The Virtual Picture Album --Japan

The grid below is an annotated index to part of the Virtual Picture Album compiled and distributed by the Less Commonly Taught Languages Project at the University of Minnesota. The pictures in this section of the VPA are of people, places and objects in Japan. Each of the pictures is represented by a thumbnail-sized image in the grid, and is accompanied by:

  • a list of vocabulary items corresponding to elements in the picture;
  • some suggested lesson topics and grammar points for which the picture might be useful. (These categories are summarized at the bottom of the page.)

There are also suggestions for ways to use certain pairs or groups of pictures.

You can also find some ideas for activities based on the pictures provided here.

Due to the number of pictures in this section, the VPA index for Japan is divided into five parts:

  • Part 2

To view or download a full-sized picture from the VPA, click on its thumbnail representation below.

Photo (Thumbnail) Vocabulary Items Topics Grammar Points
food01.jpg Market, fruit, watermelon, oranges, pears, ginger root, vegetables, tomatoes, eggplant, ramen, restaurant, shops, sell, buy, eat, expensive, cheap, delicious, bad-tasting, bustling. Shopping, food, ordering in a restaurant, asking what things are, clothing. Forming questions and making requests, stating preferences.
food02.jpg Downtown, shopping, dining, restaurants, crab, bustling, crowded, walking, hurrying, chilly. Shopping, ordering in a restaurant, inviting someone to a meal, etc., city layout, clothing, temperature and weather. Making requests, prices, ordering in a restaurant, descriptions, ~mashoo, ~mashooka, ~to issho ni.
food03.jpg Octopus, large, small, delicious, bad-tasting, strange, humorous, takoyaki, sauce, grill, buy, eat, head, eyes, arms. Ordering in a restaurant, asking what something is. Descriptions, asking questions, expressing preferences, counter for small, round objects or servings, easy (to see) ~yasui, hard (to eat) ~nikui, konna ni~, ~koto ga aru.
food04.jpg Restaurant, inexpensive, soba, noren, delicious. Buildings, Japanese cuisine, ordering in a restaurant. Making requests, kore/sore/are.
food05.jpg McDonalds, hamburger, cheeseburger, teriyaki burger, fries, coca cola, ice tea. Buildings, ordering in a restaurant, food, katakana borrowed words. Marking place of action (de), direct object (o), stating preferences.
food06.jpg Vending machines, street, insert coins, juice, tea, hot, cold (thing), drink comes out, thirsty. Food and drinks, vending machines. Stating preferences, order of actions.
food07.jpg Restaurant, window, crab, fake, delicious, cheap, expensive, eat. Ordering in a restaurant, asking what things are. Comparisons, kore/sore/are, asking what things are, ~ ni suru.
place01.jpg Bank, taxi, fare, trucks, money, traffic, in front of. Buildings, money, riding in a taxi, directions, modes of transportation, positionals. Go by means of (de), sound changes for 100s, 1000s, and higher.
place02jpg Gas stand, car, convenient, traffic, driving, stop, driver, attendant, full service. Transportation, prices. Comparisons, superlatives (gas prices, service, etc.)
place03.jpg Parking lot, dentist, convenient, teeth, brush. Buildings/places, health care, Japanese names. Sequencing daily activities.
place04.jpg Karaoke, fee, music, TV, room, sofa, table, rock, pop, jazz, classical, traditional, sing, go out, friends, choose (song), fun, laugh, be good at, be bad at, phone number, weekdays and weekends, economy, cheap, VIP, expensive, open year around. Recreation, prices, time and timespan, phone numbers, making invitations. Expressing time (~ji, kara, made), stating preferences, ~koto ga dekiru.
life04.jpg Fortune telling, good luck, bad luck, road, fence, jacket, air conditioner. Buildings, beliefs and superstitions. To think ~, to believe ~, want ~.
life08.jpg Blood, blood type, fortune, good luck, bad luck, months, months born, love, romance, personality. Beliefs, personal questions and information. Expressing future, uncertainty (~ (ni naru) deshoo, etc.)
place05.jpg Post office, letter, envelope, write, reply, send, stamps. Buildings, asking for directions, writing letters. Useful/polite expressions, counters for flat things (stamps, etc.), direction phrases.
place06.jpg Takkyuubin, ship, send, receive, service, express, fast, box, tape, heavy, light, cat, black, mother, kitten, child, cute. Buildings, buying, sending, receiving gifts. Giving and receiving expressions (humble, neutral, polite.)
place07.jpg Koban, police stand, police station, officer, safe, dangerous, helpful, close, convenient, getting lost, directions, crime, lost and found, bicycle. Buildings, occupations, crime rate, asking for directions, describing a lost object, person, etc. Descriptions.
shop01.jpg Obi, shop, shopkeeper, elderly, kind, woman, near, pretty, colors, many, variety, expensive, cheap. Clothing, buildings, shopping. Stating preferences, counter for flat things.
shop03.jpg Zabuton, sitting, comfortable, colors, buy, sell. Home furnishings, buildings. Descriptions.
shop04.jpg Telephone, cellular phones, variety, small, convenient, electronics. Buildings, techonology, phone numbers, placing phone calls, use of phone cards, colors. Descriptions, numbers.
shop05.jpg Hanko, family name, given name, buy, sell, many. Placing an order, Japanese names, stamping one's signature, nature (features appearing in names.) Kanji for names.
shop02.jpg Beef, import, Kansas, gifts, buying, giving, sending. Mid-year and end of year gift-giving seasons, food, Japanese diet. Giving and receiving expressions (humble, neutral, polite.)
food08.jpg Dinner, party, adult, child/ren, neighbor, friends, mother, son, child, parents, eat, drink, fun, smile, hold, touch, play, friendly, hungry, full, food, temakizushi, beverages, dishes, chopsticks, sauce, sit, stand, clothing, glasses, table, floor, tatami. Clothing, people, food and drink, home interiors. Expressions for visiting, receiving guest, eating, expressing thanks.
food09.jpg O-bento boxed meal, ordering out (demae), rice, goma, fish, sashimi, shoyu, shiso leaves, lemon, shiitake, daikon, tsukemono, tempura, soup, dishes, tatami. Food and drink, Japanese diet. While (action 1 ~nagara, action 2), polite expressions, eat with chopsticks (de), idiom: drink soup.
food10.jpg O-bento, cooking, rice, vegetables, meat, tsukemono, variety, healthy, cat, fox, cute, furoshiki, purple, green. Food and drink, pastimes, Japanese diet, colors. (Kenko) ni ii/warui, eat with chopsticks (de).



