Ch. 2 — Getting Directions Lesson 6 of 33

Place Names of Interest in Tokyo

東京の名所

FSI Japanese FAST Course

What You Will Learn

  • Recognize major Tokyo landmarks
  • Ask where places are located
  • Read place names in rōmaji and kana
  • Basic directional vocabulary

Lesson Material

In this lesson you will learn the names and locations of major islands of Japan, major cities, districts in Tokyo, major areas within Tokyo, and notable places of interest such as the Imperial Palace, museums, shrines, and more. This lesson builds on the place names you studied in Lesson 2 and prepares you for navigating the city.

Dialogues (会話)

Asking about locations in Tokyo

RomajiEnglish
A: Amerika Taishikan wa doko ni arimasu ka?Where is the American Embassy located?
B: Akasaka ni arimasu.It’s in Akasaka.
RomajiEnglish
A: Koko wa doko desu ka?Where is this place?
B: Akasaka desu.This is Akasaka.
RomajiEnglish
A: Koko wa Shinjuku desu ka?Is this Shinjuku?
B: Iie, Shinjuku jaa arimasen. Akasaka desu.No, this isn’t Shinjuku. It’s Akasaka.

Key Vocabulary (語彙)

Area names in Tokyo

RomajiKanjiGridEnglish
Akasaka赤坂3-DAkasaka
Ginza銀座6-EGinza
Shinbashi新橋4-EShinbashi
Marunouchi丸ノ内5-DMarunouchi
Kanda神田5-BKanda
Roppongi六本木3-ERoppongi

Places of interest in Tokyo

RomajiKanjiEnglish
Kokkai Gijidoo国会議事堂the Diet Building
Kokuritsu Gekijoo国立劇場National Theater
Meiji Jinguu明治神宮Meiji Shrine
Tokyo Tawaa東京タワーTokyo Tower
Tokyo Eki東京駅Tokyo Station
Ueno Kooen上野公園Ueno Park
Kabukiza歌舞伎座Kabuki Theater
Kookyogai皇居Imperial Palace
Shinjuku Gyoen新宿御苑Shinjuku National Garden
Kasumigaseki霞ヶ関Kasumigaseki
Hibiya Kooen日比谷公園Hibiya Park

Wards (ku) in Tokyo

RomajiKanjiEnglish
Shinjuku-ku新宿区Shinjuku Ward
Chiyoda-ku千代田区Chiyoda Ward
Shinagawa-ku品川区Shinagawa Ward

Major islands and cities of Japan

RomajiEnglish
HokkaidooHokkaido (northern island)
HonshuuHonshu (main island)
ShikokuShikoku
KyuushuuKyushu
OkinawaOkinawa
TokyoTokyo
OosakaOsaka
NagoyaNagoya
KyootoKyoto
SapporoSapporo
FukuokaFukuoka
NahaNaha
MatsuyamaMatsuyama

Grammar & Usage Notes

Asking the location of a place

Two expressions can be used to ask where something is located — they mean approximately the same thing:

  • Depaato wa doko desu ka? — “Where is the department store?”
  • Depaato wa doko ni arimasu ka? — “Where is the department store (located)?”

Answering location questions

When someone asks where something is, the answer usually takes the form:

  • (Place) desu. — “(It’s at) (place).”
  • (Place) ni arimasu. — “(It) is at (place).”

For example:

  • Q: Amerika Taishikan wa doko desu ka? — “Where is the American Embassy?”
  • A: Akasaka desu. / Akasaka ni arimasu. — “(It’s) in Akasaka.”

Using place names with location patterns

You can substitute any place name into the patterns you have already learned:

  • Tokyo Eki wa doko desu ka? — “Where is Tokyo Station?”
  • Koko wa Ginza desu ka? — “Is this the Ginza?”
  • Kono chikaku ni depaato ga arimasu ka? — “Is there a department store near here?”

Practice Exercises (練習)

Map reading — Area identification

Look at a map of Tokyo’s Urban District. Identify each area and practice pronunciation:

Grid referenceAskAnswer
3-DKoko wa doko desu ka?Akasaka desu.
6-EKoko wa doko desu ka?Ginza desu.
4-EKoko wa doko desu ka?Shinbashi desu.
5-DKoko wa doko desu ka?Marunouchi desu.
5-BKoko wa doko desu ka?Kanda desu.
3-EKoko wa doko desu ka?Roppongi desu.

Response drill — Where is it located?

Practice asking and answering about locations:

QuestionAnswer
Shinjuku Gyoen wa doko ni arimasu ka?Shinjuku ni arimasu.
Hie Jinja wa doko ni arimasu ka?Akasaka ni arimasu.
Kasumigaseki Biru wa doko ni arimasu ka?Kasumigaseki ni arimasu.
Ueno Kooen wa doko ni arimasu ka?Ueno ni arimasu.
Amerika Taishikan wa doko ni arimasu ka?Akasaka ni arimasu.

Map reading — True or false

The instructor points to a location and asks if it is a particular place. Answer Hai, soo desu or Iie, … jaa arimasen. … desu.

QuestionAnswer
Koko wa Shinjuku desu ka? (pointing to Akasaka)Iie, Shinjuku jaa arimasen. Akasaka desu.
Koko wa Ginza desu ka? (pointing to Ginza)Hai, soo desu.

Finding places on an island

Practice asking which island a city is located on:

QuestionAnswer
Oosaka wa doko ni arimasu ka?Honshuu ni arimasu.
Tokyo wa doko ni arimasu ka?Honshuu ni arimasu.
Fukuoka wa doko ni arimasu ka?Kyuushuu ni arimasu.
Nagoya wa doko ni arimasu ka?Honshuu ni arimasu.
Naha wa doko ni arimasu ka?Okinawa ni arimasu.

Cultural Notes

  • Tokyo-to (東京都) is the official name for the Tokyo jurisdiction. To literally means “capital.” It consists of the Urban District, the Tama District, and the Ogasawara Islands. As of the mid-1980s, the population of Tokyo-to was approximately twelve million — about 10% of the entire population of Japan.
  • The Urban District is composed of 23 wards (ku, 区). It is where you find government offices, headquarters of major companies, museums, and the American Embassy and American Center. It is the center of political, economic, cultural, and educational activities in Japan.
  • The Tama District, especially the areas near the Urban District, consists of satellite towns — what the Japanese call “bed towns” — from which many people commute to downtown Tokyo.
  • Kasumigaseki is the center of Japanese government, home to most national ministries and agencies.
  • The Imperial Palace (Kookyogai, 皇居) is located in Chiyoda Ward, surrounded by moats and gardens, in the heart of Tokyo.