Japanese Adjectives Guide for English Speakers: い-Adjectives, な-Adjectives, Conjugation, and Common Mistakes

You look at a photo of a mountain and want to say “That mountain is tall.” Simple enough — in English. In Japanese, you have two completely different systems of adjectives, each with its own conjugation rules, and they behave in ways that feel nothing like English adjectives. Use the wrong type, and sentences like 静かない or 高いでした pop out — grammatically impossible in Japanese, yet extremely common mistakes for English speakers.

This guide covers everything: what い-adjectives and な-adjectives are, how they conjugate in all forms (present, negative, past, past negative), how to turn them into adverbs, which emotion adjectives need extra care, and the confusing pairs that trip up even intermediate learners. Whether you are a complete beginner or preparing for JLPT N3, this guide has the depth you need.

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What Are Japanese Adjectives?

Japanese adjectives describe nouns and states

Japanese adjectives work similarly to English adjectives at first glance: they describe nouns (a tall mountain, a quiet room) and express states (the mountain is tall, the room is quiet). But the mechanics underneath are very different.

Japanese adjectives can work like predicates

In English, you need the verb “to be” to make a sentence: “This room is quiet.” In Japanese, an adjective can end a sentence on its own without a separate verb:

JapaneseLiteralEnglish
この部屋は静かだ。This room quiet-is.This room is quiet.
あの山は高い。That mountain tall.That mountain is tall.

The adjective itself carries the predicate meaning. This is one of the core features that makes Japanese adjectives feel different from English ones.

Why Japanese adjectives feel different from English adjectives

English adjectives do not conjugate. You say “tall” in every context: tall mountain, the mountain is tall, was tall, not tall. Japanese adjectives conjugate for tense, negativity, and connecting form — more like verbs than English adjectives. This is why many Japanese grammar textbooks treat adjectives as a kind of verb class.

The good news: the rules are consistent. Once you learn the pattern for one い-adjective, the pattern applies to almost all of them. Same for な-adjectives.

The two main types: い-adjectives and な-adjectives

TypeAlso calledExampleKey feature
い-adjectivei-adjective / 形容詞 (けいようし)高い (たかい) — tall/expensiveEnds in い; conjugates by changing い
な-adjectivena-adjective / 形容動詞 (けいようどうし)静か (しずか) — quietAdds な before nouns; conjugates like nouns with だ/です

How to Use This Guide

If you are a complete beginner

Start with the sections on い-Adjectives Explained and な-Adjectives Explained. Learn five adjectives from each group. Then study the conjugation charts for 高い and 静か. Master the present and past forms before moving on.

If you are studying for JLPT

Focus on the JLPT vocabulary section near the end, the conjugation charts, and the Common Mistakes section. JLPT N5 and N4 test both adjective forms and conjugation in grammar questions.

If you want to speak naturally

Study the Intensity Words section and the Emotion Adjectives section carefully. Natural Japanese speech uses intensity words like すごく and かなり constantly, and emotion adjectives have subtle rules about first-person vs. third-person use that textbooks often skip.

If you confuse い-adjectives and な-adjectives

Go directly to the Confusing Pairs and Common Mistakes sections. Pay special attention to きれい, 園い (きらい), and 大好き (だいすき) — they look like い-adjectives but are な-adjectives.

い-Adjectives Explained

What い-adjectives are

い-adjectives are the native Japanese adjective class. They always end in the sound in their dictionary form. Examples: 高い (たかい), 安い (やすい), 大きい (おおきい), 楽しい (たのしい), 難しい (むずかしい).

How い-adjectives modify nouns

AdjectiveNounCombinedEnglish
高い高い山a tall mountain
楽しい授業楽しい授業a fun class
新しい新しい本a new book
古い古い車an old car

How い-adjectives work at the end of a sentence

PlainPoliteEnglish
この山は高い。この山は高いです。This mountain is tall.
あの店は安い。あの店は安いです。That shop is cheap.

