Japanese Adverbs (Fukushi): Frequency, Degree, Time & Manner

“I study Japanese” is correct—but flat. It comes alive when you add “I always study,” “I learn pretty fast,” or “I just studied.”
In Japanese, adverbs are 副詞 (fukushi). They add detail about:
- How often (frequency)
- How strongly (degree/intensity)
- When (time)
- How an action is done (manner)
If you want natural, expressive speech, adverbs are essential.
1. Where adverbs go in Japanese sentences
In general, place the adverb before what it modifies—most often before a verb or adjective.
Common patterns:
- Adverb + verb
よく 食べる - Adverb + adjective
とても 難しい - Adverb at the start for time/frequency context
最近、忙しい
Example 1
私はよく日本のドラマを見ます。
(Watashi wa yoku Nihon no dorama o mimasu.)
I often watch Japanese dramas.
Example 2
この本はとても分かりやすいです。
(Kono hon wa totemo wakariyasui desu.)
This book is very easy to understand.
2. Frequency adverbs
2a. Frequency scale
| Japanese | Romaji | Meaning | Feel |
|---|---|---|---|
| いつも | itsumo | always | highest |
| よく | yoku | often | high |
| 時々 | tokidoki | sometimes | mid |
| たまに | tama ni | occasionally | low |
| あまり + negative | amari | not much / rarely | low |
| 全然 + negative | zenzen | not at all | zero |
2b. Usage examples
Example 3
毎朝、いつも六時に起きます。
(Maiasa, itsumo rokuji ni okimasu.)
Every morning, I always get up at six.
Example 4
最近はあまりテレビを見ません。
(Saikin wa amari terebi o mimasen.)
Lately I rarely watch TV.
Example 5
納豆は全然食べられません。
(Nattou wa zenzen taberaremasen.)
I can’t eat natto at all.
Important note: in standard formal usage,
あまりand全然pair with the negative form.
3. Degree adverbs (intensity)
3a. Intensity scale
| Japanese | Meaning | Nuance |
|---|---|---|
| とても | very | neutral, safe in formal speech |
| すごく | very | casual, expressive |
| かなり | quite / very | strong but still neutral |
| 結構 | pretty / fairly | often “more than expected” |
| まあまあ | so-so / fairly | mid |
| ちょっと / 少し | a little | light |
3b. Contrast examples
Example 6
この問題はとても難しい。
(Kono mondai wa totemo muzukashii.)
This problem is very hard.
Example 7
この問題は結構難しい。
(Kono mondai wa kekkou muzukashii.)
This problem is pretty hard (harder than expected).
Example 8
日本語がまだちょっと苦手です。
(Nihongo ga mada chotto nigate desu.)
I’m still a bit weak at Japanese.
4. Time adverbs
| Japanese | Meaning | Use |
|---|---|---|
| もう | already | action finished / change happened |
| まだ | still / not yet | unfinished action or ongoing state |
| すぐ | soon / right away | near future |
| そろそろ | any moment now | soft transition |
| やっと | finally | after effort/process |
| もうすぐ | soon | approaching an event |
Example 9
もう宿題を終えました。
(Mou shukudai o oemashita.)
I’ve already finished my homework.
Example 10
まだ終わっていません。
(Mada owatte imasen.)
It’s not finished yet.
Example 11
やっと日本語のニュースが少し分かるようになりました。
(Yatto Nihongo no nyuusu ga sukoshi wakaru you ni narimashita.)
I can finally understand Japanese news a little.
5. Making adverbs from adjectives
5a. From i-adjectives: ~い → ~く
| i-adj | Adverb | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| 早い | 早く | quickly |
| 遅い | 遅く | slowly / late |
| 強い | 強く | strongly |
| 優しい | 優しく | gently |
5b. From na-adjectives: ~な → ~に
| na-adj | Adverb | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| 静か | 静かに | quietly |
| 丁寧 | 丁寧に | politely / carefully |
| 上手 | 上手に | skillfully |
| 簡単 | 簡単に | easily |
Example 12
もっと大きく話してください。
(Motto ookiku hanashite kudasai.)
Please speak a bit louder.
Example 13
先生は丁寧に説明してくれました。
(Sensei wa teinei ni setsumei shite kuremashita.)
The teacher explained carefully and politely.
6. High-value collocations to memorize
Some adverbs have natural partners:
| Collocation | Meaning |
|---|---|
| だんだん + 〜なる | gradually become |
| しっかり + V | firmly / seriously |
| はっきり + V | clearly |
| ゆっくり + V | slowly / leisurely |
| ちゃんと + V | properly |
Example 14
毎日練習すれば、だんだん上手になります。
(Mainichi renshuu sureba, dandan jouzu ni narimasu.)
