A1 Collocation Neutral 3 min read

水を飲む

mizu o nomu

drink water

Literally: water [object marker] drink

In 15 Seconds

  • The standard way to say 'drink water' in any context.
  • Use 'nomimasu' for politeness or 'nomu' with friends.
  • Safe to use in restaurants, gyms, and daily conversations.

Meaning

This phrase is the most direct way to say you are drinking water. It is a fundamental expression used whenever you're hydrating or quenching your thirst.

Key Examples

3 of 6
1

At the gym with a trainer

水を飲みます。

I will drink some water.

2

Texting a friend on a hot day

ちゃんと水飲んでね!

Make sure you drink water, okay!

3

Ordering at a casual diner

お水をください。

Water, please.

🌍

Cultural Background

Water is often served free at restaurants, unlike in some European countries. Drinking water is considered essential for health, often emphasized in school.

💡

Particle usage

Always use 'o' (を) with 'nomu'.

In 15 Seconds

  • The standard way to say 'drink water' in any context.
  • Use 'nomimasu' for politeness or 'nomu' with friends.
  • Safe to use in restaurants, gyms, and daily conversations.

What It Means

水を飲む is your bread and butter for survival in Japan. It literally means "to drink water." It combines (water) with the verb 飲む (to drink). The in the middle is just a bridge. It tells us that the water is what's being drunk. It is simple, clear, and impossible to misunderstand. Whether you are at a gym or a cafe, this is the phrase you need.

How To Use It

In daily life, you will likely conjugate this. Use 水を飲みます to be polite to strangers or bosses. Use 水飲む with your close friends or family. If you want to sound a bit more refined, add an to make it お水を飲む. It sounds softer and more polite. You can also turn it into a question by raising your voice at the end: 水飲む? (Want some water?). It is a very versatile building block for your Japanese.

When To Use It

Use it when you are thirsty after a long walk. Use it at a restaurant when the waiter asks for your order. Use it when you are reminding a friend to stay hydrated in the humid Japanese summer. It is perfect for texting a roommate to ask if they need a bottle of water from the store. You can even use it in a medical context when a doctor asks about your habits. It is a safe, go-to phrase for any time of day.

When NOT To Use It

Do not use this for taking medicine. Even though you use water, the phrase for medicine is 薬を飲む. Also, avoid using it if you are drinking something that isn't plain water. If it has tea leaves or carbonation, use the specific name of the drink instead. While technically correct, saying 水を飲む for a bowl of soup sounds a bit odd. For soup, you usually just say 飲む or even 食べる (to eat) if it has lots of ingredients.

Cultural Background

Japan is famous for its high-quality tap water. In most cities, you can drink straight from the faucet without a second thought. When you enter a restaurant, you will almost always be served a glass of free cold water immediately. This is part of "Omotenashi," or Japanese hospitality. Because of this, asking for お水 is very common and never seen as a burden. In summer, you will see vending machines everywhere selling bottled water to combat the intense heat.

Common Variations

お水を飲む is the most common polite variation. You might also hear 水分補給をする (suibun hokyuu o suru), which means "to hydrate." If you are at a bar and want to stay sober, you might ask for 和らぎ水 (yawaragimizu), which is water served alongside sake. For cold water specifically, people often say 冷たい水を飲む. If you want plain hot water, that is called 白湯 (sayu), not just hot water.

Usage Notes

The phrase is neutral and safe for beginners. Just remember to use the polite form `飲みます` (nomimasu) when speaking to anyone who isn't a close friend.

💡

Particle usage

Always use 'o' (を) with 'nomu'.

Examples

6
#1 At the gym with a trainer

水を飲みます。

I will drink some water.

Using the polite form '-masu' shows respect to the trainer.

#2 Texting a friend on a hot day

ちゃんと水飲んでね!

Make sure you drink water, okay!

The 'o' particle is often dropped in casual texting.

#3 Ordering at a casual diner

お水をください。

Water, please.

Adding 'o' makes the request sound more polite and natural.

#4 Complaining about being broke

お金がないから、水を飲むしかない。

I have no money, so I have no choice but to drink water.

A common joke about being 'broke' and living on water.

#5 Waking up from a nightmare

落ち着くために、水を飲みました。

I drank some water to calm myself down.

Focuses on the action as a way to find peace.

#6 Asking a child if they are thirsty

お水飲む?

Do you want to drink some water?

Rising intonation at the end turns the statement into a question.

Test Yourself

Fill in the correct verb.

わたしは{水|みず}を___。

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: {飲|の}む

Water is a liquid, so we use 'nomu'.

🎉 Score: /1

Visual Learning Aids

Practice Bank

1 exercises
Fill in the correct verb. Fill Blank A1

わたしは{水|みず}を___。

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: {飲|の}む

Water is a liquid, so we use 'nomu'.

🎉 Score: /1

Frequently Asked Questions

1 questions

No, that is incorrect. Water is a liquid.

Related Phrases

🔗

{お茶|おちゃ}を{飲|の}む

similar

Drink tea

🔗

{水分|すいぶん}を{摂|と}る

specialized form

Take in fluids

Was this helpful?

Comments (0)

Login to Comment
No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts!