Introduction to Negative Forms

In Japanese, expressing negation is essential for everyday communication. Negative forms allow you to say that something is not true, did not happen, or will not happen. Unlike English, Japanese uses specific conjugation patterns for verbs, adjectives, and nouns to express negation.

We will explore how to form negative verbs, adjectives, and the negative copula, with examples to help you understand their usage.

Negative Verb Conjugation

To make verbs negative in their plain form, you generally replace the verb ending with its negative equivalent. For Group 1 (Godan) verbs, the final -u sound changes to its corresponding -a sound, then add ใชใ„. For Group 2 (Ichidan) verbs, simply remove ใ‚‹ and add ใชใ„.

Verb TypePlain FormNegative Form
Godan (ใ†-verbs)ๆ›ธใ (kaku) โ€“ to writeๆ›ธใ‹ใชใ„ (kakanai) โ€“ do not write
Ichidan (ใ‚‹-verbs)้ฃŸในใ‚‹ (taberu) โ€“ to eat้ฃŸในใชใ„ (tabenai) โ€“ do not eat

็งใฏๆ‰‹็ด™ใ‚’ๆ›ธใ‹ใชใ„ใ€‚

Watashi wa tegami o kakanai.

I do not write letters.

ๅฝผใฏ่‚‰ใ‚’้ฃŸในใชใ„ใ€‚

Kare wa niku o tabenai.

He does not eat meat.

Negative Forms of Adjectives

Japanese adjectives are divided into two main types: ใ„-adjectives and ใช-adjectives. Their negative forms are created differently.

For ใ„-adjectives, replace the final ใ„ with ใใชใ„. For ใช-adjectives, add ใ˜ใ‚ƒใชใ„ after the adjective stem.

Adjective TypePositiveNegative
ใ„-Adjective้ซ˜ใ„ (takai) โ€“ high/expensive้ซ˜ใใชใ„ (takakunai) โ€“ not high/not expensive
ใช-Adjective้™ใ‹ (shizuka) โ€“ quiet้™ใ‹ใ˜ใ‚ƒใชใ„ (shizuka janai) โ€“ not quiet

ใ“ใฎ้ƒจๅฑ‹ใฏๅบƒใใชใ„ใ€‚

Kono heya wa hirokunai.

This room is not spacious.

ๅฝผๅฅณใฏ่ฆชๅˆ‡ใ˜ใ‚ƒใชใ„ใ€‚

Kanojo wa shinsetsu janai.

She is not kind.

Polite Negative Forms

To express negation politely, conjugate verbs into their ใพใ™ form and then add ใพใ›ใ‚“. This applies to both Godan and Ichidan verbs. Similarly, adjectives use polite negative forms by adding ใใชใ„ใงใ™ or ใ˜ใ‚ƒใชใ„ใงใ™.

FormExampleMeaning
Verb Polite Negativeๆ›ธใใพใ›ใ‚“ (kakimasen)do not write
ใ„-Adjective Polite Negative้ซ˜ใใชใ„ใงใ™ (takakunai desu)is not expensive
ใช-Adjective Polite Negative้™ใ‹ใ˜ใ‚ƒใชใ„ใงใ™ (shizuka janai desu)is not quiet

็งใฏๆ‰‹็ด™ใ‚’ๆ›ธใใพใ›ใ‚“ใ€‚

Watashi wa tegami o kakimasen.

I do not write letters.

ใ“ใฎๆœฌใฏ้ซ˜ใใชใ„ใงใ™ใ€‚

Kono hon wa takakunai desu.

This book is not expensive.

Negative of ใงใ™ and ใ 

The copula ใงใ™ (polite) and ใ  (plain) are used to link nouns and adjectives to the subject. Their negative forms are ใงใฏใ‚ใ‚Šใพใ›ใ‚“ (polite) and ใ˜ใ‚ƒใชใ„ or ใงใฏใชใ„ (plain).

Note that ใ˜ใ‚ƒใชใ„ is a contraction of ใงใฏใชใ„ and is commonly used in casual speech.

FormExampleMeaning
Polite Negativeๅญฆ็”Ÿใงใฏใ‚ใ‚Šใพใ›ใ‚“ (gakusei dewa arimasen)is not a student
Plain Negativeๅญฆ็”Ÿใ˜ใ‚ƒใชใ„ (gakusei janai)is not a student

ๅฝผใฏๅ…ˆ็”Ÿใงใฏใ‚ใ‚Šใพใ›ใ‚“ใ€‚

Kare wa sensei dewa arimasen.

He is not a teacher.

็งใฏๅญฆ็”Ÿใ˜ใ‚ƒใชใ„ใ€‚

Watashi wa gakusei janai.

I am not a student.

Negating Nouns with ใ˜ใ‚ƒใชใ„

When negating nouns in casual speech, the phrase ใ˜ใ‚ƒใชใ„ is commonly added after the noun. This form is very versatile and used frequently in everyday conversation.

ใ“ใ‚Œใฏใƒšใƒณใ˜ใ‚ƒใชใ„ใ€‚

Kore wa pen janai.

This is not a pen.

ๅฝผๅฅณใฏๆ—ฅๆœฌไบบใ˜ใ‚ƒใชใ„ใ€‚

Kanojo wa nihonjin janai.

She is not Japanese.

Practice Examples

Try to identify the negative forms in these sentences and translate them.

็Šฌใฏๅฅฝใใ˜ใ‚ƒใชใ„ใ€‚

Inu wa suki janai.

I do not like dogs.

ๅฝผใฏๆ˜จๆ—ฅๅญฆๆ กใซ่กŒใ‹ใชใ‹ใฃใŸใ€‚

Kare wa kinล gakkล ni ikanakatta.

He did not go to school yesterday.

้ƒจๅฑ‹ใŒใใ‚Œใ„ใ˜ใ‚ƒใชใ„ใงใ™ใ€‚

Heya ga kirei janai desu.

The room is not clean.

Answers:

  1. ๅฅฝใใ˜ใ‚ƒใชใ„ โ€“ โ€œdo not likeโ€
  2. ่กŒใ‹ใชใ‹ใฃใŸ โ€“ past negative of ่กŒใ (to go)
  3. ใใ‚Œใ„ใ˜ใ‚ƒใชใ„ใงใ™ โ€“ polite negative of ใช-adjective

Tips for Remembering Rules

  • Memorize verb groups (Godan vs Ichidan) to conjugate negatives correctly.
  • For verbs, remember the โ€œ-aโ€ sound change + ใชใ„ for Godan verbs.
  • Adjective negatives: ใ„-adjectives replace ใ„ with ใใชใ„, while ใช-adjectives add ใ˜ใ‚ƒใชใ„.
  • Use polite negative forms (ใพใ›ใ‚“, ใ˜ใ‚ƒใชใ„ใงใ™) to sound more formal and respectful.
  • ใ˜ใ‚ƒใชใ„ is casual and very common for negating nouns and adjectives.