8 Basic Japanese Sentence Patterns Beginners Must Learn

Building sentences is one of the most rewarding first steps in Japanese. You do not need to fear unfamiliar script first. Once you know the frame, assembling a sentence feels like stacking simple blocks.
This guide covers 8 basic Japanese sentence patterns used every day. Master them before you aim for more natural speech.
Japanese structure often differs from English. English usually follows S-V-O (subject–verb–object), while Japanese follows S-O-V (subject–object–verb), with the verb at the end. Work through the eight core patterns one by one.
1. Identity Pattern: A は B です
This is the most basic structure—like “I am [Name]” or “This is [Thing].” Particle は (wa) marks the topic.
Formula:
[Topic/Subject A] は [B] です。 ([Topic/Subject A] is [B].)
Important: the hiragana ha (は) is read wa when it marks the topic.
Example sentences:
私は学生です。 Watashi wa gakusei desu. I am a student.
山田さんは日本人です。 Yamada-san wa Nihonjin desu. Yamada is Japanese.
これは私の傘です。 Kore wa watashi no kasa desu. This is my umbrella.
2. Preference and Ability: A は B が すき / じょうず です
To talk about hobbies, likes, skills, or what you feel or have, you often need particle が (ga). Words like suki (“like”) and jouzu (“skilled”) behave more like adjectives than action verbs.
Formula:
[Subject A] は [Thing B] が [State] です。
Example sentences:
私は猫が好きです。 Watashi wa neko ga suki desu. I like cats.
彼は水泳が上手です。 Kare wa suiei ga jouzu desu. He is good at swimming.
母は英語が分かります。 Haha wa eigo ga wakarimasu. My mother understands English.
Watch particle が (ga). Many beginners say “を (o) suki desu.” The correct pattern is “[object] GA suki desu.”
3. Action with an Object: A は B を します
This subject–object–predicate pattern uses を (o) for the direct object of a transitive verb (eat, drink, see, and similar actions).
Formula:
[Subject A] は [Object B] を [Action Verb]。
Example sentences:
私は本を読みます。 Watashi wa hon o yomimasu. I read a book.
ケビンさんは毎朝コーヒーを飲みます。 Kebin-san wa maiasa koohii o nomimasu. Kevin drinks coffee every morning.
今日、テレビを見ません。 Kyou, terebi o mimasen. Today I will not watch television.
4. Movement to a Place: A は B に/へ いきます
For going, coming, or returning, Japanese marks the destination with に (ni) or へ (e).
Formula:
[Subject A] は [Place B] に (or へ) [Motion Verb]。
Both mean roughly “to,” though へ (e) stresses direction and に (ni) stresses the arrival point.
Important: hiragana he (へ) is read e as a direction particle.
Example sentences:
明日、私は日本へ行きます。 Ashita, watashi wa Nihon e ikimasu. Tomorrow I will go to Japan.
父は7時に会社に来ました。 Chichi wa shichi-ji ni kaisha ni kimashita. My father came to the company at 7 o’clock.
弟は家へ帰りました。 Otouto wa ie e kaerimashita. My younger brother went home.
5. Action at a Location: A は B で C を します
This pattern combines place, object, and verb. で (de) marks where an action happens. Use it with real actions (study, play, eat). For simply “being” somewhere, use に (ni) with あります / います.
Formula:
[Subject A] は [Place B] で [Object C] を [Action Verb]。
Example sentences:
私は図書館で日本語を勉強します。 Watashi wa toshokan de nihongo o benkyoushimasu. I study Japanese at the library.
サキさんは食堂で昼ごはんを食べます。 Saki-san wa shokudou de hirugohan o tabemasu. Saki eats lunch at the cafeteria.
公園でサッカーをしますか? Kouen de sakkaa o shimasu ka? Shall we play soccer at the park?
6. Questions: A は B ですか
To turn a statement into a question, add particle か (ka) at the end after the verb or desu. You do not invert word order the way English does. Rising intonation also signals a question.
Formula:
[Statement] + か。 ([Is/Does Statement]?)
