13. My Family
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Japanese has separate words for your own family and someone else's family. 父 (chichi) and 母 (haha) refer to your own father and mother, but when talking about someone else's parents you say お父さん (otousan) and お母さん (okaasan). The lesson vocab uses the humble set because you're describing your own family.
Japanese has specific words for older brother (兄), older sister (姉), younger brother (弟), and younger sister (妹) — there is no generic word for just "brother" or "sister." When Japanese people talk about siblings, the age relationship is always part of the word.
住む covers everything from "I live in Japan" (country level) to "I live here" (neighborhood level). Unlike English, which might switch between "live in" and "stay at," 住む works for any place you call home, as long as it is a settled residence rather than a temporary visit.