If you practice every day, you’ll gradually get better.
Example 15
発音をしっかり練習してください。
(Hatsuon o shikkari renshuu shite kudasai.)
Please practice pronunciation thoroughly.
Example 16
もう一度、はっきり言ってください。
(Mou ichido, hakkiri itte kudasai.)
Once more—please say it clearly.
7. Mini dialogues
Dialogue 1: Self-study
A: 最近、勉強はどう?
(Saikin, benkyou wa dou?)
How’s studying lately?
B: まあまあ。毎日は無理だけど、よく復習してる。
(Maa maa. Mainichi wa muri dakedo, yoku fukushuu shiteru.)
So-so. Not every day, but I review often.
A: いいね。わからない単語はすぐ調べるといいよ。
(Ii ne. Wakaranai tango wa sugu shiraberu to ii yo.)
Nice. Words you don’t know—look them up right away.
B: うん、これからはもっとしっかりやる!
(Un, korekara wa motto shikkari yaru!)
Yeah—from now on I’ll work harder!
Dialogue 2: In class
Teacher: この文を大きな声で読んでください。
(Kono bun o ookina koe de yonde kudasai.)
Please read this sentence out loud.
Student: すみません、まだあまり読めません。
(Sumimasen, mada amari yomemasen.)
Sorry, I still can’t read it very well.
Teacher: だいじょうぶです。ゆっくり読めばいいですよ。
(Daijoubu desu. Yukkuri yomeba ii desu yo.)
That’s fine. Just read slowly.
8. Common mistakes ⚠️
| ❌ Wrong | ✅ Right | Note |
|---|---|---|
| あまり食べる | あまり食べない | formal あまり wants negative |
| 全然分かる (formal) | 全然分からない | standard 全然 + negative |
| 早い走る | 早く走る | i-adj → adverb with く |
| 静か話す | 静かに話す | na-adj → adverb with に |
| とても行く | すぐ行く / よく行く | とても fits degree/quality, not every verb |
| もう食べていない (meant “already ate”) | もう食べた | もう + affirmative for “already” |
9. Mini JLPT practice (10 items)
Q1
Fill in: いつも朝ごはんを___。
Answer: 食べます
Why: Frequency adverbs are followed by a verb.
Q2
Translate: “I rarely drink coffee at night.”
Answer: 夜はあまりコーヒーを飲みません。
Why:あまり + negative.
Q3
Make an adverb: 丁寧
Answer: 丁寧に
Why: na-adj +に.
Q4
Make an adverb: 速い
Answer: 速く
Why: i-adj +く.
Q5
Choose the correct one:
A. 全然分かる
B. 全然分からない
Answer: B
Why: Standard formal pattern.
Q6
Translate: “Please speak slowly.”
Answer: ゆっくり話してください。
Why:ゆっくりas a manner adverb.
Q7
Fill in: もう___か。 (Already finished?)
Answer: 終わりました
Why:もう+ affirmative past.
Q8
Translate: “I finally understood this explanation.”
Answer: やっとこの説明が分かりました。
Why:やっとmarks a result after a process.
Q9
Fix: 静か勉強します。
Answer: 静かに勉強します。
Why: na-adj → adverb withに.
Q10
Translate: “Lately I’ve been reading Japanese news fairly often.”
Answer: 最近、日本のニュースを結構よく読みます。
Why: Degree + frequency can stack naturally.
10. Case study: one sentence, different nuances
Swap one small adverb and the feel of the sentence changes.
Example A: Intensity
- この料理はおいしい。
- この料理はとてもおいしい。
- この料理は結構おいしい。
Differences:
- Sentence 1 is neutral.
- Sentence 2 is strong and clear: “very tasty.”
- Sentence 3 feels “tastier than expected.”
Example B: Frequency
- 日本語を勉強する。
- よく日本語を勉強する。
- たまに日本語を勉強する。
Frequency changes how disciplined you sound.
Example C: Time status
- もう終わった。
- まだ終わっていない。
- もうすぐ終わる。
One adverb flips the timeline: done, not done, almost done.
Example D: Speech style
Same message, different style:
- とても難しいです。 (polite neutral)
- すごく難しい。 (casual expressive)
Use the first for formal contexts (class, work email); the second for relaxed talk.
11. Daily adverb production checklist
Build the habit with this daily format.
Step 1: Pick one routine activity
Examples: study, cook, exercise, watch videos.