TOPICS   GRAMMAR POINTS
advertising   action verbs
aesthetics   adverbs
animals   be able to (~koto ga dekiru, ~reru)
architecture   but/however
beliefs/superstitions   by means of (de)
buildings/places   comparatives (no ho ga)
celebrations/ceremonies   conditionals (~eba, ~tara, ~to)
children   conjunctions for nouns (to,ya)
city layout   continuative for adjectives and Adj.-Nouns (~ku te/de))
clothing   continuative for nouns (de)
colors   continuative for verbs (te form)
culture   counters
daily activities   dependent clauses
days of the week   direct object (o)
death/illness   do for later (~te oku)
descriptions   existence (iru - animate, aru - inanimate)
directions   idiomatic expressions
elements   indirect object (ni)
emotions   invitational (~mashoo/~yo)/(~masen ka/~yo ka)
family/friends   motion verbs (iku, kuru, kaeru) (ni/e)
food and drink/diet   negative
gardens   negative past
geography   nonspecific times (no particle)
history   numbers
holidays   particles
homes interiors   passive
housing   past
humor   point of view
landscape   preferences (suki/kirai, etc.)
maps   progressive (~te iru)
marriage/weddings   quotations (~ to iu)
materials   registers (polite, casual, honorific, humble)
morals   requests (~ o kudasai, ~te kudasai)
music/sounds   seems/appears like (~mitai, ~yo ni mieru, ~soo)
names   sequencing events (mazu, sorekara, etc.)
nature   specific times/days (ni)
numbers   superlatives (ichiban~)
occupations   synonyms/antonyms
opposites   think, feel (~ to omou)
ordering at a restaurant   transitive/intransitive
pastimes   wa versus ga
people   want (~tai/hoshii)
personality   when/while (~nagara, ~aida ni, ~toki ni)
phone calling
politics
positionals/locations
prices/money
recreation
relationships
religion
safety
school
school activities
seasons
shapes
shopping
sight-seeing
signs
stores
sports
symbolism
technology
time
traditional arts
transportation
travel
urban/rural
useful expressions
weather/climate
western influences

Grouping Suggestions


ACTIVITY SUGGESTIONS

  • Research floor plans and interiors of Japanese apartments and houses. Then, design and furnish your own house! Where in Japan would you like to build it?

