が means subject marker. It is a JLPT N5 Japanese grammar pattern used to mark the subject, new information, or focused item.
This grammar point appears often in beginner conversations, textbooks, and JLPT-style reading questions. If you want to identify who or what is doing, existing, wanted, or described, が is a useful pattern to learn early because it connects directly to everyday communication.
What does が mean?
Use が when you want to mark the thing being identified, discovered, described, or focused on.
Natural translations include:
- subject marker
- but in some contexts
- the one that
The exact English translation changes with context. The important point is to understand what job the pattern is doing in the sentence, not to memorize only one English phrase.
How to form が
Noun + が
Examples of the pattern:
- 雨が降る
- 猫がいる
- 日本語が好き
Pay attention to the form that comes before the grammar point. Many beginner mistakes happen because the learner understands the meaning but attaches the pattern to the wrong word form.
When is が used?
Use が in situations like:
- introducing new information
- marking the subject of existence or ability
- answering “who” or “what” questions
Tone and register:
- neutral and essential in all Japanese
- Common in daily speech, textbook examples, and beginner JLPT questions
が example sentences
- 雨が降っています。 — It is raining.
- 猫がいます。 — There is a cat.
- 誰が来ますか。 — Who is coming?
- 私が行きます。 — I will go.
- 日本語が好きです。 — I like Japanese.
Read the Japanese sentence first, then check whether the English translation matches the feeling of the whole sentence. This helps you avoid translating each piece too literally.
Nuance of が
The key nuance is が highlights the subject or identifies the answer.
This matters because learners often know the dictionary meaning but miss the speaker’s intention. In real Japanese, grammar points show attitude, politeness, contrast, certainty, desire, or context. For が, focus on how the pattern changes the role of the sentence.
For example:
- In conversation, it can sound focused and specific.
- Compared with は, it feels more focused on identification.
が vs は
Both が and は can be related in beginner Japanese, but they are different.
が:
- marks new or focused information
- often answers “who/what?”
は:
- marks the topic of the sentence
- often gives known context or contrast
Quick contrast examples:
- 私が田中です。— I am Tanaka.
- 私は田中です。— As for me, I am Tanaka.
If you are unsure which one to use, ask what the sentence is trying to do: define something, ask something, show a reason, mark a subject, describe a desire, or connect ideas.
Common mistakes with が
Watch out for these mistakes:
- Using は for every subject
- Missing が with あります, います, 好き, and ほしい
- Thinking が always means “but”; that is a different use
A good study habit is to make one simple original sentence, then change only one part of it. That makes the function of the grammar point easier to see.
Is が on the JLPT?
Yes. が is commonly taught as JLPT N5 grammar.
That means learners should be able to:
- recognize it in reading
- understand its nuance in context
- use it in simple original sentences
For test preparation, do not only memorize the English gloss. Practice identifying the word before and after the grammar point, because JLPT questions often test structure and context together.
Practice questions for が
Try making your own sentences with these prompts:
- Say who will go.
- Say that rain is falling.
- Say that you like Japanese.
Keep the sentences short at first. Once the form feels natural, add time words, places, reasons, or contrast to make the sentence more realistic.
Learn が with Kanjiru
If you want to review が together with kanji, vocabulary, and other JLPT N5 patterns, Kanjiru helps you practice Japanese in short, focused sessions.
Browse more lessons here: