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Anonymous Posted 13 years ago
Grammar

Japan / Japanese

My favorite magazine usually has several articles every week about the political and economic situation in Japan.

This week, however, it did not have any Japan / Japanese news.

Which word should I use?

Thanks
  

Top answer

This week, however, it did not have any Japan news. )

  • This week, however, it did not have any Japan news.
  • )
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6 Answers
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This week, however, it did not have any Japan news.

(The other is possible but not as good a choice.)
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it did not have any news about Japan.
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"News from Japan" is much more natural.

The most recent issue has no news from Japan.
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That's funny. I would just say "Japanese news."
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I have heard "News on Japan".
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AlpheccaStars"News from Japan" is much more natural.
If you mean more so than "news about Japan" then I have to disagree. For me, both are natural. However, "news from Japan" has a slightly different connotation that I did not think the OP intended. It means news emanating from / generated in Japan, rather than comment about the country that may originate anyw

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