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Top 100 Japanese Words for Beginners to Start Speaking

2026/06/21
Learning your first Japanese words for beginners is easier than the language’s tough reputation suggests, because a small core of common words covers most everyday speech.
This guide gives you 100 basic Japanese words for beginners, grouped by theme with an example sentence for each.
Contents
Effective Ways to Learn Basic Japanese Vocabulary
The most effective way to learn basic Japanese vocabulary is to start with the words you’ll actually use. A few principles do most of the work:
- Group words by theme : Studying greetings, numbers, or food words together helps your brain file them in connected sets.
- Learn words inside short sentences : Recognising a word on a flashcard and understanding it in fast speech are different skills, and context bridges the two.
- Build gradually : Ten words a day adds up to 100 in ten days, and steady daily review always beats cramming.
If you’re starting as a busy adult, a short daily routine matters far more than long, occasional study marathons. One last thing before the list: learn to read hiragana early rather than leaning on romaji, which quickly turns into a crutch.
The 100 Most Common Japanese Words for Beginners

Here are the 100 most common Japanese words for beginners, organised by theme. Each entry shows the word in Japanese, its romaji reading, the English meaning, and a short example sentence so you see how it works in real speech.
Greetings & Everyday Politeness
Greetings and polite words are the first basic Japanese words you’ll reach for in any conversation, and a slight bow naturally goes with them.
| Japanese | Romaji | Meaning | Example | Translation |
| こんにちは | konnichiwa | Hello / good afternoon | こんにちは、田中さん。 | Hello, Mr. Tanaka. |
| おはようございます | ohayō gozaimasu | Good morning | おはようございます。いい天気ですね。 | Good morning. Nice weather, isn’t it? |
| こんばんは | konbanwa | Good evening | こんばんは、お疲れ様です。 | Good evening, thanks for your hard work. |
| おやすみなさい | oyasuminasai | Good night | もう寝ます。おやすみなさい。 | I’m going to bed. Good night. |
| さようなら | sayōnara | Goodbye | さようなら、また会いましょう。 | Goodbye, let’s meet again. |
| ありがとうございます | arigatō gozaimasu | Thank you | 手伝ってくれてありがとうございます。 | Thank you for helping me. |
| すみません | sumimasen | Excuse me / sorry | すみません、駅はどこですか。 | Excuse me, where is the station? |
| ごめんなさい | gomennasai | I’m sorry | 遅れてごめんなさい。 | I’m sorry I’m late. |
| お願いします | onegaishimasu | Please | 水をお願いします。 | Water, please. |
| はい | hai | Yes | はい、わかりました。 | Yes, I understand. |
| いいえ | iie | No | いいえ、違います。 | No, that’s not right. |
Numbers 1 to 10
Numbers in Japanese are simple once you know one to ten, because bigger numbers just reuse them. Eleven is literally “ten-one” (jū-ichi) and twenty is “two-ten” (ni-jū).
| Japanese | Romaji | Meaning | Example | Translation |
| 一 | ichi | One | 一時に起きます。 | I get up at one o’clock. |
| 二 | ni | Two | 二人で行きます。 | The two of us will go. |
| 三 | san | Three | 三回行きました。 | I went three times. |
| 四 | shi / yon | Four | 四月になりました。 | It’s now April. |
| 五 | go | Five | 五分待ってください。 | Please wait five minutes. |
| 六 | roku | Six | 六時に会いましょう。 | Let’s meet at six. |
| 七 | shichi / nana | Seven | 一週間は七日です。 | A week has seven days. |
| 八 | hachi | Eight | 八月はとても暑いです。 | August is very hot. |
| 九 | kyū / ku | Nine | 九時に寝ます。 | I go to bed at nine. |
| 十 | jū | Ten | 十まで数えられます。 | I can count to ten. |
Both shi and yon mean four, but yon is used more often because shi sounds like the word for death.
People & Pronouns
Japanese speakers often drop pronouns when the meaning is clear, and tend to use names or roles rather than a blunt “you”.
| Japanese | Romaji | Meaning | Example | Translation |
| 私 | watashi | I / me | 私は学生です。 | I am a student. |
| 僕 | boku | I (male, casual) | 僕は日本人です。 | I’m Japanese. |
| あなた | anata | You | あなたの名前は何ですか。 | What is your name? |
| 友達 | tomodachi | Friend | 友達と映画を見ます。 | I watch a movie with a friend. |
| 家族 | kazoku | Family | 家族は四人です。 | My family has four people. |
| お母さん | okāsan | Mother | お母さんは優しいです。 | My mother is kind. |
| お父さん | otōsan | Father | お父さんは先生です。 | My father is a teacher. |
| 先生 | sensei | Teacher | 先生に質問します。 | I ask the teacher a question. |
| 人 | hito | Person | あの人は誰ですか。 | Who is that person? |
Common Verbs
These common verbs let you build simple sentences right away. A Japanese verb doesn’t change with the subject, so taberu means “eat” whether the subject is I, you, or they.
