You open your Japanese textbook and learn that 好き(すき)means “like” and 有名(ゆうめい)means “famous.” Then you try to use them in a sentence — and everything goes wrong. You write 有名い instead of 有名な, or you forget to add な before a noun, and suddenly your sentence sounds completely off to a native speaker.
This is the na-adjective trap, and almost every Japanese learner falls into it. Na-adjectives (な形容詞, na-keiyoushi; formally called 形容動詞, keiyoudoushi) look and behave differently from regular i-adjectives (い形容詞), and if you mix up the rules, your Japanese will sound unnatural fast. This guide covers everything you need: what na-adjectives are, how to conjugate them in every tense and form, and how to actually use them in conversation.
| Form | Affirmative | Negative |
|---|---|---|
| Present / Polite | 好きです (suki desu) | 好きじゃないです (suki ja nai desu) |
| Past / Polite | 好きでした (suki deshita) | 好きじゃなかったです (suki ja nakatta desu) |
| Present / Plain | 好きだ (suki da) | 好きじゃない (suki ja nai) |
| Past / Plain | 好きだった (suki datta) | 好きじゃなかった (suki ja nakatta) |
| Before a noun (prenominal) | 好きな人 (suki na hito) | 好きじゃない人 (suki ja nai hito) |
| Adverb form | 静かに (shizuka ni) | — |
| Te-form (connecting) | 静かで (shizuka de) | 静かじゃなくて (shizuka ja nakute) |
What Are Na-Adjectives? (And Why They Are Different)
Japanese has two types of adjectives: i-adjectives (い形容詞) and na-adjectives (な形容詞). The difference is not just about how they look — it is about how they are built.
I-adjectives are true adjectives in the grammatical sense. They carry their own inflection endings: 高い(たかい)becomes 高くない, 高かった, 高ければ. The adjective itself changes shape.
Na-adjectives work differently. The adjective word itself never changes. Instead, you add the copula だ / です to carry tense, and you add な when the adjective goes directly before a noun. This is why grammarians call them 形容動詞 (keiyoudoushi): they behave like nouns that are being used as adjectives, with the verb-like copula doing the grammatical work.
The practical takeaway: na-adjectives never end in い in their dictionary form (with a few important lookalike exceptions covered below), and they never change their own spelling when conjugated.
So when I see 便利, I just add です or な depending on the situation? It stays 便利 the whole time?


Exactly! 便利です, 便利な駅, 便利じゃない — the word 便利 itself never changes. Only what you attach to it changes.
Na-Adjective Conjugation: Full Table
We will use 静か(しずか)(“quiet”) and 便利(べんり)(“convenient”) as our main examples. Remember: the adjective root stays the same — only the ending changes.
Polite Forms (with です)
| Form | 静か (quiet) | English |
|---|---|---|
| Present affirmative | 静かです | It is quiet. |
| Present negative | 静かじゃないです / 静かではありません | It is not quiet. |
| Past affirmative | 静かでした | It was quiet. |
| Past negative | 静かじゃなかったです / 静かではありませんでした | It was not quiet. |
Note on formality: 静かじゃないです is perfectly natural in everyday polite speech. 静かではありません is more formal and suits written Japanese or formal presentations.
Plain Forms (casual speech, embedded clauses)
| Form | 静か (quiet) | English |
|---|---|---|
| Present affirmative | 静かだ | It’s quiet. |
| Present negative | 静かじゃない | It’s not quiet. |
| Past affirmative | 静かだった | It was quiet. |
| Past negative | 静かじゃなかった | It wasn’t quiet. |
Formation note: Plain negative 静かじゃない is built from じゃ (a contraction of では) + ない. For past negative, replace ない with なかった: 静かじゃなかった.
Three Key Uses of Na-Adjectives
1. Prenominal Use: な Before a Noun
When a na-adjective modifies a noun directly (i.e., it comes right before the noun), you must add な between the adjective and the noun. This is where the name “na-adjective” comes from.
| Na-adjective | + noun | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| 好き(すき) | 好きな人(すきなひと) | a person I like |
| 有名(ゆうめい) | 有名な場所(ゆうめいなばしょ) | a famous place |
| 便利(べんり) | 便利なアプリ(べんりなアプリ) | a convenient app |
| 大切(たいせつ) | 大切な友達(たいせつなともだち) | an important friend |
| 特別(とくべつ) | 特別な日(とくべつなひ) | a special day |
Common mistake: Writing 有名場所 (missing な) sounds like a broken compound noun, not an adjective phrase. Always include な.
2. Adverbial Use: に to Modify a Verb
To turn a na-adjective into an adverb — to describe how something is done — replace な (or だ) with に.
| Na-adjective | Adverb form | Example sentence | English |
|---|---|---|---|
| 静か(しずか) | 静かに | 静かに話してください。 | Please speak quietly. |
| 親切(しんせつ) | 親切に | 先生が親切に教えてくれた。 | The teacher taught me kindly. |
| 丁寧(ていねい) | 丁寧に | 丁寧に書いてください。 | Please write carefully. |
| 上手(じょうず) | 上手に | 上手に歌えるようになった。 | I became able to sing well. |
3. Te-Form: Connecting Clauses with で
The te-form of a na-adjective is formed by replacing だ with で. It connects two clauses, similar to “and” or “being ~” in English.
Pattern: [Na-adjective] + で + [next clause]
| Example | English |
|---|---|
| あの図書館は静かで、勉強しやすい。 | That library is quiet, so it’s easy to study. |
| 彼女は親切で、みんなに好かれている。 | She is kind, and everyone likes her. |
| この町は有名で、観光客が多い。 | This town is famous, so there are many tourists. |


