Japanese Copula:
The copula `desu` identifies what something is while maintaining a polite and respectful tone in conversation.
The Rule in 30 Seconds
- Desu means am, is, or are in polite Japanese.
- Place it at the very end of your sentence.
- Negative form is ja arimasen; past form is deshita.
- Use it with nouns and na-adjectives for politeness.
Quick Reference
| Tense/Form | Affirmative | Negative |
|---|---|---|
| Present Polite | desu | ja arimasen |
| Past Polite | deshita | ja arimasen deshita |
| Present Plain | da | ja nai |
| Past Plain | datta | ja nakatta |
| Probable | deshou | ja nai deshou |
| Te-form (Connective) | de | ja nakute |
关键例句
3 / 10Watashi wa Tanaka desu.
I am Tanaka.
Kore wa ringo ja arimasen.
This is not an apple.
Kinou wa yasumi deshita.
Yesterday was a holiday.
The Silent 'U'
In standard Tokyo Japanese, the 'u' at the end of `desu` is barely whispered or totally silent. Practice saying 'dess' instead of 'dess-oo' to sound like a local!
The Verb Trap
Don't say `taberu desu`. `desu` is for nouns and adjectives. For verbs, the politeness is built into the verb itself, like `tabemasu`.
The Rule in 30 Seconds
- Desu means am, is, or are in polite Japanese.
- Place it at the very end of your sentence.
- Negative form is ja arimasen; past form is deshita.
- Use it with nouns and na-adjectives for politeness.
Overview
Ever wondered how to say "I am a student" or "This is a cat" in Japanese? You need the copula. In English, we use "am," "is," or "are." In Japanese, we mostly use desu. It is the absolute foundation of the language. Think of it like the glue that holds your sentences together. Without it, your thoughts are just a pile of words. desu is polite, safe, and works in almost every situation. Whether you are introducing yourself at a party or ordering ramen, desu has your back. It is essentially an equals sign between two things. You will hear it constantly in Tokyo, Kyoto, and everywhere in between. It is the polite way to end a sentence about a state of being. Yes, even native speakers rely on it to keep things respectful. If you learn only one thing today, make it this. It is your passport to sounding like a functioning human in Japanese.
How This Grammar Works
Japanese grammar is like a train. The most important part always comes at the very end. In English, we say "I am a teacher." The "am" is in the middle. In Japanese, we say Watashi wa sensei desu. The desu sits right at the finish line. It tells the listener, "Hey, I am finished with this thought, and I am being polite about it." It functions as an equalizer. It connects a subject to a noun or an adjective. It does not indicate an action like running or eating. It simply states a fact about what something is. You can imagine desu as a little polite bow at the end of your sentence. It softens the statement. If you leave it off, you might sound a bit too blunt or even rude. It is like forgetting to say "please" or "thank you." Simple, yet incredibly powerful.
Formation Pattern
- 1Making a sentence with
desuis easier than making instant noodles. Just follow these steps: - 2Start with your subject (like
watashifor "I"). - 3Add the particle
wa(this marks what you are talking about). - 4Put in your noun (like
gakuseifor "student"). - 5Finish with
desu. - 6To make it negative (saying something is NOT), change
desutoja arimasen. For example,gakusei ja arimasenmeans "not a student." To talk about the past, usedeshita. For a negative past, useja arimasen deshita. It is a very logical system. Once you memorize these four variations, you can describe almost anything in the world. Just remember to keepdesuat the end. Putting it anywhere else is like trying to wear your shoes on your hands. It just doesn't work.
When To Use It
Use desu whenever you want to identify something or someone. It is perfect for introductions. "I am Alex" becomes Arekkusu desu. Use it when you are pointing at things in a store. "This is a pen" is Kore wa pen desu. It is also great for describing how things look or feel with certain adjectives. If you are in a job interview, desu is your best friend. It shows you have manners. Use it when talking to teachers, bosses, or people you don't know well. It is the "Goldilocks" of Japanese grammar—not too formal, not too casual. It is just right. You can even use it for the weather. Ame desu means "It is rain" or "It's raining." It is the ultimate multi-tool for your language kit.
