Japanese Grammar Hub

Understand Japanese Grammar Faster

Browse the grammar system by level and category, then open clear explanations with practical examples.

187 Total Rules
47 Chapters
6 CEFR level
Understand Japanese Grammar Faster

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B1 Writing System Verified

Intermediate Kanji: The Next 200 (100-300)

Mastering these 200 kanji unlocks daily Japanese life, enabling you to read menus, SNS, and news.

  • Intermediate kanji transition from physical object...
  • Radicals act as meaning-hints (e.g., heart for emo...
10 examples 8 exercises 8 FAQ
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A1 Sentence Structure Verified

Japanese Word Order: The Verb-Last Rule (SOV)

In Japanese, the verb is the anchor that must always stay at the end of the sentence.

  • Verbs always go at the very end of the sentence.
  • Japanese follows Subject-Object-Verb (SOV) order,...
10 examples 8 exercises 8 FAQ
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A2 Adjectives Verified

Japanese I-Adjective Adverbs (~く form)

Convert I-adjectives to adverbs by swapping `い` for `く` to describe actions or changes.

  • Replace the final `い` with `く` to create adverbs...
  • Adverbs modify verbs or describe a change in state...
10 examples 8 exercises 8 FAQ
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B1 Writing System Verified

Kanji Readings: On-yomi (The Chinese Sound)

If you see Kanji glued together without hiragana, switch to On-yomi readings.

  • On-yomi is the Chinese-derived sound reading.
  • Used mainly in multi-Kanji compound words.
10 examples 8 exercises 8 FAQ
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A2 Adjectives Verified

Connecting Japanese Adjectives: and/because (~くて)

Connect multiple `い`-adjectives by replacing the final `い` with `くて` to sound more natural and descriptive.

  • Drop the final `い` and add `くて` to connect adje...
  • Functions like the English word 'and' or implies '...
10 examples 1 exercises 1 FAQ
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B1 Writing System Verified

Mastering Kun-yomi: The Native Japanese Readings of Kanji

Kun-yomi represents the native Japanese heart of Kanji, used primarily for isolated nouns, verbs, and adjectives.

  • Kun-yomi are native Japanese readings used for sta...
  • Look for okurigana (Hiragana tails) to identify na...
12 examples 8 exercises 8 FAQ
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A1 Sentence Structure Verified

Japanese Basics: The "A is B" Sentence (wa/desu)

Use the pattern **A `は` B `です`** to say "A is B," remembering that the verb always comes last.

  • Japanese sentence order is SOV (Subject-Object-Ver...
  • Particle `は` (wa) marks the topic.
12 examples 8 exercises 8 FAQ
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B1 Writing System Verified

Kanji Compound Logic: Subject-Verb & Verb-Object

Don't memorize compounds blindly; decode the internal logic (Subject-Verb, Verb-Object) to guess meanings instantly.

  • Kanji compounds follow logical patterns.
  • Modifier+Noun: Left describes Right.
12 examples 8 exercises 8 FAQ
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A2 Adjectives Verified

Connecting Na-Adjectives: The Te-form (~で)

The Na-adjective Te-form uses `で` (de) to connect descriptions like "and", keeping your sentences flowing naturally.

  • Drop the `な` (na) and add `で` (de).
  • Connects two or more descriptive ideas smoothly.
10 examples 8 exercises 8 FAQ
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B1 Writing System Verified

Japanese Okurigana Rules (送り仮名の付け方)

Okurigana are the vital 'kana tails' that make Japanese verbs and adjectives grammatically functional and readable.

  • Kana suffixes following kanji to indicate inflecti...
  • Essential for verbs and adjectives to show tense a...
10 examples 8 exercises 8 FAQ
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A2 Adjectives Verified

Totemo vs. Sugoku: How to Say "Very" Like a Local

Use `totemo` for general politeness and `sugoku` to sound more expressive and casual in daily conversation.

  • `Totemo` is the standard "very" (polite/safe).
  • `Sugoku` is the casual "super" (conversational).
10 examples 8 exercises 8 FAQ
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A2 Adjectives Verified

Not Very / Not Much (amari~nai)

Always pair `あまり` with a negative ending to say something is 'not very' or 'not much'.

  • Used to mean 'not very' or 'not much' in Japanese.
  • Always must be paired with a negative verb or adje...
10 examples 8 exercises 8 FAQ
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A2 Adjectives Verified

Comparing Things: More Than (より, yori)

Attach `より` to the baseline and `のほうが` to the winner to easily compare anything in Japanese.

  • Use `より` after the item you are comparing agains...
  • Use `のほうが` after the item that is 'more' or 'b...
10 examples 8 exercises 8 FAQ
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B1 Advanced Verbs Verified

Japanese Potential Form: Can you do it? (Suru/Kuru)

Mastering the irregular potential forms `できる` and `{来|こ}られる` lets you express ability and possibility in natural Japanese.

  • Suru becomes Dekiru (can do); Kuru becomes Korarer...
  • Always use the particle 'ga' instead of 'o' with D...
10 examples 8 exercises 8 FAQ
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B1 Advanced Verbs Verified

Formal Ability: Using 'Koto Ga Dekiru' (Can Do)

Use `koto ga dekiru` to express ability or possibility formally, turning the action into a noun phrase.