Common い-adjectives beginners should learn

JapaneseReadingEnglish
高いたかいtall / expensive
安いやすいcheap / inexpensive
大きいおおきいbig / large
小さいちいさいsmall / little
新しいあたらしいnew
古いふるいold (for objects)
楽しいたのしいfun / enjoyable
難しいむずかしいdifficult
嬉しいうれしいhappy / glad
いい / よいいい / よいgood

Why いい is irregular

The adjective いい (good) is the most important irregular in Japanese. All conjugated forms use the base よ-:

FormCorrectWrong (common mistake)
Dictionaryいい / よい
Negativeよくない❌ いくない
Pastよかった❌ いかった
Past negativeよくなかった❌ いくなかった
Adverbよく❌ いく

な-Adjectives Explained

What な-adjectives are

な-adjectives are sometimes called “adjectival nouns” because they behave grammatically like nouns. Their dictionary form is the bare stem — 静か, 有名 (ゆうめい), きれい — without な attached. The な only appears when the adjective directly precedes a noun.

PositionFormExampleEnglish
Before nounstem + な + noun静かな部屋a quiet room
Sentence end (plain)stem + だこの部屋は静かだ。This room is quiet.
Sentence end (polite)stem + ですこの部屋は静かです。This room is quiet.

Why な appears before nouns

The な is a connecting particle that links the adjective stem to the following noun. Historically, な comes from the classical copula なり. な-adjectives are noun-like, and な is the connector between that noun-like word and the following noun.

な-adjectives at the end of a sentence

JapaneseEnglish
ここは静かThis place is quiet.
あの人は有名ですThat person is famous.
この道具は便利This tool is convenient.

Common な-adjectives beginners should learn

JapaneseReadingEnglish
きれいきれいpretty / clean
有名ゆうめいfamous
便利べんりconvenient
静かしずかquiet
賢やかにぎやかlively / bustling
大切たいせつimportant / precious
簡単かんたんeasy / simple
特別とくべつspecial
丁寧ていねいpolite / careful
好きすきliked / to like (feeling)

The い-trap: な-adjectives that end in い

Here is the most common trap: some な-adjectives end in い, making them look exactly like い-adjectives. They are not. The three most important ones to memorize:

WordReadingEnglishTypeBefore noun
きれいきれいpretty / cleanな-adjectiveきれい
園いきらいdislikedな-adjective園い食べ物
大好きだいすきloveな-adjective大好き

い-Adjectives vs な-Adjectives: Side-by-Side

How they modify nouns

TypePatternExampleEnglish
い-adjectiveadjective + noun高い山a tall mountain
な-adjectiveadjective + な + noun静かな部屋a quiet room

How they conjugate (overview)

Formい-adjective (高い)な-adjective (静か)
Present plain高い静かだ
Present polite高いです静かです
Negative plain高くない静かじゃない
Past plain高かった静かだった
Past negative高くなかった静かじゃなかった
Before noun高い山静かな部屋
Adverb高く静かに

How they connect to other words (て-form)

TypeRuleExampleEnglish
い-adjectiveい → くて高くて広い部屋a tall and spacious room
な-adjectiveだ → で静かできれいな部屋a quiet and pretty room

Quick identification test

  1. Does it end in い? Maybe い-adjective — but check the い-trap list first.
  2. Can you negate it by changing い to くない? Yes → い-adjective. No → な-adjective.
  3. Does it not end in い at all? → Almost certainly な-adjective.

Common exceptions and traps

WordLooks likeActuallyWhy it matters
きれいい-adjectiveな-adjectiveきれいな人 (correct); ❌ きれい人
園いい-adjectiveな-adjective園いな食べ物; ❌ 園く
大きなな-adjectiveprenominal-only form of 大きい大きな問題 OK; ❌ 問題は大きなだ
小さなな-adjectiveprenominal-only form of 小さい小さな子供 OK; ❌ 子供は小さなだ

い-Adjective Conjugation Chart

Full conjugation for 高い (たかい — tall / expensive). The same pattern applies to all regular い-adjectives.

FormPlainPolite
Present高い高いです
Negative高くない高くないです / 高くありません
Past高かった高かったです
Past negative高くなかった高くなかったです / 高くありませんでした
て-form高くて
Adverb高く

Common mistake: 高いでした (WRONG)

WrongCorrectWhy
❌ 高いでした✅ 高かったですい-adjectives conjugate internally; でした does not attach to い-adjectives
❌ 楽しいでした✅ 楽しかったですChange い to かった, then add です

いい full conjugation

FormPlainPolite
Presentいい / よいいいです / よいです
Negativeよくないよくないです / よくありません
Pastよかったよかったです
Past negativeよくなかったよくなかったです / よくありませんでした
て-formよくて
Adverbよく

な-Adjective Conjugation Chart

Full conjugation for 静か (しずか — quiet). The same pattern applies to all な-adjectives.