When Not To Use It
Don't get "desu-happy" and put it everywhere. The biggest trap is using it with verbs in their polite form. You don't say tabemasu desu. That is like saying "I am eat am." Just say tabemasu. Also, avoid using desu with friends or family if you want to sound natural. In those cases, you would use da or nothing at all. Another tricky spot is "i-adjectives" like oishii (delicious). While people do say oishii desu to be polite, the desu there is actually a politeness marker, not the copula itself. Grammar purists might give you a look, but don't worry too much. The main rule: if there is already a verb like "to go" or "to buy," leave the desu at home. It doesn't like sharing the spotlight with other verbs.
Common Mistakes
One of the most common face-palm moments is using desu with other verbs. Nomasu desu is a big no-no. Another classic error is forgetting the wa particle. Without wa, your sentence is just two nouns floating in space. Also, be careful with da. Some learners think da and desu are identical. They are, but the "vibe" is totally different. Using da with your boss is like high-fiving the CEO—it might not end well. Also, watch out for the double-negative. Ja arimasen ja arimasen isn't a thing. Stick to the patterns we talked about. If you mess up, just smile and correct yourself. Even the best students trip over their tongues sometimes. Think of it like a grammar traffic light; sometimes you just have to wait for the right signal.
Contrast With Similar Patterns
You will often see da and dearu. da is the plain, casual version of desu. It is what you use with your best friend or your pet cat. dearu is very formal and mostly found in books or speeches. Then there is deshou, which means "probably is." If desu is a certain "yes," deshou is a shrug and a guess. Don't confuse desu with the particle no either. no shows ownership, like watashi no (mine). desu shows identity. If you say watashi no desu, you are saying "It is mine." If you say watashi desu, you are saying "It is me." Small change, huge difference in meaning! It is like the difference between "My dog" and "I am a dog." Choose wisely.
Quick FAQ
Q. Is desu a verb?
A. Technically it is a copula, but for now, think of it as the "is" verb.
Q. Can I just say desu by itself?
A. Yes! If someone asks "Who is it?", you can reply Watashi desu (It is me).
Q. Do I need to pronounce the 'u' at the end?
A. Usually, the 'u' is silent. It sounds more like "dess."
Q. Is desu used for both men and women?
A. Absolutely! It is a gender-neutral politeness powerhouse.
Q. How do I ask a question with it?
A. Just add ka at the end. Gakusei desu ka? (Are you a student?)
Reference Table
| Tense/Form | Affirmative | Negative |
|---|---|---|
| Present Polite | desu | ja arimasen |
| Past Polite | deshita | ja arimasen deshita |
| Present Plain | da | ja nai |
| Past Plain | datta | ja nakatta |
| Probable | deshou | ja nai deshou |
| Te-form (Connective) | de | ja nakute |
The Silent 'U'
In standard Tokyo Japanese, the 'u' at the end of `desu` is barely whispered or totally silent. Practice saying 'dess' instead of 'dess-oo' to sound like a local!
The Verb Trap
Don't say `taberu desu`. `desu` is for nouns and adjectives. For verbs, the politeness is built into the verb itself, like `tabemasu`.
The Magic 'Ka'
Japanese has no question marks in traditional writing. Adding `ka` after `desu` is your verbal question mark. Instant conversation starter!
Social Distance
Think of `desu` as a comfortable social bubble. It keeps enough distance to be polite without being cold. Use it with anyone you aren't close enough to hug.
例句
10Watashi wa Tanaka desu.
Focus: desu
I am Tanaka.
A standard self-introduction using a name.
Kore wa ringo ja arimasen.
Focus: ja arimasen
This is not an apple.
Use 'ja arimasen' to deny what something is.
Kinou wa yasumi deshita.
Focus: deshita
Yesterday was a holiday.
Deshita indicates the state existed in the past.
