〜が — Subject Marker
〜が (ga): JLPT N5 grammar pattern. Usage, structure, examples, and comparison with は.
〜が
| Property | Value |
|---|---|
| Pattern | が |
| JLPT Level | N5 |
| Type | particle |
| Formality | Neutral |
Meaning
The particle が (ga) is one of the most fundamental particles in Japanese. It has two primary roles:
- Grammatical subject marker — it marks who or what performs the action or is in the state described by the predicate.
- New information marker — it introduces a subject that is being mentioned for the first time, or highlights the subject as the answer to an implicit "who/what" question.
が is also required (not optional) after the subject of certain predicates, including:
- あります / います (existence: there is / there are)
- わかる (to understand)
- できる (to be able to, to exist as a possibility)
- 好き (like) and 嫌い (dislike)
Structure Formula
[Noun] + が + [Predicate]
- The noun before が is the grammatical subject of the sentence.
- が directly precedes the predicate (verb, adjective, or noun + copula).
Example Sentences
| Japanese | Romaji | English |
|---|---|---|
| 猫(ねこ)がいます。 | Neko ga imasu. | There is a cat. |
| 田中(たなか)さんが来(き)ました。 | Tanaka-san ga kimashita. | Mr. Tanaka came. |
| 日本語(にほんご)がわかります。 | Nihongo ga wakarimasu. | I understand Japanese. |
| 私(わたし)はピザが好(す)きです。 | Watashi wa piza ga suki desu. | I like pizza. |
| 空(そら)が青(あお)い。 | Sora ga aoi. | The sky is blue. |
は vs. が Comparison
This is one of the most discussed distinctions in Japanese grammar. A brief guide:
| Feature | は (topic marker) | が (subject marker) |
|---|---|---|
| Function | Marks the topic of the sentence | Marks the grammatical subject |
| Information role | Refers to known / established information | Introduces new or focused information |
| Scope | Sets the frame for the whole sentence | Emphasizes the noun it marks |
| Example | 猫は魚を食べる。(As for the cat, it eats fish.) | 猫が魚を食べる。(It is the cat that eats the fish.) |
Rule of thumb: Use は when the subject is already known or you are making a general statement. Use が when identifying who or what, or when using predicates that require が (好き, わかる, できる, etc.).
Common Mistakes
-
Replacing が with は after 好き / 嫌い: ❌ 私はすしは好きです。→ ✓ 私はすしが好きです。 Explanation: The thing you like is marked with が, not は. Using は here changes the nuance to contrast (I like sushi but not other things).
-
Dropping が with います / あります: ❌ 本あります。→ ✓ 本があります。 Explanation: Existence predicates require が to mark what exists. Dropping the particle is too casual and can sound ungrammatical.
-
Using が instead of は for general statements: ❌ 犬が動物です。(introducing a fact about dogs in general) → ✓ 犬は動物です。 Explanation: For general definitions or facts about a known topic, は is the natural choice. が would imply "it is the dog (not something else) that is an animal," which sounds awkward.
-
Confusing subject and object: ❌ 私がりんごを食べます。(correct only when answering "who eats the apple?") vs ✓ 私はりんごを食べます。(general statement: I eat the apple) Explanation: が on the subject strongly focuses attention on that noun. Use it deliberately, not as a default substitute for は.