FormPlainPolite
Present静かだ静かです
Negative静かじゃない / 静かではない静かじゃないです / 静かではありません
Past静かだった静かでした
Past negative静かじゃなかった静かじゃなかったです / 静かではありませんでした
Before noun静かな場所
て-form静かで
Adverb静かに

Common mistake: 静かない (WRONG)

WrongCorrectWhy
❌ 静かない✅ 静かじゃないな-adjectives negate with じゃない
❌ 便利くない✅ 便利じゃないSame rule
❌ 有名くない✅ 有名じゃないSame rule

Adjectives Before Nouns

い-adjective + noun

JapaneseEnglish
高い山a tall mountain
楽しい授業a fun class
難しい問題a difficult problem
新しい友達a new friend

な-adjective + な + noun

JapaneseEnglish
静かな部屋a quiet room
有名な人a famous person
大切な話an important talk
便利な道具a convenient tool

Why きれいな人 is correct

WrongCorrect
❌ きれい人✅ きれいな人
❌ きれい部屋✅ きれいな部屋

Common mistake: 高いな山 (WRONG)

WrongCorrect
❌ 高いな山✅ 高い山
❌ 楽しいな授業✅ 楽しい授業

Adjectives at the End of Sentences

い-adjective ends sentences directly

PlainPoliteEnglish
この山は高い。この山は高いです。This mountain is tall.
そのゲームは楽しい。そのゲームは楽しいです。That game is fun.

な-adjective needs だ/です

PlainPoliteEnglish
この部屋は静かだ。この部屋は静かです。This room is quiet.
あの店は有名だ。あの店は有名です。That shop is famous.

Connecting adjectives with て-form

TypeRuleExampleEnglish
い-adjectiveい → くて高くて新しい建物a tall and new building
な-adjectiveだ → で静かできれいな部屋a quiet and pretty room

Giving reasons with て-form

JapaneseEnglish
高くて買えない。It is expensive so I cannot buy it.
静かで好きだ。I like it because it is quiet.
難しくて困っている。I am troubled because it is difficult.

Turning Adjectives into Adverbs

い-adjective + く → adverb

AdjectiveAdverb formExampleEnglish
早い (はやい)早く早く走るto run fast
大きい大きく大きく書くto write large
強い (つよい)強く強く打つto hit hard
よい/いいよくよく食べるto eat well

な-adjective + に → adverb

AdjectiveAdverb formExampleEnglish
静か静かに静かに話すto speak quietly
丁寧丁寧に丁寧に書くto write carefully
上手 (じょうず)上手に上手に歌うto sing skillfully
簡単簡単に簡単に説明するto explain simply

Common mistake: confusing adjective and adverb forms

WrongCorrectExplanation
❌ 早い走る✅ 早く走るAdjective cannot directly modify a verb
❌ 静か話す✅ 静かに話すな-adjective needs に to become an adverb

Intensity Words

Intensity words (degree adverbs) modify adjectives to strengthen or weaken the description. Choosing the right one affects both nuance and register.

とても — polite / neutral “very”

とても is the standard “very” suitable in all contexts — casual conversation, formal emails, JLPT answers.

この映画はとても面白い。 — This movie is very interesting.

すごく — casual “really / super”

すごく is the casual intensifier, very common in everyday speech. Avoid it in formal writing.

このラーメンはすごくおいしい。 — This ramen is really delicious.

かなり — “considerably / quite”

かなり suggests a degree that may be more than expected. Slightly formal, often used in writing.

この問題はかなり難しい。 — This problem is quite difficult.

ちょっと — “a little”

ちょっと softens an adjective and can serve as a polite way to express mild dissatisfaction.

ちょっと高いですね。 — It is a little expensive, isn’t it.

あまり + negative — “not very”

あまり always pairs with a negative form. Using it with a positive adjective is ungrammatical in standard Japanese.

あまり高くない ✅ — not very expensive

全然 + negative — “not at all”

全然 (ぜんぜん) traditionally pairs with negative forms. 全然わからない。 — I do not understand at all.

