~はずです
~hazu desu
It should be ~
Phrase in 30 Seconds
Use ~はずです when you have a logical reason to expect something will happen or be true.
- Means: Something is expected to be true based on evidence or logic.
- Used in: Confirming schedules, predicting outcomes, or explaining why something should have happened.
- Don't confuse: Do not use for personal desires; use ~たい for what you want.
Explanation at your level:
Significado
Expressing expectation or strong probability.
Contexto cultural
Used to avoid directness.
Logical Check
Ask yourself: Do I have evidence? If yes, use Hazu.
Significado
Expressing expectation or strong probability.
Logical Check
Ask yourself: Do I have evidence? If yes, use Hazu.
Teste-se
Fill in the blank with the correct form.
{彼|かれ}は{今日|きょう}は{来|く}る____です。
Hazu is used for expectation.
🎉 Pontuação: /1
Recursos visuais
Perguntas frequentes
1 perguntasOnly if you are talking about your own schedule objectively.
Frases relacionadas
はずがない
contrastNo way
Onde usar
Checking a schedule
A: {電車|でんしゃ}はもう{着|つ}くはずです。
B: {そう|そう}ですね。
Memorize It
Mnemonic
Think of an archer (hazu) who knows his arrow will hit because he aimed perfectly.
Visual Association
An archer pulling back a bow; the arrow is perfectly aligned (hazu). He knows it will hit the target.
Rhyme
Hazu is the word, for what you've heard, it should be true, based on the clue.
Story
Kenji is waiting for his friend. He checks his watch. He knows his friend is punctual. He says, 'He should be here.' He sees the friend walking up. The logic holds!
Word Web
Desafio
Write 3 sentences about your day using 'hazu' to predict what will happen next.
In Other Languages
Debería
Japanese requires specific noun/verb forms before the phrase.
Devrait
Japanese is more rigid regarding the evidence requirement.
Sollte
German 'sollte' can also imply moral obligation.
应该 (yīnggāi)
Chinese 'yinggai' is more flexible with personal intent.
-ㄹ 것이다 / -ㄹ 줄 알다
Japanese 'hazu' is more specific to logical deduction.
Deveria
Portuguese can be more subjective.
من المفترض (min al-muftarad)
Arabic is more formal in structure.
はずです
N/A
Easily Confused
Both relate to future, but tsumori is intent.
Tsumori = I plan to; Hazu = It is logical that.
Perguntas frequentes (1)
Only if you are talking about your own schedule objectively.