Wait — so the te-form is just で? That seems much simpler than the te-form for verbs!


Right! 静かだ → 静かで. Compare i-adjectives: 高い → 高くて. Na-adjectives use で; i-adjectives use くて. Different shapes, same function.
Essential Na-Adjectives by Category
Here are the most useful na-adjectives organized by theme. These appear constantly in daily conversation, JLPT exams, and written Japanese.
Personality and Character
| Na-adjective | Reading | Meaning | Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| 親切 | しんせつ | kind | 親切な人 (a kind person) |
| 真面目 | まじめ | serious, hardworking | 真面目な学生 (a diligent student) |
| 丁寧 | ていねい | polite, careful | 丁寧な返事 (a polite reply) |
| 元気 | げんき | energetic, healthy | 元気な子ども (an energetic child) |
| 素直 | すなお | honest, obedient | 素直な性格 (an honest personality) |
| 賑やか | にぎやか | lively, bustling | 賑やかなパーティー (a lively party) |
Places and Things
| Na-adjective | Reading | Meaning | Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| 有名 | ゆうめい | famous | 有名な店 (a famous shop) |
| 便利 | べんり | convenient | 便利なアプリ (a convenient app) |
| 大切 | たいせつ | important, precious | 大切な時間 (precious time) |
| 静か | しずか | quiet | 静かな部屋 (a quiet room) |
| 複雑 | ふくざつ | complicated | 複雑な問題 (a complicated problem) |
| 安全 | あんぜん | safe | 安全な道 (a safe road) |
High-Frequency JLPT Words
| Na-adjective | Reading | Meaning | JLPT level |
|---|---|---|---|
| 必要 | ひつよう | necessary | N4 |
| 特別 | とくべつ | special | N4 |
| 安全 | あんぜん | safe | N4 |
| 大丈夫 | だいじょうぶ | okay, fine | N5 |
| 好き | すき | liked, fond of | N5 |
| 嫌い | きらい | disliked | N5 |
| 得意 | とくい | good at | N4 |
| 苦手 | にがて | not good at, weak at | N4 |
The Lookalike Trap: I-Adjective Endings That Are Actually Na-Adjectives
Here is where many learners make their biggest mistakes. Some na-adjectives end in い in their written form and look exactly like i-adjectives — but they are not. Do not add the i-adjective negative ending くない to these words.
| Word | Reading | Meaning | Correct negative | Wrong (i-adj) form |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 好き | すき | like | 好きじゃない | |
| 嫌い | きらい | dislike | 嫌いじゃない | |
| 大嫌い | だいきらい | hate | 大嫌いじゃない | |
| 下手 | へた | bad at | 下手じゃない | |
| 上手 | じょうず | good at | 上手じゃない | |
| 得意 | とくい | skilled at | 得意じゃない | |
| 苦手 | にがて | weak at | 苦手じゃない |
How do you tell the difference? If you look up the word in a dictionary and it is listed as な形容詞 or 形容動詞, use the na-adjective rules. The prenominal test also works: if the word takes な before a noun (好きな, 嫌いな, 上手な), it is a na-adjective regardless of its ending.


