📖 Chapter 7 of 13

🏝️ Trip to Okinawa — Adjectives

In this chapter, we focus on adjectives to describe our experiences, like a trip to Okinawa. We’ll also learn how to express preferences and suggest actions to others.

Adjectives: The Two Types

Japanese has two distinct types of adjectives. Knowing the difference is critical because they conjugate differently.

い-Adjectives (i-adjectives)

Always end in the hiragana い (i).

  • さむい (samui) - Cold usually for weather
  • あつい (atsui) - Hot
  • たのしい (tanoshii) - Fun
  • おいしい (oishii) - Delicious

な-Adjectives (na-adjectives)

Behave like nouns. The “na” appears when modifying a noun.

  • しずか (shizuka) - Quiet
  • げんき (genki) - Healthy/Energetic
  • きれい (kirei) - Beautiful/Clean
  • ひま (hima) - Free time/Not busy

Caution: “Kirei” ends in “i” but is a na-adjective!

Conjugation Rules

1. い-Adjectives

To conjugate, you usually drop the final and add a suffix.

TenseAffirmativeNegative
Presentさむ ですさむくない です
Pastさむかった ですさむくなかった です

Exception (Irregular): いい (Good) conugates from its older form yoi.

  • Present Neg: よくない です
  • Past Aff: よかった です
  • Past Neg: よくなかった です

2. な-Adjectives (Same as Nouns)

TenseAffirmativeNegative
Presentしずか ですしずか じゃない です
Pastしずか でしたしずか じゃなかった です

Noun Modification

When you place an adjective before a noun to describe it:

  • i-adjective: Just place it in front.
    • おもしろ えいが (Interesting movie)
  • na-adjective: Add (na) between them.
    • きれい うみ (Beautiful sea)
    • げんき せんせい (Energetic teacher)

Expressing Preferences: 好き and きらい

In English, “like” is a verb. In Japanese, it’s an adjective meaning “likable” or “desirable”. This means we use the particle が (ga) instead of o.

[Topic] wa [Thing] ga Suki/Kirai desu.

  • わたしは おきなわが すきです。
    • Watashi wa Okinawa ga suki desu.
    • (I like Okinawa.)
  • たけしさんは トマトが きらいです。
    • Takeshi-san wa tomato ga kirai desu.
    • (Takeshi dislikes tomatoes.)

Degrees of Preference:

  • だいすき (Daisuki) = Love / Like a lot
  • だいきらい (Daikirai) = Hate / Dislike a lot

Suggestions: ~Mashou

To suggest doing something with someone else:

  1. ~ましょう (Mashou) — “Let’s…”

    • Use when you are sure the other person will agree, or simply urging action.
    • いきましょう! (Let’s go!)
    • たべましょう。 (Let’s eat.)
  2. ~ましょうか (Mashou ka) — “Shall we…?”

    • Use when proposing an idea, or asking for agreement.
    • テニスを しましょうか。 (Shall we play tennis?)

Counting Guide

Japanese uses “counters” based on shape.

The General Counter (Native Japanese)

Use this for small objects or things with no specific counter.

NumberJapaneseReading
1ひとつHitotsu
2ふたつFutatsu
3みっつMittsu
4よっつYottsu
5いつつItsutsu
6むっつMuttsu
7ななつNanatsu
8やっつYattsu
9ここのつKokonotsu
10とおToo

People Counter

NumberJapaneseReading
1 personひとりHitori
2 peopleふたりFutari
3 peopleさんにんSan-nin
4 peopleよにんYo-nin

Cultural Note: 沖縄 (Okinawa)

Okinawa is Japan’s tropical prefecture, distinct from the mainland (Honshu).

  • Climate: Subtropical, warm year-round.
  • Dialect: Okinawan (Uchinaaguchi) is traditional, though standard Japanese is spoken.
  • Food: Famous for Goya Chanpuru (bitter melon stir fry) and Soki Soba (pork rib noodles).
  • History: Formerly the Ryukyu Kingdom, it has unique architecture and music (sanshin).

Test Your Knowledge

🧩

Chapter Quiz

1 / 10

Which particle is used with 'Suki' (to like)?