  • Formation: Dictionary Form + koto ga dekiru
  • Means 'can do' or 'is possible to do'
10 examples 8 exercises 8 FAQ
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A1 Particles Verified

The Object Marker: を (wo/o) Particle

The particle を (pronounced "o" in modern Japanese, though romanized as "wo") is one of the most fundamental particles in Japanese. It marks the direct object of a verb — the thing that receives the a...

  • を marks the direct object (the thing receiving th...
  • Pronounced "o" (not "wo") in normal speech
5 examples 8 exercises 8 FAQ
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A1 Particles Verified

The Versatile Particle: に (ni) — Location, Time & Direction

The particle に (ni) is arguably the most versatile particle in Japanese. It serves multiple crucial roles that English handles with different prepositions like "at," "in," "to," "on," and "for." At i...

  • に marks specific time: 3時に (at 3 o'clock)
  • に marks destination: 学校に行く (go to school)
5 examples 8 exercises 8 FAQ
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A1 Particles Verified

The Action Particle: で (de) — Means & Location of Action

The particle で (de) answers two fundamental questions: "Where do you do it?" and "How/by what means do you do it?" It marks the location where an action takes place and the tool, method, or means use...

  • で marks location of action: レストランで食べる (e...
  • で marks means/tool: 箸で食べる (eat with chopstic...
5 examples 8 exercises 8 FAQ
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A1 Particles Verified

The Direction Particle: へ (e) — Toward a Destination

The particle へ (pronounced "e" when used as a particle, not "he") marks direction — the way you are heading. While に also indicates destination, へ puts the focus on the journey and direction rather...

  • へ marks direction: 日本へ行く (go toward Japan)
  • Pronounced "e" not "he" as a particle
4 examples 8 exercises 8 FAQ
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A1 Verb Basics Verified

Polite Present & Future: The ます (masu) Form

The ます (masu) form is the polite present/future tense of Japanese verbs and is the first verb form most learners encounter. It is used in everyday polite conversation — with strangers, coworkers, te...

  • ます form = polite present/future tense
  • Group 1: change -u to -i + ます (書く→書きます)
4 examples 8 exercises 8 FAQ
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A1 Verb Basics Verified

Polite Negative: ません (masen) — "I don't..."

To make a polite negative sentence in Japanese ("I don't...", "I won't..."), simply replace ます with ません. This is one of the easiest and most regular patterns in Japanese — no exceptions, no irreg...

  • Replace ます with ません for polite negative
  • Works for all verbs with no exceptions
4 examples 8 exercises 8 FAQ
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A1 Verb Basics Verified

Polite Past Tense: ました (mashita) — "I did..."

To express past tense politely in Japanese ("I did...", "I ate...", "I went..."), replace ます with ました. Like the negative form, this is perfectly regular with zero exceptions. 食べます → 食べまし...

  • Replace ます with ました for polite past tense
  • Works for all verbs: 食べました, 行きました, しま...
4 examples 8 exercises 8 FAQ
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Why Learn Japanese Grammar?

Grammar is the foundation of language fluency. Without understanding grammar patterns, you can memorize vocabulary but struggle to form correct sentences. Here's why structured grammar study matters:

Build Accurate Sentences

Move beyond memorized phrases. Understand the rules so you can create original, correct sentences in any situation.

Pass Language Exams

Grammar is tested in every major language exam — IELTS, DELE, DELF, JLPT, HSK, TOPIK, and more. Our CEFR-aligned curriculum maps directly to exam requirements.

Understand Native Speakers

Knowing grammar helps you parse complex sentences, understand nuance, and follow conversations even when speakers use advanced constructions.

Progress Faster

Students who study grammar systematically reach fluency faster than those who rely on immersion alone. Structure accelerates learning.

How Our Japanese Grammar Course Works

1

Choose Your Level

Start with your CEFR level — from A0 Zero Point to C2 Mastery. Not sure? Begin at A0 and progress at your own pace.

2

Study Structured Chapters

Each chapter covers a grammar topic with clear explanations, pattern tables, and real-world example sentences.

3

Practice with Exercises

Test your understanding with interactive exercises — fill-in-the-blank, multiple choice, sentence building, and translation practice.

4

Track & Progress

Your progress is saved automatically. Complete chapters, unlock new levels, and watch your grammar mastery grow.

Frequently Asked Questions About Japanese Grammar

SubLearn covers 187 Japanese grammar rules organized across 6 CEFR proficiency levels (from A1 to C2), spanning 47 structured chapters. Each rule includes clear explanations, real-world examples, and interactive practice exercises.

Our Japanese grammar curriculum covers CEFR levels from A1 to C2. Each level is designed to match your current proficiency — beginners start with basic sentence patterns at A1, while advanced learners tackle nuanced structures at C1-C2.

Yes! All Japanese grammar rules, explanations, and examples are completely free to access. You can browse the full curriculum, read detailed explanations, and practice with exercises at no cost.

Grammar is organized into 47 thematic chapters following the CEFR framework. Each chapter groups related rules together — for example, verb tenses, sentence structure, or particles — so you can learn related concepts in a logical sequence.

Yes! Create a free account to track which grammar rules you've studied, see your progress across all CEFR levels, and pick up exactly where you left off. Your learning progress syncs across devices.