な形容詞 (Na-adjectives) – Basic Forms with です in Japanese [JLPT N5]
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Quick Summary
- Meaning: な形容詞 (na-adjectives) are adjectives that describe what something or someone is like, similar to “quiet,” “famous,” or “strange” in English.
- How to Use: Use the dictionary form na-adj before nouns with na-adj-な + N, and use na-adj by itself before です (desu, to be) to make simple sentences.
Example:
- 私の猫は有名です。
- Watashi no neko wa yuumei desu.
- My cat is famous.
Overview
In Japanese, there are two main kinds of adjectives: i-adjectives and na-adjectives (な形容詞). Both describe people, things, places, and situations, but they change (conjugate) in different ways.
Na-adjectives are words like 有名 (yuumei, famous), きれい (kirei, pretty/clean), 元気 (genki, healthy/energetic), or 便利 (benri, convenient). They are used to say what something is, what it is not, and to talk about the past and politeness with です (desu).
Na-adjectives are called “na-adjectives” because when they come directly before a noun, they usually need the particle-like sound な between the adjective and the noun. For example, 有名な歌手 (yuumei na kashu, a famous singer). When they are at the end of the sentence before です (desu), they do not use な: 猫は有名です (neko wa yuumei desu, the cat is famous).
In this article, we will focus on the most basic and most useful part for beginners:
- How to use na-adjectives with です (desu) in the present (is / is not)
- How to use them in the past (was / was not)
We will not cover every possible advanced form yet. The goal here is to make you comfortable saying simple, correct sentences like:
- この本は便利です。
- Kono hon wa benri desu.
- This book is convenient.
Structure / Formation
Basic Patterns
Here are the core patterns you will use with na-adjectives at the N5 level:
- na-adj + です (present, polite, affirmative)
- na-adj + じゃないです (present, polite, negative – very common in speech)
- na-adj + でした (past, polite, affirmative)
- na-adj + じゃなかったです (past, polite, negative – very common in speech)
- na-adj-な + N (na-adjective directly before a noun)
Here, na-adj is the dictionary form of the na-adjective, for example:
- 有名 (yuumei, famous)
- 静か (shizuka, quiet)
- 元気 (genki, healthy; energetic)
- 便利 (benri, convenient)
Na-adjectives as Predicates (A is B)
When you want to say “A is ~” with a na-adjective, the structure is:
- N + は + na-adj + です
For example:
- このロボットは便利です。
- Kono robotto wa benri desu.
- This robot is convenient.
- おじいさんは元気です。
- Ojiisan wa genki desu.
- Grandpa is energetic.
Notice that there is no な before です. We only use な when the adjective directly comes before a noun.
Na-adjectives Before Nouns (Attributive Use)
When a na-adjective comes directly before a noun, you add な between them:
- na-adj-な + N
Examples:
- 有名な先生
- Yuumei na sensei
- a famous teacher
- 静かな図書館
- Shizuka na toshokan
- a quiet library
In a full sentence, this looks like:
- 有名な先生はロックバンドにいます。
- Yuumei na sensei wa rokkubando ni imasu.
- The famous teacher is in a rock band.
Present Tense: Affirmative and Negative
The most common polite forms you need first are:
| Meaning | Pattern | Example (with 元気) |
|---|---|---|
| is ~ (present, polite) | na-adj + です | 元気です (genki desu, is energetic) |
| is not ~ (present, polite) | na-adj + じゃないです | 元気じゃないです (genki ja nai desu, is not energetic) |
Example sentences:
- 私の犬は元気です。
- Watashi no inu wa genki desu.
- My dog is energetic.
- 今日のロボットは元気じゃないです。
- Kyou no robotto wa genki ja nai desu.
- Today’s robot is not energetic.
You will also see ではないです (dewa nai desu) instead of じゃないです (ja nai desu). ではないです is a bit more formal or careful, but じゃないです is very common and natural in everyday speech. For beginners, focusing on じゃないです is enough.
Past Tense: Affirmative and Negative
To talk about the past (was / was not), you change です (desu) to でした (deshita) and じゃないです (ja nai desu) to じゃなかったです (ja nakatta desu).
| Meaning | Pattern | Example (with 静か) |
|---|---|---|
| was ~ (past, polite) | na-adj + でした | 静かでした (shizuka deshita, was quiet) |
| was not ~ (past, polite) | na-adj + じゃなかったです | 静かじゃなかったです (shizuka ja nakatta desu, was not quiet) |
Example sentences:
- 昨日のパーティーは静かでした。
- Kinou no paatii wa shizuka deshita.