| Japanese | Romaji | Meaning | Example | Translation |
| する | suru | To do | 宿題をします。 | I do my homework. |
| 行く | iku | To go | 学校に行きます。 | I go to school. |
| 来る | kuru | To come | 友達が来ます。 | My friend is coming. |
| 食べる | taberu | To eat | ご飯を食べます。 | I eat a meal. |
| 飲む | nomu | To drink | 水を飲みます。 | I drink water. |
| 見る | miru | To see / watch | テレビを見ます。 | I watch TV. |
| 聞く | kiku | To listen / ask | 音楽を聞きます。 | I listen to music. |
| 話す | hanasu | To speak | 日本語を話します。 | I speak Japanese. |
| 読む | yomu | To read | 本を読みます。 | I read a book. |
| 書く | kaku | To write | 手紙を書きます。 | I write a letter. |
| 買う | kau | To buy | パンを買います。 | I buy bread. |
| 分かる | wakaru | To understand | 意味が分かります。 | I understand the meaning. |
| ある | aru | To be (objects) | 机の上に本があります。 | There is a book on the desk. |
| いる | iru | To be (people, animals) | 部屋に猫がいます。 | There is a cat in the room. |
Common Adjectives
Adjectives add colour to your Japanese vocabulary and let you describe food, places, and people.
| Japanese | Romaji | Meaning | Example | Translation |
| いい | ii | Good | 今日はいい天気です。 | It’s nice weather today. |
| 悪い | warui | Bad | 体調が悪いです。 | I feel unwell. |
| 大きい | ōkii | Big | 大きい家ですね。 | It’s a big house. |
| 小さい | chiisai | Small | 小さい犬がいます。 | There is a small dog. |
| 美味しい | oishii | Delicious | このラーメンは美味しい。 | This ramen is delicious. |
| 可愛い | kawaii | Cute | 可愛い猫ですね。 | What a cute cat. |
| 高い | takai | Expensive / tall | この時計は高いです。 | This watch is expensive. |
| 安い | yasui | Cheap | この店は安いです。 | This shop is cheap. |
| 新しい | atarashii | New | 新しい車を買いました。 | I bought a new car. |
| 暑い | atsui | Hot (weather) | 今日は暑いです。 | It’s hot today. |
| 楽しい | tanoshii | Fun | パーティーは楽しいです。 | The party is fun. |
Time & Days
Time words come up constantly. For days of the week, add -yōbi to an element: getsu-yōbi (Monday), ka-yōbi (Tuesday), through to nichi-yōbi (Sunday).
| Japanese | Romaji | Meaning | Example | Translation |
| 今日 | kyō | Today | 今日は忙しいです。 | I’m busy today. |
| 明日 | ashita | Tomorrow | 明日会いましょう。 | Let’s meet tomorrow. |
| 昨日 | kinō | Yesterday | 昨日は雨でした。 | It rained yesterday. |
| 今 | ima | Now | 今、何時ですか。 | What time is it now? |
| 朝 | asa | Morning | 朝六時に起きます。 | I get up at six in the morning. |
| 昼 | hiru | Noon / daytime | 昼ご飯を食べます。 | I eat lunch. |
| 夜 | yoru | Night | 夜は静かです。 | The night is quiet. |
| 時間 | jikan | Time / hour | 時間がありません。 | I don’t have time. |
| 週 | shū | Week | 来週は休みです。 | Next week is a holiday. |
| 月 | tsuki | Month | 来月日本に行きます。 | I’m going to Japan next month. |
| 年 | toshi | Year | 来年二十歳になります。 | I’ll turn twenty next year. |
| 曜日 | yōbi | Day of the week | 今日は何曜日ですか。 | What day is it today? |
Food & Drink
Food vocabulary is some of the most useful for travel and daily life in Japan.
| Japanese | Romaji | Meaning | Example | Translation |
| ご飯 | gohan | Rice / meal | ご飯を食べましょう。 | Let’s eat. |
| 水 | mizu | Water | 水をください。 | Water, please. |
| お茶 | ocha | Tea | お茶が好きです。 | I like tea. |
| 肉 | niku | Meat | 肉を食べません。 | I don’t eat meat. |
| 魚 | sakana | Fish | この魚は新鮮です。 | This fish is fresh. |
| 野菜 | yasai | Vegetable | 野菜は体にいいです。 | Vegetables are good for you. |
| 果物 | kudamono | Fruit | 果物が大好きです。 | I love fruit. |
| 卵 | tamago | Egg | 卵を二つ使います。 | I use two eggs. |
| パン | pan | Bread | 朝はパンを食べます。 | I eat bread in the morning. |
| 寿司 | sushi | Sushi | 寿司を食べたいです。 | I want to eat sushi. |
| 飲み物 | nomimono | Drink | 飲み物は何がいいですか。 | What would you like to drink? |
Question Words
Question words turn a pile of vocabulary into real conversation.
