の is used as the nominative auxiliary word.
Continuation: body language (nouns, numerals and pronouns)+の+body language (nouns, numerals and pronouns)
Usage: indicates the relationship between two items, which means "de" in Chinese. The "body language+の" in front of this usage is used as an attribute to modify the body language behind it.
Example:
わたしはのです Japanese teacher. /I am a Japanese teacher.
Here, "Japanese" is a kind of body language, which together with the nominative auxiliary word "の" constitutes an attribute to modify the body language "teacher" behind it.
About Japanese characters:
1, the so-called Japanese characters, are based on China Chinese characters, which are re-coined by the Japanese and endowed with new ideas and China characters.
2. Historically, Japan first learned Chinese characters from the Korean Peninsula almost intact, and then gradually spread them from top to bottom among the nobility. For Japan (including North Korea) at that time, knowing Chinese characters was a status symbol, just as French was the first popular language in Britain.
2. Historically, Japan first learned Chinese characters from the Korean Peninsula almost intact, and then gradually spread them from top to bottom among the nobility. For Japan (including North Korea) at that time, knowing Chinese characters was a status symbol, just as French was the first popular language in Britain.