Casual vs formal comparison table

IntensityCasualNeutral/FormalEnglish
Veryすごく / めちゃとても / 非常にvery / extremely
Quiteけっこうかなりquite / considerably
A littleちょっと少し (すこし)a little / slightly
Not veryあんまり + neg.あまり + neg.not very
Not at all全然 + neg.全く + neg.not at all

Japanese Emotion Adjectives

Emotion adjectives in Japanese describe inner feelings. They work like regular い-adjectives for conjugation, but there is an important rule about first-person vs. third-person use that many textbooks underemphasize.

うれしい — happy about something that happened

うれしい expresses happiness caused by a specific external event — compare with 楽しい (enjoying an ongoing activity).

プレゼントをもらって嬉しかった。 — I was happy that I received a present.

悲しい (かなしい) — sad

彼女に振られて悲しい。 — I am sad because I was rejected by her.

寂しい (さびしい) — lonely

一人で食べるのは寂しい。 — Eating alone is lonely.

怖い (こわい) — scared / scary

あの映画は怖い。 — That movie is scary. 暗い道は怖い。 — Dark roads are scary.

楽しい (たのしい) — fun / enjoying

旅行は楽しかった。 — The trip was fun.

Why third-person emotions need care

In Japanese, emotion adjectives naturally describe your own feelings. Saying 彼は嬉しい as a plain statement about someone else sounds presumptuous. Use one of these patterns instead:

PatternExampleEnglishNuance
〜そうだ彼は嬉しそうだ。He looks happy.Based on observation
〜らしい彼は嬉しいらしい。He seems happy.Based on hearsay/inference
〜と言っていた嬉しいと言っていた。He said he was happy.Direct quote

〜そう with emotion adjectives

Base〜そう formEnglish
楽しい楽しそうlooks fun
悲しい悲しそうlooks sad
嬉しい嬉しそうlooks happy
怖い怖そうlooks scary
Yuka

Wait — so I can say 楽しいそうだ and 楽しそうだ? What is the difference?

Rei

Great question! 楽しそうだ (stem + そう) means “it looks fun” from direct observation. 楽しいそうだ (full adjective + そうだ) means “I heard it is fun” — reporting what someone else said. The small い makes all the difference.

Confusing Adjective Pairs

These pairs are among the most common sources of errors for English speakers because English often uses a single word where Japanese draws a fine distinction.

PairCore differenceExampleEnglish
楽しい vs 面白いenjoying (personal) vs interesting/funny (quality)旅行が楽しい vs 映画が面白いThe trip is fun vs The movie is interesting
嬉しい vs 楽しいpleased about an event vs enjoying an ongoing processプレゼントが嬉しい vs パーティーが楽しいGlad about the present vs The party is fun
寒い vs 冷たいambient cold (air, weather) vs cold to the touch今日は寒い vs 水が冷たいToday is cold vs The water is cold
暑い vs 熱いambient hot (weather) vs hot to touch/taste夏は暑い vs お茶が熱いSummer is hot vs The tea is hot
早い vs 速いearly (time) vs fast (speed)朝が早い vs 電車が速いMorning is early vs The train is fast
大きい vs 大きない-adj (all positions) vs prenominal-only象は大きい vs 大きな問題Elephants are big vs a big problem
きれい vs 美しいclean/pretty (casual) vs beautiful (formal/literary)部屋がきれい vs 景色が美しいThe room is pretty vs The scenery is beautiful
Yuka

So if I want to say “the soup is hot,” I use 熱い, not 暑い?

Rei

Exactly right! スープが熱い。 The soup is hot (to the touch or taste). 暑い is only for the surrounding temperature — the weather, the room, the season. Think: you feel 暑い with your whole body; you feel 熱い when you touch or taste something.

Japanese Adjectives by JLPT Level

JLPT N5 — Core adjectives

JapaneseReadingEnglishType
大きいおおきいbig
小さいちいさいsmall
高いたかいtall / expensive
安いやすいcheap
新しいあたらしいnew
古いふるいold (objects)
いい / よいいい / よいgoodい (irregular)
きれいきれいpretty / clean
好きすきliked
園いきらいdisliked
有名ゆうめいfamous
静かしずかquiet

JLPT N4 — Expanding vocabulary

JapaneseReadingEnglishType
便利べんりconvenient
大切たいせつimportant / precious
特別とくべつspecial
丁寧ていねいpolite / careful
賢やかにぎやかlively
複雑ふくざつcomplicated
珍しいめずらしいrare / unusual
正しいただしいcorrect / right
厳しいきびしいstrict / severe
優しいやさしいkind / gentle