  • Act out a shopping and dining excursion, playing roles such as shopper, grocer, clerk, and server in a casual Japanese setting. Create a shopping list, price tags, etc. Practice ordering/serving, selling/buying, handling currency.

  • Research transportation, trade and shipping in Japan. Compare Japan's fuel prices, sources, and consumption with that of other nations (using ~no hou ga/ichiban~).

  • Research Japanese recycling and waste disposal practices. Compare with practices of your neighborhood.

  • Plan a sightseeing tour with partner/small group. Pick points of interest from the VPA and find internet sites with historical and travel information.

  • Set up a vocabulary scavenger hunt based on the VPA photos. Hunts could be thematic (colors, plants, actions, etc.) Students can also create hunts for other classmates.

  • Teams of students create internet travel brochures for various cities using VPA photos. Try to convince visitors to come to your city. Decide as a class which team was most convincing.

  • Make a to-do list of weekend errands. Include bank, grocery, post office, etc. What will you do at each place? What do you need to take with you before you leave the house?

  • Create timelines based on examples of architecture, stages of life, etc., that are portrayed in the VPA.

  • Describe a day in the life of a Japanese middle/high school student or a person in a given profession (teacher, shop owner, police officer, train engineer, etc.).

  • Conduct a scavenger hunt based on counters: go through the VPA and count fish, zabuton, plates, phones, cups, people, buildings, vehicles, etc. and express the number with the counter appropriate for the given object.

  • Research the history, utensils, ceremony, and significance of the Way of Tea. Groups of students can be responsible for different topics and then report to the class. Create posters for the classroom summarizing the findings in Japanese. Invite someone to perform the tea ceremony for class. Or, make a traditional Japanese treat such as ohagi in class and have a Japanese tea party with green tea!

  • Select a picture and describe it or compose a story around it. Can be done individually, in pairs, or as a class, with each student adding the next sentence. Suitable opening activity could be brainstorming vocabulary suggested by the photo.

  • "Make" an obento with markers, paper, magazine cutouts, etc., and describe the contents and/or recipes of typical Japanese obento fillers. Hold a food festival with each student bringing an item and sharing the recipe.

  • Create a story about a girl celebrating the Doll Festival, becoming engaged, and marrying.

  • Act out a scene where a child has lost his way and asks an officer at a koban for help. Give directions for getting the child back home.

  • Select 3-4 seemingly unrelated photos and create a story that ties them together.

  • Study the various signs represented in the VPA and create your own sign. Will it be informative, advertise food or goods, or warn of danger?

  • Create a city as a class with various buildings and modes of transportation. Pay attention to city layout. Roleplay traveling around town and visiting various places.

  • Locate specific examples of how materials are used (stone, wood, fabric, paper, pottery, plant life, water, concrete, steel, bamboo, fire/smoke etc.) Learn the kanji for common materials, several of which are the kanji for the days of the week. Discuss common nature kanji radicals (uohen, kihen, sansuihen, etc.)

  • Discuss the relationships depicted in various photos (teacher/student, parent/child, engaged/married partners, neighbors, customer/clerk, etc.) What kind of language choices and politeness registers will be used by each person? Create a dialogue or alter one previously studied to suit the various relationships depicted in photos.

  • Study the photos depicting nature. What emotions does each invoke? Compare with standard Japanese symbolism (such as the transience of sakura.) Find examples of literature referring to these elements of nature (such as haiku by Basho, traditional songs, folk stories, etc.)

  • Compare photos of nature or everyday life with how elements of each are depicted in art (folding screens, ukiyou-e, kakemono, kimono and obi textiles, etc.)

  • Please email additional activity ideas you'd like to see added here! Thank you!


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©1998 The Regents of the University of Minnesota. All rights reserved.

The Virtual Photo Album for Japan was created by Marian Sheeran.
Please e-mail suggestions directly to msheeran@hotmail.com.

This URL: /lctl/VPA/Japan/org_grid2.html

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