- Yesterday’s party was quiet.
- 先週の図書館は静かじゃなかったです。
- Senshuu no toshokan wa shizuka ja nakatta desu.
- The library last week was not quiet.
Quick Conjugation Table (Na-adj + です Patterns)
Here is a compact summary using 有名 (yuumei, famous):
| Form | Pattern | Example with 有名 | English |
|---|---|---|---|
| Present affirmative | na-adj + です | 有名です (yuumei desu) | is famous |
| Present negative | na-adj + じゃないです | 有名じゃないです (yuumei ja nai desu) | is not famous |
| Past affirmative | na-adj + でした | 有名でした (yuumei deshita) | was famous |
| Past negative | na-adj + じゃなかったです | 有名じゃなかったです (yuumei ja nakatta desu) | was not famous |
| Before noun | na-adj-な + N | 有名な歌手 (yuumei na kashu) | a famous singer |
Example in a sentence:
- この有名な歌手は先生じゃないです。
- Kono yuumei na kashu wa sensei ja nai desu.
- This famous singer is not a teacher.
Usage Tips for Beginners
Here are two simple but important points to remember:
- When a na-adjective is before a noun: use na-adj-な + N
有名な人 (yuumei na hito, a famous person) - When a na-adjective is at the end of the sentence with です: use na-adj + です (no な)
その人は有名です (Sono hito wa yuumei desu, that person is famous)
If you are not sure whether a new adjective is an i-adjective or a na-adjective, look at how it appears in example sentences in your textbook or dictionary. Over time, your brain will start to feel which pattern is natural.
Example Sentences
- この町は静かですけど、夜のロボットは元気です。
- Kono machi wa shizuka desu kedo, yoru no robotto wa genki desu.
- This town is quiet, but the night-time robots are energetic.
- あのタコは先生じゃないです。でも、とても親切なタコです。
- Ano tako wa sensei ja nai desu. Demo, totemo shinsetsu na tako desu.
- That octopus is not a teacher. But it is a very kind octopus.
- 昨日のテストは簡単でしたが、私のコンピューターは元気じゃなかったです。
- Kinou no tesuto wa kantan deshita ga, watashi no konpyuutaa wa genki ja nakatta desu.
- Yesterday’s test was easy, but my computer was not energetic.
- あの有名な犬は静かなアイドルです。
- Ano yuumei na inu wa shizuka na aidoru desu.
- That famous dog is a quiet idol.
- この便利なほうきは車でした。でも、今は車じゃないです。
- Kono benri na houki wa kuruma deshita. Demo, ima wa kuruma ja nai desu.
- This convenient broom was a car. But now, it is not a car.
Quick Practice
(Answers and explanations are right under this section.)
Multiple-Choice
1. Choose the correct present polite sentence: “This alien is energetic.”
- A. このエイリアンは元気なです。(Kono eirian wa genki na desu.)
- B. このエイリアンは元気です。(Kono eirian wa genki desu.)
- C. このエイリアンは元気とです。(Kono eirian wa genki to desu.)
- D. このエイリアンは元気なエイリアンです。(Kono eirian wa genki na eirian desu.)
2. Choose the correct sentence that means “That famous robot is not a teacher.”
- A. あの有名なロボットは先生じゃないです。(Ano yuumei na robotto wa sensei ja nai desu.)
- B. あの有名ロボットは先生なじゃないです。(Ano yuumei robotto wa sensei na ja nai desu.)
- C. あの有名なロボットは先生やないです。(Ano yuumei na robotto wa sensei ya nai desu.)
- D. あの有名なロボットは先生ですじゃない。(Ano yuumei na robotto wa sensei desu ja nai.)
3. Choose the correct past polite sentence: “Yesterday, the library was quiet.”
- A. 昨日、図書館は静かです。(Kinou, toshokan wa shizuka desu.)
- B. 昨日、図書館は静かでした。(Kinou, toshokan wa shizuka deshita.)
- C. 昨日、図書館は静かじゃないです。(Kinou, toshokan wa shizuka ja nai desu.)
- D. 昨日、図書館は静かなでした。(Kinou, toshokan wa shizuka na deshita.)
4. Choose the correct sentence with a na-adjective before a noun: “a convenient broom.”
- A. 便利のほうき (Benri no houki)
- B. 便利なほうき (Benri na houki)
- C. 便利やほうき (Benri ya houki)
- D. 便利とほうき (Benri to houki)
5. Choose the correct sentence: “My grandpa was not energetic last week.”
- A. 先週、おじいさんは元気じゃなかったです。(Senshuu, ojiisan wa genki ja nakatta desu.)