I always said 上手くない because it ends in い… so the correct way to say “not good at it” is 上手じゃない?


Yes! 上手じゃない (polite: 上手じゃないです) is correct. The key check: 上手な人 uses な before a noun, which tells you it is a na-adjective, not an i-adjective.
Common Mistakes and How to Avoid Them
Mistake 1: Using い-adjective Conjugation for Na-Adjectives
| Wrong | Correct | Why |
|---|---|---|
| 有名じゃない | 有名 is a na-adjective; negation uses じゃない | |
| 便利だった | Past tense uses だった, not かった | |
| 静かで | Te-form uses で, not くて | |
| 好きじゃない | 好き is a na-adjective despite ending in い |
Mistake 2: Dropping な Before a Noun
| Wrong | Correct | Note |
|---|---|---|
| 有名な場所 | な is required between adjective and noun | |
| 静かな部屋 | Always add な in prenominal position | |
| 便利な駅 | Dropping な produces an ungrammatical compound |
Mistake 3: Forgetting だ in Plain Form Affirmative
In casual speech, ending a sentence with just 静か (without だ) sounds incomplete or like you stopped mid-sentence. Use 静かだ for a complete plain-form statement. In very casual female speech, だ is sometimes omitted, but as a learner, always include it until you have developed strong instincts for the register.
Na-Adjective vs I-Adjective: Quick Decision Flowchart
Not sure which type of adjective you are dealing with? Work through these steps:
Is it listed as 形容動詞 or な形容詞 in the dictionary?
↓ YES → Na-adjective. Use: だ/です, じゃない, だった, な (before noun), に (adverb), で (te-form)
↓ NO
Does it end in い in its dictionary form?
↓ YES → Probably an i-adjective. Use: くない, かった, くなかった, い (before noun), く (adverb), くて (te-form)
EXCEPTION: 好き, 嫌い, 大嫌い, 下手, 上手, 得意, 苦手 → these end in い but are Na-adjectives!
↓ NO (ends in something other than い)
Definitely a na-adjective.
→ Prenominal check: does it take な before a noun? 有名な / 便利な / 静かな → YES = na-adjective ✓Quick Quiz
Test your understanding. Choose the correct form for each blank.
1. This restaurant is famous. → このレストランは____です。
Answer: 有名 (yuumei) — 有名です
2. She is a kind person. → 彼女は____人です。
Answer: 親切な (shinsetsu na) — 親切な人
3. Please speak quietly. → ____話してください。
Answer: 静かに (shizuka ni) — 静かに
4. I don’t like natto (plain form). → 納豆が____。
Answer: 好きじゃない (suki ja nai)
5. The park was quiet, and I felt calm. → 公園は____、落ち着いた。
Answer: 静かで (shizuka de) — te-form connecting two clauses
6. He was not good at swimming (past). → 彼は水泳が____。
Answer: 下手じゃなかった (heta ja nakatta) — NOT 下手くなかった
How did you do? If questions 4 and 6 tripped you up, revisit the lookalike section above — those い-ending na-adjectives are the ones that catch most learners.
Share your score or any questions in the comments below — we love hearing where learners get stuck!
Keep Learning
Na-adjectives are just one piece of the Japanese adjective puzzle. Explore these related guides to build a complete picture:
- I-Adjective vs Na-Adjective: Side-by-Side Comparison
- The Japanese Te-Form: Complete Guide for All Verb Types
- Japanese Sentence Structure (SOV): How Japanese Sentences Are Built
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About the Author
Daisuke is the creator of JP YoKoSo — a Japanese learning site for English speakers. Every article is written to explain Japanese clearly, with real examples, grammar notes, and practical tips for learners at every level.
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