Particles– category –
Japanese particles (は, が, に, で, を, も, と, から, まで) explained with clear examples. All particle articles are part of the Grammar category.
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Particles
Common Japanese Mistake: Particle Pronunciation in Connected Speech
【Particles Sound Different in Real Speech】 When you learn Japanese particles in textbooks, you learn their spelling. But in natural spoken Japanese, some particles are pronounced differently from how they're written. This surprises lea... -
Particles
Common Japanese Mistake: Dropping の (no) Particle Incorrectly
【の Is More Than Just Possession】 English speakers often learn の as "the possessive particle" — like 's in English. While that's true (わたしのほん = my book), の has several other important functions that learners frequently misuse o... -
Particles
Common Japanese Mistake: Confusing に (ni) and で (de) for Location
【Two Particles, Two Different Uses of "Location"】 Both に and で can mean "at" or "in" a place, which causes endless confusion. The fix is simple once you understand the underlying logic: に marks where something exists or where you go... -
Particles
に vs で: Which Japanese Particle Marks Location?
Both に and で can appear before location words, but they mean very different things. This guide explains the rules with clear examples, comparison tables, and a decision flowchart so you always pick the right particle. -
Particles
は vs が: The Ultimate Guide to Japanese Particles for English Speakers
は (wa) and が (ga) are two of the most confusing particles in Japanese. This guide explains their core difference, when to use each one, and how to stop second-guessing yourself with clear examples and rules. -
Particles
wa-vs-ga
Test. Hey Rei! I keep mixing up wa and ga. Can you break it down for me? Sure! They're both useful words but used in different situations. Let me walk you through it with some examples! https://jpyokoso.com/wa-ni-ga-wo-and-more/ \ Learn...
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