You overheard that Yuka got a new job. In Japanese, how do you say ‘It seems like Yuka got a new job’ — and which word do you use? そう, よう, らしい, and みたい all translate roughly to ‘seems’ or ‘looks like’ — but each carries a different type of evidence. Getting this right makes your Japanese sound dramatically more natural.
| Expression | Evidence Type | Nuance | Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| 〜そう | Visual / immediate impression | It looks like… (based on appearance) | おいしそう!(It looks delicious!) |
| 〜よう | Speaker’s reasoning / judgment | It seems like… (logical conclusion) | 彼は忙しいようだ。(He seems to be busy.) |
| 〜らしい | Hearsay / external information | Apparently… / I heard that… | 田中さんは転職したらしい。(Apparently Tanaka changed jobs.) |
| 〜みたい | Casual observation / resemblance | It seems like… (casual version of よう) | 雨が降りそうみたい。(Looks like it might rain.) |
〜そう: What You See Right Now
「そう」は目で見た印象から判断するときに使う。「あ、おいしそう!」「疲れていそう」みたいに、今まさに見ているものから感じること。
(そう is for judgments based on what you can SEE right now. ‘Oh, that looks delicious!’ or ‘You look tired’ — things you’re observing in this moment.)
| Attach to | Rule | Example |
|---|---|---|
| い-adjective | Remove い, add そう | おいしい → おいしそう (looks delicious) |
| な-adjective | Add そう directly | 元気 → 元気そう (looks energetic) |
| Verb (stem) | Remove ます, add そう | 降る → 降りそう (looks like it will fall/rain) |
| いい (good) | Irregular: よさそう | いい → よさそう (looks good) |
Key nuance: そう describes what’s happening right in front of you. You cannot use it for something you’ve heard from someone else.
〜よう: The Logical Conclusion


「よう」は話し手の観察や推測から論理的に判断するとき。「彼のカバンが重そうだから、たくさん持ってきたようだ」みたいに。客観的な判断に使うよ。
(よう is for logical deductions from evidence. ‘His bag looks heavy, so it seems he brought a lot.’ It’s used for more objective, reasoned conclusions.)
| Pattern | Japanese | English |
|---|---|---|
| 〜ようだ (plain) | 彼女は疲れているようだ。 | She seems to be tired. (reasoned) |
| 〜ようです (polite) | 雨が降るようです。 | It seems it will rain. |
| Noun + のよう | 夢のようだ。 | It’s like a dream. |
| 〜ように見える | 元気なように見える。 | She looks well / healthy. |
〜らしい: Apparently (Hearsay)


「らしい」は人から聞いた情報や、噂ベースのときに使う。「田中さんは結婚したらしい」は「そう聞いた」というニュアンス。直接見ていなくても使える。
(‘らしい’ is for information you received from others or heard as a rumor. ‘I heard Tanaka got married’ — you didn’t witness it yourself but have indirect evidence.)
| Pattern | Japanese | English |
|---|---|---|
| Verb + らしい | 彼女は会社を辞めたらしい。 | Apparently she quit her job. |
| Noun + らしい | 田中さんは日本人らしい。 | Tanaka seems genuinely Japanese. (typical) |
| い-adj + らしい | この町は住みやすいらしい。 | I hear this town is easy to live in. |
| Note: noun + らしい | 彼は先生らしい先生だ。 | He is a very teacher-like teacher. (typical) |
Special use: Noun + らしい can also mean ‘typical of’ or ‘befitting.’ 男らしい (manly) or 子供らしい (childlike) use this meaning.
〜みたい: Casual Version of よう


「みたい」はくだけた会話でよく使う「よう」の口語バージョン。「彼、怒ってるみたいだよ」のように友達との会話に自然。正式な文章では「よう」を使ってね。
(‘みたい’ is the casual spoken version of よう. ‘He seems angry’ — natural in conversations with friends. For formal writing, use よう instead.)
| Feature | よう | みたい |
|---|---|---|
| Register | Neutral to formal | Casual / colloquial |
| Written Japanese | ✓ Used | ✗ Avoid in formal writing |
| Spoken Japanese | ✓ Slightly formal-sounding | ✓ More natural in conversation |
| After plain form | 〜ようだ | 〜みたいだ |
Side-by-Side Comparison Table
| Situation | Which to use | Example |
|---|---|---|
| You see dark clouds | 〜そう (visual) | 雨が降りそう。(It looks like rain.) |
| You reasoned it must rain from forecast | 〜よう (logical) | 雨が降るようだ。(It seems it will rain.) |
| Your friend told you it rained yesterday | 〜らしい (hearsay) | 昨日雨が降ったらしい。(Apparently it rained.) |
| Casual chat: ‘Seems like rain’ | 〜みたい (casual) | 雨みたい。(Seems rainy.) |
Quick Quiz
1. You see a cake and it looks delicious. Which do you use?
→ おいしそう! — そう for visual impressions.
2. Your coworker told you Tanaka is quitting. How do you pass this on?
→ 田中さんは辞めるらしい。 — らしい for hearsay.
3. You’re chatting with a friend and want to say ‘Seems like he’s tired’ casually?
→ 疲れてるみたい。 — みたい is the casual spoken form.
Which of these four still confuses you? Comment below! 💬
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