ね – Softly Seeking Agreement in Japanese [JLPT N5]
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Quick Summary
- Meaning: The particle ね is used at the end of a sentence to gently seek agreement, confirmation, or shared feeling, like “right?”, “isn’t it?”, or “you know?”.
- How to Use: Add ね to the end of almost any sentence when you expect the listener to agree or feel the same.
Example:
- この宇宙人はかわいいね。
- Kono uchuujin wa kawaii ne.
- This alien is cute, isn’t it?
Overview
The sentence-ending particle ね is one of the most common and friendly tools in Japanese conversation.
When you add ね to the end of a sentence, you are:
- Checking agreement: asking the listener to agree with you, like “right?” or “isn’t it?”.
- Sharing a feeling: inviting the listener to feel the same way, like “it’s cold today, huh?”.
- Softening your speech: making your sentence sound more gentle and friendly.
Compare these two ideas in English:
- “It’s interesting.” (just a statement)
- “It’s interesting, right?” (you want the other person to agree)
In Japanese, ね does this “right?” or “isn’t it?” job in a very natural, soft way. It is not as strong as a real question; it is more about connection and shared understanding.
You can use ね with:
- Statements you think the listener will agree with
- Things both of you can see or experience right now
- Facts or opinions you believe are shared
For example, if you and your friend are both sweating on a hot day, you might say:
- 今日は暑いね。
- Kyou wa atsui ne.
- It’s hot today, isn’t it?
Notice how ね makes the sentence feel like “We’re both suffering together.” It pulls the listener into your feeling.
ね is also used when you are pretty sure about something but still want a small confirmation. For example, when you think you remember something correctly, or when you want to sound softer than a plain statement.
Socially, ね makes your Japanese sound:
- More natural and conversational
- Less direct or cold
- More friendly and cooperative
Because of this, beginners sometimes worry they are overusing it, but in everyday speech Japanese people use ね a lot. As long as you are really expecting agreement or sharing a feeling, it is usually safe and natural.
Structure / Formation
The good news: the structure of ね is very simple. You just put it at the end of a sentence.
Basic Pattern
You can add ね after almost any kind of sentence:
- Clause + ね
Here, Clause can be many things:
- N + です
- V (plain or polite)
- i-adj (+ です or plain)
- na-adj + です or na-adj-だ (plain)
Then simply attach ね at the end:
- N + です + ね
- V-ます + ね
- V (plain) + ね
- i-adj (+ です) + ね
- na-adj + です + ね
Some simple pattern examples:
| Pattern | Example (Japanese) | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| N + です + ね | 先生はロボットですね。 | The teacher is a robot, right? |
| V-ます + ね | 毎日ダンスしますね。 | You dance every day, huh? |
| V-る + ね | よく食べるね。 | You eat a lot, don’t you? |
| i-adj + ね | このラーメンは甘いね。 | This ramen is sweet, isn’t it? |
| na-adj + です + ね | あの犬は有名ですね。 | That dog is famous, isn’t it? |
Polite vs. Casual with ね
ね itself does not change form. Politeness comes from the sentence before it:
- Polite: use です/ます + ね
- Casual: use plain forms + ね
Polite examples:
- 今日は静かですね。
- Kyou wa shizuka desu ne.
- It’s quiet today, isn’t it?
- よく走りますね。
- Yoku hashirimasu ne.
- You run a lot, don’t you?
Casual examples (to friends, family, close people):
- このメガネ、変だね。
- Kono megane, hen da ne.
- These glasses are weird, huh?
- 明日もゲームするね。
- Ashita mo geemu suru ne.
- You’re going to play games tomorrow too, right?
Nuance: Statement + ね vs Real Question
It is important to feel the difference between:
- ね (soft “right?”)
- か (clear question marker)
| Form | Japanese | Romaji | Meaning |
|---|---|---|---|
| Statement + ね | 明日はテストですね。 | Ashita wa tesuto desu ne. | We have a test tomorrow, right? (You expect agreement.) |
| Question with か | 明日はテストですか。 | Ashita wa tesuto desu ka. | Do we have a test tomorrow? (You are asking for information.) |
With ね, you usually already know (or think you know) the answer. With か, you are really asking.
When ね Sounds Natural
Use ね when:
- You and the listener share the same situation or information.
- You believe the listener will agree.
- You want to sound friendly or soften your opinion.
Example (shared funny situation):
- あのカラスは頭がいいね。
- Ano karasu wa atama ga ii ne.
- That crow is smart, isn’t it?
Avoid ね when:
- You are giving completely new information that the listener doesn’t know.
- You are making a strong order or command (especially to someone above you).
For new information, it is usually better to just state it without ね, or use か if you are really asking.
Typical Beginner Patterns to Practice
Here are some very common, beginner-friendly patterns with ね that you can start using right away:
| Pattern | Model | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| Place + は + N + です + ね | この町は静かな町ですね。 | This town is a quiet town, isn’t it? |
| Time + は + i-adj + です + ね | 夜は寒いですね。 | It’s cold at night, isn’t it? |
| Person + は + V-ます + ね | おじいさんは走りますね。 | Grandpa runs a lot, doesn’t he? |
| N + が + i-adj + ね | このケーキが大きいね。 | This cake is big, isn’t it? |
One more fun example that puts it all together:
- うちの猫は日本語が上手ね。
- Uchi no neko wa Nihongo ga jouzu ne.
- My cat is good at Japanese, isn’t it?
If you start adding ね to sentences like these when talking to friends, teachers, or language partners, your Japanese will immediately sound more natural and more “alive”.
