another (a bit literary/archaic) form of ない.
2012年8月11日
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