- B. 先週、おじいさんは元気でしたないです。(Senshuu, ojiisan wa genki deshita nai desu.)
- C. 先週、おじいさんは元気じゃないでした。(Senshuu, ojiisan wa genki ja nai deshita.)
- D. 先週、おじいさんは元気でもなかったです。(Senshuu, ojiisan wa genki demo nakatta desu.)
Spot-the-Error
6. One of these sentences has a mistake with a na-adjective before a noun. Which sentence is incorrect?
- A. 変なロボットは先生です。(Hen na robotto wa sensei desu.)
- B. 元気な猫は新聞を読みます。(Genki na neko wa shinbun o yomimasu.)
- C. 有名先生はピザを作ります。(Yuumei sensei wa piza o tsukurimasu.)
7. One of these sentences has a mistake with present vs. past na-adjective + です. Which sentence is incorrect?
- A. 今日のテストは簡単です。(Kyou no tesuto wa kantan desu.)
- B. 昨日のテストは簡単じゃないです。(Kinou no tesuto wa kantan ja nai desu.)
- C. 昨日の映画は静かなでした。(Kinou no eiga wa shizuka na deshita.)
Translation
8. Translate into Japanese using a na-adjective + です: “This town is quiet, but the station is not quiet.”
9. Translate into Japanese using a past na-adjective + です: “Last year, that dog was famous.”
10. Translate into Japanese using na-adjective + な before a noun: “She is a kind teacher.”
Answers and Explanations
- このエイリアンは元気です。(Kono eirian wa genki desu.) — For a simple “A is ~” sentence with a na-adjective, use “na-adj + です” with no な before です.
- あの有名なロボットは先生じゃないです。(Ano yuumei na robotto wa sensei ja nai desu.) — Use “na-adj-な + N” before the noun and “じゃないです” for the present polite negative.
- 昨日、図書館は静かでした。(Kinou, toshokan wa shizuka deshita.) — For past polite with a na-adjective, change です to でした.
- 便利なほうき (Benri na houki) — Before a noun, na-adjectives take な: “na-adj-な + N.”
- 先週、おじいさんは元気じゃなかったです。(Senshuu, ojiisan wa genki ja nakatta desu.) — For past polite negative, use “na-adj + じゃなかったです.”
- 有名先生はピザを作ります。(Yuumei sensei wa piza o tsukurimasu.) — 有名 is a na-adjective, so before a noun it must be 有名な先生; the other two sentences use na-adjectives correctly.
- 昨日の映画は静かなでした。(Kinou no eiga wa shizuka na deshita.) — After a na-adjective at the end of the sentence, use でした, not なでした, so it should be 静かでした.
- この町は静かですけど、駅は静かじゃないです。(Kono machi wa shizuka desu kedo, eki wa shizuka ja nai desu.) — Use “na-adj + です” for “is quiet” and “na-adj + じゃないです” for “is not quiet,” joined with けど.
- 去年、あの犬は有名でした。(Kyonen, ano inu wa yuumei deshita.) — For “was famous,” use the past polite form “有名でした.”
- 彼女は親切な先生です。(Kanojo wa shinsetsu na sensei desu.) — Use “親切な先生” with な before the noun and です to say “She is a kind teacher.”
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After mastering the JLPT N5 kanji, you're ready to take your Japanese kanji game to the next level. JLPT N4. Let's go...
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Kanji For Kanji - 漢字
Inception time. Which kanji compose the kanji of "kanji"? The kanji for "kanji" is actually pretty straightforward. I...
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How to Memorize Katakana Easily: 9 Tips for Beginners
For those diving into Japanese, mastering hiragana and katakana is the first significant challenge. While hiragana o...
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Complete Hiragana and Katakana Chart With All 112 Characters
The very first step for everybody who wants to learn Japanese is to study the hiragana and katakana chart (before lea...
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JLPT N5 Kanji: Kanji For One 一 (ichi)
Probably one the most simple kanji to remember, the kanji for 'one' is simply written '一'. Let's see its readings and...
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How Long Does It Take to Learn Kanji? A Beginner's Guide
Ask any Japanese student what's the scariest part of learning the language, and they'll say kanji. And they're righ...
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Is it Necessary to Learn Kanji? The Last Answer You'll Ever Need
Many beginners in Japanese wonder whether they should really learn kanji. I know this, because I also wondered when s...
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How Long Does it Take to Learn Hiragana and Katakana?