Example sentences:
ここは病院ですか。 Koko wa byouin desu ka. Is this a hospital?
山田さんはコーヒーを飲みますか。 Yamada-san wa koohii o nomimasu ka. Does Yamada drink coffee?
週末、どこへ行きますか。 Shuumatsu, doko e ikimasu ka. On the weekend, will you go somewhere?
For yes/no answers, start with はい (hai) for yes or いいえ (iie) for no, then add a short explanation.
7. Negative Noun Sentences: A は B ではありません
To say “I am not a student” or “This is not a pen,” change です (desu) to its polite negative ではありません (dewa arimasen). In lighter polite speech, じゃありません (ja arimasen) is common.
Formula:
[Subject A] は [B] ではありません / じゃありません。 ([Subject A] is not [B].)
Example sentences:
私は医者じゃありません。 Watashi wa isha ja arimasen. I am not a doctor.
あの人は先生ではありません。 Ano hito wa sensei dewa arimasen. That person is not a teacher.
これは私の鞄じゃありません。 Kore wa watashi no kaban ja arimasen. This is not my bag.
8. Existence: [Place] に [Object] が あります/います
Japanese is precise about what “exists.” The pattern reports where something is. Remember the split:
- Inanimate / plants: あります (arimasu) — books, bags, trees, buildings, machines.
- People / animals: います (imasu) — friends, family, cats, dogs, birds.
Location takes に (ni). What exists takes が (ga) (or は (wa) if it is the topic). Here に is locative, not a motion goal.
Formula:
[Place] に [Existing Thing] が あります/います。 (There is [Thing] at [Place].)
Examples with inanimate things:
机の上に本があります。 Tsukue no ue ni hon ga arimasu. There is a book on the desk.
部屋にテレビがありません。 Heya ni terebi ga arimasen. There is no television in the room.
駅の前にコンビニがありますか? Eki no mae ni konbini ga arimasu ka? Is there a convenience store in front of the station?
Examples with living beings:
庭に犬がいます。 Niwa ni inu ga imasu. There is a dog in the yard.
教室に学生がいます。 Kyoushitsu ni gakusei ga imasu. There are students in the classroom.
そこに誰がいますか? Soko ni dare ga imasu ka? Who is there?
Unique Trait: Omitting the Subject
Japanese often drops the subject or topic when context is clear. English usually needs I or you. If everyone already knows who is meant, leaving the subject out sounds natural.
If someone asks 「コーヒーを飲みますか?」 (Koohii o nomimasu ka? — “Will (you) drink coffee?”), you need not answer with a full textbook line 「はい、私はコーヒーを飲みます」.
For native speakers, repeating everything can sound stiff. A short answer is enough:
はい、飲みます。 Hai, nomimasu. Yes, (I) will drink (it).
“Watashi” and “koohii” are already clear in a one-to-one chat, so shortening the reply is normal.
Short dialogue:
- A: 「明日、映画を見に行きますか?」 (Ashita, eiga o mi ni ikimasu ka? — Tomorrow, will [you] go see a movie?)
- B: 「いいえ、忙しいですから、行きません。」 (Iie, isogashii desu kara, ikimasen. — No, because [I] am busy, [I] will not go.)
There is no watashi or anata. Learning to trust context is part of sounding natural. Overusing watashi can sound foreign.
