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I meant to gather more examples before posting this question, but here we go. These are some lines out of various Ghibli movies I saw last weekend.

わからないは - when asked to take a guess about something
いないは - after looking for someone in a specific place

I realize this is casual and may not be strictly grammatically correct. Still I wonder what's the reasoning behind these type of sentences. It's not difficult to understand what they mean, but why は? How would a native speaker justify the particle? And if someone can tie it to some formally correct version of the sentences that would be great!

Mechanical snail
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1 Answers1

5

As a sentence-final particle, it's , not . See more about in this post and this post.

istrasci
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