As a beginner in Japanese, your first step is diving into the alphabets of Hiragana and Katakana. These are the build...
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13 Best YouTube Channels to Learn Japanese, From Beginner to Intermediate
YouTube can be an incredible resource for learning Japanese. And best of all, it's free. So we've compiled a list of ...
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Top 10 Manga for Japanese Language Learners: From Beginners to Intermediates!
If you're learning Japanese, chances are you're interested in manga. So instead of reading texts about Tanaka-san s...
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Kanji for 'Fire' in Japanese: 火 or 炎?
Welcome to our enlightening exploration of Japanese kanji! Today, we're igniting our understanding of a primal force ...
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The Complete Guide to Country Names in Japanese: Say and Pronounce Them Right!
Whether you're planning a trip, learning Japanese, or just curious about how different countries are represented in a...
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Kanji for Peace: 平, 和, 泰 - The Symbols of Harmony
You might be wondering what are the Japanese symbols for 'Peace'. In this article, we're diving deep into this univer...
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Kanji for 'Love': How and When to Use 愛 and 恋
Welcome to our journey into the world of Japanese kanji! Today, we're delving into one of the most heartwarming and p...
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![よ – Adding Friendly Emphasis in Japanese [JLPT N5]](http://hirakan.com/cdn/shop/articles/yo_-_ending_particle_Friendly_Emphasis.jpg?v=1767433517&width=170)
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![この・その・あの・どの – Using ‘This / That / Which’ with Nouns in Japanese [JLPT N5]](http://hirakan.com/cdn/shop/articles/acd351ada3fe4b04ae86de788a3350b8.jpg?v=1766305268&width=170)
![これ・それ・あれ・どれ – Saying ‘This / That / Which One’ in Japanese [JLPT N5]](http://hirakan.com/cdn/shop/articles/this-that.jpg?v=1766305107&width=170)
![か~か – Expressing Choices like “A or B” in Japanese [JLPT N5]](http://hirakan.com/cdn/shop/articles/choices.jpg?v=1766304827&width=170)
![~から~まで – Saying “From A to B” in Japanese [JLPT N5]](http://hirakan.com/cdn/shop/articles/from-AtoB.jpg?v=1765093560&width=170)
![まで – Expressing “Until” and “Up To” in Japanese [JLPT N5]](http://hirakan.com/cdn/shop/articles/until-up-to.jpg?v=1765093405&width=170)
![から – Expressing “Because” and “From/Since” in Japanese [JLPT N5]](http://hirakan.com/cdn/shop/articles/because-from_since.jpg?v=1765093285&width=170)
![や – Listing Examples with “And, Among Others” in Japanese [JLPT N5]](http://hirakan.com/cdn/shop/articles/and.jpg?v=1765093138&width=170)
![か – Forming Questions and Saying “Or” in Japanese [JLPT N5]](http://hirakan.com/cdn/shop/articles/ka-questions.jpg?v=1763787134&width=170)
![も – Saying “Also” and “Too” in Japanese [JLPT N5]](http://hirakan.com/cdn/shop/articles/mo-also-too_99f908e6-78d0-4f82-8319-391ef42764bc.jpg?v=1763787251&width=170)
![と – Linking 'And', 'With', and Quotations in Japanese [JLPT N5]](http://hirakan.com/cdn/shop/articles/to-and-with-quotation.jpg?v=1763265110&width=170)
![で – Marking Where and How an Action Happens in Japanese [JLPT N5]](http://hirakan.com/cdn/shop/articles/de-where-how-action-happens.jpg?v=1763264973&width=170)
![へ – Marking Direction ‘Toward’ in Japanese [JLPT N5]](http://hirakan.com/cdn/shop/articles/he-marking-direction.jpg?v=1762667986&width=170)
![に – Marking Time, Destinations, and Recipients in Japanese [JLPT N5]](http://hirakan.com/cdn/shop/articles/ni-marking-destination.jpg?v=1762667846&width=170)
![の – Possession and Noun Linking in Japanese [JLPT N5]](http://hirakan.com/cdn/shop/articles/no-possession-and-noun-linking.jpg?v=1761961297&width=170)
![を – Marking the Direct Object in Japanese [JLPT N5]](http://hirakan.com/cdn/shop/articles/o-direct-object.jpg?v=1761960990&width=170)
![が – Marking the Subject ('Who/What') in Japanese [JLPT N5]](http://hirakan.com/cdn/shop/articles/ga-subject-marker_60f30f70-6ca5-47ee-9a00-3646195d7d3c.jpg?v=1761386355&width=170)
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