JLPT N3: Common Exam Mistakes and How to Avoid Them

JLPT N3 has specific grammar and vocabulary traps that English speakers consistently fall into. This guide covers the most common mistakes — and exactly how to avoid them — based on the patterns that appear most frequently on the exam.

Mistake CategoryCommon Error
Particle choiceUsing を instead of に for location/goal
Potential formConfusing できる (general) and 〜られる (specific)
ConcessionMixing up のに and ても
CausativeConfusing させる (cause) and させられる (be forced)
Formality mismatchUsing casual form in formal writing answers
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Mistake 1: Particle Confusion at N3 Level

Yuka
Yuka

「駅を行く」じゃなくて「駅に行く」!
(It’s not 「駅を行く」, it’s 「駅に行く」!)

Rei
Rei

そうだよ!を は通過する場所に使うよ。
(Exactly! を is for places you pass through.)

ParticleUseExample
Destination / goal駅に行く (go to the station)
Location of action公園で遊ぶ (play at the park)
Path passed through橋を渡る (cross the bridge)
Subject of potential/emotion日本語が話せる (can speak Japanese)

Mistake 2: Confusing できる and Potential Form

N3 candidates often use できる where the potential form is needed, or vice versa.

WrongCorrectWhy
この本を読めることができる。この本が読める / 読むことができる。Double-potential — pick one
水泳ができる。(I can swim — specific)泳げる。できる = ability in general; potential = specific action
彼女は料理ができます。OK — 料理 is a nounできる + noun is correct

Mistake 3: のに vs ても Confusion

Yuka
Yuka

「疲れてもいても、仕事をします」は変だよ。
(「疲れてもいても」is strange.)

Rei
Rei

「疲れていても」が正しいね!
(「疲れていても」is correct!)

Wrong ContextCorrect PatternRule
Expressing regret about past with てもUse のに for emotional past contrastのに = regret/surprise; ても = neutral even if
Using のに for future/hypotheticalUse ても for hypotheticalsのに refers to real, past or current facts
Mixing くせに with formal writingUse にもかかわらず in formal contextsくせに = casual criticism only

Mistake 4: Causative vs Causative-Passive

This is one of the hardest N3 grammar areas. The causative-passive looks complex but expresses being forced to do something.

FormMeaningExample
させるCause / make someone do子供に野菜を食べさせる (make child eat vegetables)
させられるBe made to do (against will)野菜を食べさせられた (was made to eat vegetables)
Yuka
Yuka

上司に残業させられました…
(I was made to work overtime by my boss…)

Rei
Rei

大変だったね。強制された感じが「させられる」に出てるよ。
(That was rough. The feeling of being forced comes through in させられる.)

Mistake 5: Formality Mismatch in Exam Answers

N3 reading and grammar sections sometimes include formal writing. Mixing casual and formal patterns loses marks.

SituationWrongCorrect
Formal report〜と思う〜と考えられる / 〜と思われる
Formal concession〜くせに〜にもかかわらず
Formal opinion〜だと思う〜であると思われる
Causal in formal text〜から〜ため / 〜ので

Study Strategy: Common N3 Traps

Yuka
Yuka

N3対策のポイントは、「似ている文型の違い」を覚えることだよ。
(The key to N3 prep is memorizing the differences between similar grammar patterns.)

Rei
Rei

それぞれの「ニュアンスの差」が試験に出るよね。
(The nuance differences between them are what the exam tests.)

PairHow to Distinguish
のに vs てものに = regret about real event; ても = hypothetical/neutral
ために vs ようにために = intentional action goal; ように = state/ability goal
ほど vs くらいほど = extent comparison; くらい = approximate degree
させる vs させられるさせる = you force; させられる = you are forced

Quick Quiz: Spot the Mistake

1. 日本語を勉強したても、難しい。 → _____
勉強しても (て-form: 勉強して + も)

2. 雨のため行きますでした。 → _____
雨のため、行きませんでした (negative + でした for past)

3. 彼は何もしないのに、できる振りをする。 → _____
くせに (criticism nuance is better matched by くせに here)


Have a question about JLPT N3? Drop it in the comments below — Yuka reads every one! 💬

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