JLPT N3 — Nuanced adjectives

JapaneseReadingEnglishType
激しいはげしいintense / fierce
銭いするどいsharp / keen
穏やかおだやかcalm / mild
豊かゆたかrich / abundant
微妙びみょうsubtle / delicate
残念ざんねんregrettable / too bad
貧しいまずしいpoor / needy
恥ずかしいはずかしいembarrassed / shy
惘しいくやしいfrustrated / mortified
惜しいおしいso close / regrettably near

N2/N1 note

At N2 and N1 levels, adjectives become more literary and formal: 壮大な (そうだいな — grand), 緻密な (ちみつな — meticulous), 曖昧な (あいまいな — ambiguous). Focus on recognizing them in reading passages.

Common Mistakes

Mistake 1: Saying 高いでした (い-adjective polite past)

WrongCorrect
❌ 高いでした✅ 高かったです
❌ 楽しいでした✅ 楽しかったです
❌ 難しいでした✅ 難しかったです

Mistake 2: Forgetting な before nouns

WrongCorrect
❌ 有名人✅ 有名な人
❌ 便利道具✅ 便利な道具
❌ 大切話✅ 大切な話

Mistake 3: 静かない (な-adjective negative)

WrongCorrect
❌ 静かない✅ 静かじゃない
❌ きれいくない✅ きれいじゃない
❌ 便利くない✅ 便利じゃない

Mistake 4: Treating きれい as an い-adjective

FormWrongCorrect
Before noun❌ きれい人✅ きれいな人
Negative❌ きれくない✅ きれいじゃない
Past❌ きれかった✅ きれいだった
Past negative❌ きれくなかった✅ きれいじゃなかった

Mistake 5: Using emotion adjectives for third-person in plain form

ContextLess naturalNatural Japanese
Your own feeling✅ 私は嬉しい。 (perfectly fine)
Someone else’s feeling⚠️ 彼は嬉しい。✅ 彼は嬉しそうだ。

How to Practice Japanese Adjectives

1. Describe objects around you

Pick any object in your environment and produce three sentences: one with an い-adjective, one with a な-adjective, and one connecting two adjectives with て-form.

2. Make positive and negative sentences

For each adjective you learn, practice both the positive and negative forms immediately. This forces you to internalize the difference between くない (い-adj) and じゃない (な-adj).

3. Change present to past

Take any present-tense adjective sentence and convert it to past tense. Drilling かった vs だった is one of the fastest ways to internalize conjugation patterns.

4. Connect two adjectives with て-form

Create combined sentences like 安くておいしい (cheap and delicious) or 静かできれい (quiet and pretty). Mix い and な for extra challenge: 高くて有名なお店 (an expensive and famous shop).

5. Turn adjectives into adverbs

For each adjective you know, produce the adverb form and use it in a verb sentence. Example: 速い → 速く → 速く走る. 静か → 静かに → 静かに読む.

6. Compare confusing pairs

Write one sentence for each word in a confusing pair on the same day. Seeing 寒い (今日は寒い) and 冷たい (水が冷たい) side by side engraves the distinction in memory faster than definitions alone.

Quick Quiz

Test yourself on the key points from this guide. Answers are below.

Question 1: Is きれい an い-adjective or a な-adjective? How do you say “a pretty person” in Japanese?

Question 2: What is the plain past negative form of 楽しい?

Question 3: Fill in the blank: 静か___部屋 (a quiet room). What goes in the blank?

Question 4: Which form is correct for the polite past of 面白い? (A) 面白かったです (B) 面白いでした


Answers:

Q1: きれい is a な-adjective despite ending in い. “A pretty person” is きれいな人. Never きれい人.

Q2: The plain past negative of 楽しい is 楽しくなかった. Pattern: remove い, add くなかった. (Polite: 楽しくなかったです.)

Q3: 静か部屋. な-adjectives require な before a noun.

Q4: (A) 面白かったです is correct. い-adjectives conjugate internally (い → かった); でした does not attach to い-adjectives.


✏️ Want to check if your adjective usage sounds natural? Practice these patterns with a Japanese teacher on italki — get real feedback on your sentences.

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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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