Step 2: Make 4 sentence versions
- Frequency
いつも夜に勉強します。 - Intensity
きょうはとても集中しました。 - Time
もう宿題を終えました。 - Manner
静かに読みます。
Step 3: Classic error check
- Do
あまり/全然take a negative form? - Did i-adjectives become
くas adverbs? - Did na-adjectives become
に? - Does the adverb match formal vs casual context?
Suggested weekly plan
- Mon–Tue: frequency focus.
- Wed–Thu: degree focus.
- Friday: time focus.
- Saturday: manner focus.
- Sunday: write an 8–10 sentence journal combining types.
One consistent week makes adverbs much more automatic in speech and writing.
12. Ready-to-use sentence bank (sound ~50% more natural)
Use this as an expression bank—ready lines for daily conversation.
A. For class
- 先生、もう少しゆっくり話してください。
- この説明はとても分かりやすいです。
- まだ全部は理解できていません。
- 最近はよく復習しています。
B. For work
- 先ほどの資料、もう確認しました。
- この作業はかなり時間がかかります。
- 今日はあまり体調がよくありません。
- できるだけ早く対応します。
C. For travel
- すぐ次の電車が来ますか。
- この店は結構高いですね。
- この道をまっすぐ行くと駅ですか。
- きょうは全然疲れていません。
D. For study reflection
- 前よりずっと自然に話せるようになりました。
- まだ語彙が足りないので、毎日少しずつ覚えています。
- やっとニュースを短い文なら理解できるようになりました。
- 来月はもっとしっかり勉強するつもりです。
Don’t memorize them raw—treat them as patterns you can rewrite.
How to use the bank
- Pick 4 sentences per day.
- Swap at least 2 key words per sentence.
- Read them aloud.
- Rewrite from memory.
In 2–3 weeks, adverb choice usually feels far more automatic.
13. Adverb position practice
Learners often pick the right adverb but put it in an awkward spot. Use this practice.
Recommended basic patterns
- [Time] + [frequency adverb] + [object] + [verb]
- [Topic] + [degree adverb] + [adjective]
- [Subject] + [manner adverb] + [verb]
Examples
- 毎日よく単語を復習します。
- この本はとても役立ちます。
- 彼は丁寧に説明しました。
Wrong vs right
❌ よく毎日勉強します。
✅ 毎日よく勉強します。
❌ この料理は食べるとても。
✅ この料理はとてもおいしいです。
Weekly targets
- Write 5 frequency sentences.
- Write 5 degree sentences.
- Write 5 time sentences.
- Write 5 manner sentences.
- Self-check adverb placement.
Consistent position practice makes sentences sound natural even with a limited vocabulary.
14. Final recap for spontaneous use
When talking fast, use this mental checklist:
- “How often?” → frequency adverb.
- “How strongly?” → degree adverb.
- “Time status?” → time adverb.
- “How is it done?” → manner adverb.
Quick models:
- よく練習する。
- とても難しい。
- もう終わった。
- 丁寧に説明する。
When these four are automatic, you sound more natural even with simple structures.
Extra tip: when reading or watching Japanese, note at least three adverbs and make your own sentences the same day. Small habits beat long lists without context.
The more you produce your own sentences, the faster adverbs become a reflex. Your lines sound alive instead of flat. A small step with a big impact on speaking fluency. Keep this practice weekly. Keep growing.
New vocabulary
| Kanji | Hiragana | Romaji | Meaning | Word class |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 副詞 | ふくし | fukushi | adverb | term |
| 頻度 | ひんど | hindo | frequency | noun |
| 程度 | ていど | teido | degree / extent | noun |
| 最近 | さいきん | saikin | recently | time noun |
| 復習 | ふくしゅう | fukushuu | review | noun/suru |
| 発音 | はつおん | hatsuon | pronunciation | noun |
| 単語 | たんご | tango | vocabulary word | noun |
| 説明 | せつめい | setsumei | explanation | noun/suru |
| 苦手 | にがて | nigate | weak at | na-adj |
| 丁寧 | ていねい | teinei | polite / careful | na-adj |
Conclusion
- Adverbs make sentences far more natural and informative.
- Core groups: frequency, degree, time, and manner.
- Memorize negative patterns:
あまり + negative,全然 + negative. - Master adjective→adverb changes (
い→く,な→に). - Collocations like
しっかり,ゆっくり,はっきりpower everyday talk.
Once adverbs click, it’s much easier to express subtle nuance in opinions, quotes, and N4–N3 dialogue.
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Next: Quotes & opinions →
Related reading:
頑張って! (Ganbatte / Keep going!)