Example Sentences
- あなたの犬はダンスが上手ですね。
- Anata no inu wa dansu ga jouzu desu ne.
- Your dog is good at dancing, isn’t it?
- このロボットはコーヒーが好きね。
- Kono robotto wa koohii ga suki ne.
- This robot likes coffee, huh?
- 先生はゲームがとても強いですね。
- Sensei wa geemu ga totemo tsuyoi desu ne.
- Our teacher is really strong at games, right?
- あの宇宙人は日本語がわかるね。
- Ano uchuujin wa Nihongo ga wakaru ne.
- That alien understands Japanese, doesn’t it?
- 今日はおじいさんのヘアスタイルがアイドルみたいですね。
- Kyou wa ojiisan no heasutairu ga aidoru mitai desu ne.
- Grandpa’s hairstyle looks like an idol’s today, doesn’t it?
Quick Practice
(Answers and explanations are right under this section.)
Multiple-Choice
1. Choose the best sentence that naturally uses ね to share a feeling: “It’s cold today, isn’t it?”
- A. 今日は寒いです。(Kyou wa samui desu.)
- B. 今日は寒いですか。(Kyou wa samui desu ka.)
- C. 今日は寒いですね。(Kyou wa samui desu ne.)
- D. 今日は寒いと。(Kyou wa samui to.)
2. Choose the correct casual sentence that asks for agreement with ね: “You play games a lot, right?”
- A. よくゲームするね。(Yoku geemu suru ne.)
- B. よくゲームするか。(Yoku geemu suru ka.)
- C. よくゲームすると。(Yoku geemu suru to.)
- D. よくゲームするや。(Yoku geemu suru ya.)
3. Choose the sentence that uses ね naturally when you and your friend are both looking at the same robot: “That robot is fast, isn’t it?”
- A. あのロボットは速いね。(Ano robotto wa hayai ne.)
- B. あのロボットは速いや。(Ano robotto wa hayai ya.)
- C. あのロボットは速いか。(Ano robotto wa hayai ka.)
- D. あのロボットは速いでも。(Ano robotto wa hayai demo.)
4. You are pretty sure about the information and want soft confirmation. Choose the best polite sentence: “Tomorrow is a holiday, right?”
- A. 明日は休みですね。(Ashita wa yasumi desu ne.)
- B. 明日は休みですか。(Ashita wa yasumi desu ka.)
- C. 明日は休みですと。(Ashita wa yasumi desu to.)
- D. 明日は休みでも。(Ashita wa yasumi demo.)
5. Choose the most natural sentence with ね when you and your friend both hear the loud music: “This music is noisy, huh?”
- A. この音楽はうるさいね。(Kono ongaku wa urusai ne.)
- B. この音楽はうるさいか。(Kono ongaku wa urusai ka.)
- C. この音楽はうるさいと。(Kono ongaku wa urusai to.)
- D. この音楽はうるさいなど。(Kono ongaku wa urusai nado.)
Spot-the-Error
6. One of these sentences uses ね in an unnatural or incorrect way. Which one has the error?
- A. 今日はテストですね。(Kyou wa tesuto desu ne.)
- B. このカレーは甘いですね。(Kono karee wa amai desu ne.)
- C. これは新しい単語ですかね。(Kore wa atarashii tango desu ka ne.)
7. Only one of these sentences is wrong because of how ね is used with new information or commands. Which one is incorrect?
- A. 外は暗いですね。(Soto wa kurai desu ne.)
- B. あなたのロボットはギターが上手ですね。(Anata no robotto wa gitaa ga jouzu desu ne.)
- C. この薬を飲んでくださいねか。(Kono kusuri o nonde kudasai ne ka.)
Translation
8. Translate into polite Japanese with ね: “Your cat is very quiet today, isn’t it?”
9. Translate into casual Japanese with ね: “This cake is big, huh?”
10. Translate into casual Japanese with ね: “Grandpa is an idol, right?”
Answers and Explanations
- 今日は寒いですね。(Kyou wa samui desu ne.) — Uses ね at the end of a polite sentence to softly seek agreement about the shared feeling.
- よくゲームするね。(Yoku geemu suru ne.) — Casual plain verb + ね naturally asks for agreement in a friendly way.
- あのロボットは速いね。(Ano robotto wa hayai ne.) — ね is added to a simple statement that both speakers can see, inviting shared reaction.
- 明日は休みですね。(Ashita wa yasumi desu ne.) — Polite です + ね shows you are mostly sure and just confirming gently.
- この音楽はうるさいね。(Kono ongaku wa urusai ne.) — ね fits well when both people are hearing the noisy music and sharing the feeling.
- これは新しい単語ですかね。(Kore wa atarashii tango desu ka ne.) — A and B are natural; C is odd because ですかね is usually used about your own doubt, but here it’s the only one mixing か and ね in a way that is too advanced and unnatural for this simple pattern, so it is the error.
- この薬を飲んでくださいねか。(Kono kusuri o nonde kudasai ne ka.) — A and B naturally use ね to share a situation; C is incorrect because ね and か should not be combined like this after a command.
- 今日はあなたの猫はとても静かですね。(Kyou wa anata no neko wa totemo shizuka desu ne.) — Polite です + ね politely invites agreement about the cat’s quiet mood.
- このケーキは大きいね。(Kono keeki wa ookii ne.) — Casual i-adjective + ね sounds friendly and natural with someone looking at the same cake.
- おじいさんはアイドルだね。(Ojiisan wa aidoru da ne.) — Casual noun + だ + ね asks for agreement in a light, playful way.
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