New Vocabulary List
Review the vocabulary used in this guide:
| Kanji | Reading | Meaning | Type |
|---|---|---|---|
| 私 | Watashi | I / me | pronoun |
| 学生 | Gakusei | student | noun |
| 日本人 | Nihonjin | Japanese person | noun |
| 傘 | Kasa | umbrella | noun |
| 猫 | Neko | cat | noun |
| 好き | Suki | like | na-adjective |
| 彼 | Kare | he | pronoun |
| 水泳 | Suiei | swimming | noun |
| 上手 | Jouzu | skilled / good at | na-adjective |
| 母 | Haha | mother (own) | noun |
| 英語 | Eigo | English | noun |
| 分かります | Wakarimasu | understand | verb |
| 本 | Hon | book | noun |
| 読みます | Yomimasu | read | verb |
| 毎朝 | Maiasa | every morning | noun |
| 飲みます | Nomimasu | drink | verb |
| 今日 | Kyou | today | noun |
| 見ます | Mimasu | see / watch | verb |
| 明日 | Ashita | tomorrow | noun |
| 日本 | Nihon | Japan | noun |
| 行きます | Ikimasu | go | verb |
| 父 | Chichi | father (own) | noun |
| 会社 | Kaisha | company / office | noun |
| 来ます | Kimasu | come | verb |
| 弟 | Otouto | younger brother | noun |
| 家 | Ie | house / home | noun |
| 帰ります | Kaerimasu | return home | verb |
| 図書館 | Toshokan | library | noun |
| 日本語 | Nihongo | Japanese language | noun |
| 勉強します | Benkyoushimasu | study | verb |
| 食堂 | Shokudou | cafeteria | noun |
| 昼ごはん | Hirugohan | lunch | noun |
| 食べます | Tabemasu | eat | verb |
| 公園 | Kouen | park | noun |
| 病院 | Byouin | hospital | noun |
| 週末 | Shuumatsu | weekend | noun |
| 医者 | Isha | doctor | noun |
| 先生 | Sensei | teacher | noun |
| 鞄 | Kaban | bag | noun |
| 机 | Tsukue | desk | noun |
| 上 | Ue | above / on | noun |
| 前 | Mae | in front | noun |
| 庭 | Niwa | garden / yard | noun |
| 犬 | Inu | dog | noun |
| 教室 | Kyoushitsu | classroom | noun |
| 部屋 | Heya | room | noun |
| 駅 | Eki | station | noun |
| 誰 | Dare | who | pronoun |
Summary
You have now worked through 8 basic Japanese sentence patterns:
- Identity:
[A] は [B] です(A is B) - Feeling / state:
[A] は [B] が 好きです(A likes B) - Active object:
[A] は [B] を します(A does B) - Movement:
[A] は [B] へ/に 行きます(A goes to B) - Action place:
[A] は [B] で [C] を します(A does C at B) - Question:
[A] + か。(Is/Does A?) - Negative:
[A] は [B] ではありません(A is not B) - Existence:
[A] に [B] が あります/います(There is B at A)
Memorize the frames and swap vocabulary often so the patterns feel automatic. Next, open the Complete Japanese Verb Conjugation Guide (Doushi) to connect these frames with verb forms.
Frequently Asked Questions
1. What is the difference between particles は (wa) and が (ga)?
は (wa) marks the topic—what you are talking about. が (ga) marks the grammatical subject, often for new information, focus, or after a question word. Example: 「だれがきましたか?」 (Who came?) vs 「たなかさんはきました。」 (As for Tanaka, he came.)
2. Can Japanese word order be rearranged?
Yes, Japanese is fairly flexible as long as the verb stays at the end and particles stay on the right words. 「わたしは ほんを よみます」 and 「ほんを わたしは よみます」 are both grammatical.
3. When should I use に (ni) and when へ (e)?
Both can mark a destination. に (ni) stresses the end point; へ (e) stresses the direction of travel. In daily speech they often overlap.
4. How do で (de) and に (ni) differ for place?
Use で (de) for the place of an action (study, eat, play). Use に (ni) for where something is (arimasu/imasu). Example: 「としょかんでべんきょうします」 (study at the library) vs 「いえにいます」 (be at home).
5. Why does the verb come at the end?
Japanese is an SOV language (subject–object–verb), unlike English SVO. Keeping the verb last is a core rule for clear sentences.
Common Beginner Mistakes
When building basic sentences, many learners carry over habits from their first language. To avoid traps such as attaching desu to verbs, stacking topic particles badly, or putting the verb in the wrong place, read:
👉 7 Common Beginner Mistakes in Japanese Grammar
Next Steps
Return to the Japanese grammar hub for core particles, JLPT paths, and daily practice ideas.
