What You Will Learn
- State your name Japanese-style
- Greet people
- Say "I understand" / "I don't understand"
- Count numbers up to 99
Lesson Material
Welcome to Japanese! In this first lesson you will learn how to state your name Japanese-style, greet people in Japanese, say “I understand” and “I don’t understand,” ask someone to repeat something, and count numbers up to 99. You will also become familiar with a few representative scenes from Japan and facts about the Japanese language.
Dialogues (会話)
Identifying yourself
| Romaji | English |
|---|---|
| Watakushi wa … desu. | I’m (name). |
Confirming a place on a map
| Romaji | English |
|---|---|
| Kore wa Tokyo desu ka? | Is this Tokyo? |
| Hai, soo desu. | Yes, it is. |
| Iie, chigaimasu. | No, it isn’t. (Lit., No, it is different.) |
Asking for repetition
| Romaji | English |
|---|---|
| Sumimasen. Moo ichi-do itte kudasai. | Excuse me. Please say that again. |
Greetings
| Romaji | English |
|---|---|
| A: …san, ohayoo gozaimasu. | Good morning, Mr./Ms. … |
| B: Ohayoo gozaimasu. | Good morning. |
| A: Konnichiwa. | Good afternoon. |
| B: Konnichiwa. | Good afternoon. |
| A: Konbanwa. | Good evening. |
| B: Konbanwa. | Good evening. |
| A: Sayoonara. | Good-bye. |
| B: Sayoonara. | Good-bye. |
Classroom expressions
| Romaji | English |
|---|---|
| Instructor: Wakarimasu ka? | Do you understand? |
| Student: Hai, wakarimasu. | Yes, I understand. |
| Student: Iie, wakarimasen. | No, I don’t understand. |
| Student: Moo ichi-do itte kudasai. | Please say it again. |
Key Vocabulary (語彙)
| Romaji | Kana | English |
|---|---|---|
| kore | これ | this (thing) |
| wa | は | (topic marker particle) |
| nan | なん | what? |
| desu | です | is / am / are |
| ka | か | (question marker particle) |
| watakushi | わたくし | I |
| Nihon | にほん | Japan |
| hai | はい | yes |
| …san | …さん | Mr., Mrs., Ms. |
| soo | そう | thus, so, correct |
| iie | いいえ | no |
| chigaimasu | ちがいます | wrong, different |
| sumimasen | すみません | excuse me, I’m sorry |
| moo | もう | more, again, further |
| ichi-do | いちど | one time, once |
| itte kudasai | いってください | please say |
| ohayoo gozaimasu | おはようございます | good morning |
| konnichiwa | こんにちは | good day, good afternoon |
| konbanwa | こんばんは | good evening |
| sayoonara | さようなら | good-bye |
| wakarimasu | わかります | understand |
| wakarimasen | わかりません | not understand |
| sensee | せんせい | teacher, instructor |
| o-genki desu ka? | おげんきですか | How are you? (polite) |
Grammar & Usage Notes
Japanese names
A Japanese name consists of the family name followed by the given name — the reverse of English order. The family name is used far more frequently in Japanese than in English, and first names are usually reserved for intimates.
Forms of address with san
The title san is the most common form of address and is used regardless of the person’s sex or marital status. It translates as “Mr.,” “Mrs.,” or “Ms.” depending on context. There are three patterns:
- Family name + san — most common among adults (e.g., Tanaka-san)
- First name + san — implies intimacy, used between close friends and family
- Full name + san — most formal, used when a full name is required
Never add san to your own name — it is a mark of politeness toward others.
Greetings
- Ohayoo gozaimasu — “Good morning.” (Ohayoo is the casual form.)
- Konnichiwa — “Good afternoon” or “Good day,” used from late morning to dusk.
- Konbanwa — “Good evening.”
- Sayoonara — “Good-bye,” implying you won’t meet again the same day.
Making questions with ka
Add ka to the end of any statement to turn it into a question:
- Kore wa Tokyo desu. → “This is Tokyo.”
- Kore wa Tokyo desu ka? → “Is this Tokyo?”
Practice Exercises (練習)
Loanwords from English
These English-origin words are commonly used in modern Japanese. Practice pronouncing them:
| Romaji | English |
|---|---|
| basu | bus |
| biiru | beer |
| menyuu | menu |
| biifu | beef |
| erebeetaa | elevator |
| chokoreeto | chocolate |
| wain | wine |
| koohii | coffee |
| esukareetaa | escalator |
| sandoitchi | sandwich |
| shatsu | shirt |
| hanbaagaa | hamburger |
| koora | cola |
| sarada | salad |
| seetaa | sweater |
| sokkusu | socks |
American names in Japanese pronunciation
Practice recognizing American names as they sound in Japanese:
| Romaji | English name |
|---|---|
| Sumisu | Smith |
| Teeraa | Taylor |
| Hoomuzu | Holmes |
| Joonzu | Jones |
| Tonpuson | Thompson |
| Andaason | Anderson |
| Jonson | Johnson |
| Toomasu | Thomas |
| Reegan | Reagan |
| Buraun | Brown |
| Makudonarudo | McDonald |
| Jakuson | Jackson |
Counting: Numbers 0–99
| Number | Romaji | Number | Romaji |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | zero | 10 | juu |
| 1 | ichi | 20 | ni-juu |
| 2 | ni | 30 | san-juu |
| 3 | san | 40 | yon-juu |
| 4 | shi / yon | 50 | go-juu |
| 5 | go | 60 | roku-juu |
| 6 | roku | 70 | nana-juu |
| 7 | shichi / nana | 80 | hachi-juu |
| 8 | hachi | 90 | kyuu-juu |
| 9 | ku / kyuu | 99 | kyuu-juu kyuu |
Compound numbers follow a simple pattern: juu-ichi (11), juu-ni (12), ni-juu-ichi (21), etc.
Reading telephone numbers
Use the particle no where the hyphen appears:
- 123-4567 → ichi, ni, san no yon, go, roku, shichi (or nana)
Cultural Notes
- The Japanese writing system uses five kinds of symbols: Kanji (Chinese characters), Hiragana, Katakana, Romaji (Roman letters), and Arabic numerals. About 90% of characters in ordinary text are Kanji and Hiragana.
- Pronunciation basics: Japanese has only five vowels (a, i, u, e, o) and most consonants are similar to English. Each syllable receives approximately equal stress and time — unlike English, where some syllables are louder than others.
- Accent in Japanese is shown by pitch difference (high vs. low), not by stress (loud vs. soft) as in English.
- Most Japanese study English in school but few can use it for conversation. When you need to communicate in English, try writing down what you want to say — many Japanese find it easier to understand written English than spoken English.
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