Sore wa hon desu ka?
Focus: desu ka
Is that a book?
Adding 'ka' turns the copula into a question.
Genki desu. / Genki da.
Focus: da
I am well. (Polite / Casual)
Note how the feeling changes based on the ending.
✗ Taberu desu → ✓ Tabemasu.
Focus: Tabemasu
I eat.
Never add desu directly to a dictionary-form verb.
✗ Kawaii da desu → ✓ Kawaii desu.
Focus: Kawaii desu
It is cute.
Don't stack the plain copula and polite copula together.
Kyou wa samui desu.
Focus: samui desu
It is cold today.
With i-adjectives, desu technically just adds politeness.
Sore wa sou desu ne.
Focus: sou desu ne
That is indeed so.
Common phrase for agreeing in conversation.
Tesuto wa kantan ja arimasen deshita.
Focus: ja arimasen deshita
The test was not easy.
Combines negative and past endings.
自我测试
Select the correct polite ending to complete the self-introduction.
Watashi wa gakusei ___.
Desu is the standard polite copula used for identifying oneself as a student.
How do you say 'This is not water' politely?
Kore wa mizu ___.
Ja arimasen is the polite negative form of desu.
Complete the sentence to say 'Yesterday was a holiday'.
Kinou wa yasumi ___.
Deshita is the past tense form of desu, necessary for 'yesterday'.
🎉 得分: /3
视觉学习工具
Polite vs. Casual Endings
Choosing the Right Ending
Is it about the past?
Are you denying it?
Common Use Cases
Introductions
- • Name desu
- • Job desu
Identifying
- • Object desu
- • Place desu
常见问题
21 个问题It is the Japanese copula, which is a fancy way of saying it acts like the verb 'to be' (am/is/are). It links a subject to a description, like Kore wa hon desu (This is a book).
Grammatically, it is a 'copula' or an auxiliary verb. While it functions like 'is,' it behaves differently than action verbs like taberu (to eat).
You can, but it might sound a bit formal or stiff. Usually, friends use da or just drop the ending entirely for a more casual feel.
No, desu is completely neutral. Men, women, and non-binary people all use it exactly the same way in polite conversation.
The most common polite negative is ja arimasen. For example, Tanaka-san ja arimasen means 'I am not Mr. Tanaka.'
Dewa arimasen is slightly more formal and often used in writing. In daily speech, ja arimasen is much more common.
No! Unlike English (am/is/are), desu stays the same whether you are talking about one person or a hundred people.
Use deshita when you are talking about something in the past. Ame deshita means 'It was rain' or 'It rained.'
Generally, no. You shouldn't say iku desu. Instead, use the polite verb form ikimasu to express 'I go' politely.
Yes, saying oishii desu (It's delicious) is very common and polite, though the desu there is technically just a politeness marker.
Deshou means 'probably' or 'it seems.' Use it when you aren't 100% sure, like Ashita wa hare deshou (Tomorrow will probably be sunny).
Da is the plain/informal version of desu. It's what you see in manga, anime, and hear between close friends.
Never. Japanese is a verb-final language, so the copula desu will always be the very last word in your statement.
Yes! Sou desu ka is a very common phrase that means 'Is that so?' or 'I see.'
Use the long form ja arimasen deshita. For example, Shizuka ja arimasen deshita means 'It was not quiet.'
It is the standard polite form. It's not 'super formal' (like for royalty), but it's perfect for 90% of real-life situations.
This is called 'vowel devoicing.' It happens frequently in Japanese when 'u' or 'i' are between voiceless consonants.
No. Desu means 'is' (identity), while arimasu means 'there is' or 'to have' (existence).
In English, the verb 'to be' changes a lot (am, is, are, was, were). In Japanese, you only need to learn one word: desu.
Na-adjectives like kirei (pretty) behave like nouns. They require desu to form a complete, polite sentence: Kirei desu.
Yes! Pointing at a menu and saying Kore desu (It's this one) is a perfectly polite way to order.
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