| Japanese | Romaji | Meaning | Example | Translation |
| 何 | nani | What | これは何ですか。 | What is this? |
| 誰 | dare | Who | あの人は誰ですか。 | Who is that person? |
| どこ | doko | Where | トイレはどこですか。 | Where is the toilet? |
| いつ | itsu | When | いつ帰りますか。 | When are you going back? |
| どうして | dōshite | Why | どうして遅れたのですか。 | Why are you late? |
| いくら | ikura | How much | これはいくらですか。 | How much is this? |
| どうやって | dō yatte | How | どうやって行きますか。 | How do you get there? |
Handy Everyday Phrases
A few set phrases will carry you through most beginner situations.
| Japanese | Romaji | Meaning | Example | Translation |
| わかりません | wakarimasen | I don’t understand | すみません、わかりません。 | Sorry, I don’t understand. |
| 大丈夫です | daijōbu desu | It’s okay / I’m fine | 大丈夫です、心配しないで。 | It’s okay, don’t worry. |
| いただきます | itadakimasu | Said before eating | いただきます。 | Thanks for the food (let’s eat). |
| ごちそうさまでした | gochisōsama deshita | Said after eating | ごちそうさまでした。 | Thank you for the meal. |
| はじめまして | hajimemashite | Nice to meet you | はじめまして、リサです。 | Nice to meet you, I’m Lisa. |
| もう一度お願いします | mō ichido onegaishimasu | One more time, please | もう一度お願いします。 | Once more, please. |
| ゆっくりお願いします | yukkuri onegaishimasu | Slowly, please | ゆっくりお願いします。 | Slowly, please. |
Saying “I Love You” in Japanese (Kokuhaku)
One of the most searched questions among beginners is how to say “I love you” in Japanese. A kokuhaku (告白) is the confession where one person tells another how they feel, and the words depend on how strong the feeling is.
| Japanese | Romaji | Meaning | Example | Translation |
| 好きです | suki desu | I like / love you | あなたが好きです。 | I like you. |
| 大好きです | daisuki desu | I really love you | あなたが大好きです。 | I really love you. |
| 愛してる | aishiteru | I love you (deep) | ずっと愛してる。 | I’ll always love you. |
| 付き合ってください | tsukiatte kudasai | Will you go out with me? | 私と付き合ってください。 | Please go out with me. |
| 告白 | kokuhaku | A confession of love | 彼に告白しました。 | I confessed to him. |
If someone says suki desu to you, a warm reply is watashi mo (私も, “me too”) or watashi mo suki desu. To turn someone down gently, gomennasai (ごめんなさい) softens the no.
Japanese Slang
Beginner textbooks skip slang, but you’ll meet these constantly in real life, on social media, and in anime.
| Japanese | Romaji | Meaning | Example | Translation |
| 草 | kusa | “lol” (lit. grass) | それは草。 | That’s hilarious (lol). |
| やばい | yabai | Crazy / amazing / terrible | このケーキ、やばい。 | This cake is amazing. |
| マジ | maji | Seriously / for real | マジで? | For real? |
| やだ | yada | No way / yuck | やだ、行きたくない。 | No way, I don’t want to go. |
| うける | ukeru | That’s hilarious | それ、うける。 | That’s so funny. |
Kusa literally means “grass” and is used like “lol”, because rows of w (from warau, to laugh) look like blades of grass. You’ll also hear oi oi oi, a “hey, come on” reaction to something surprising or ridiculous.
Start Your Japanese Journey with Nihongo Online School

These top beginner Japanese words are your foundation, but words only become conversation when you use them in real situations. That’s how our beginner course is built.
Following the trusted Minna no Nihongo Shokyū textbook, it takes you from zero to JLPT N5 level through everyday scenarios, and the vocabulary on this page maps directly onto the lessons.
Your greetings and self-introduction words show up in the very first lessons, the numbers and time words power the lessons on schedules and shopping, and the verbs and adjectives let you talk about your daily life, your likes and dislikes, your family, and your hobbies. Each lesson starts from a simple sentence pattern and grows step by step, building speaking, listening, reading, and writing through guided practice and homework from your teacher.
At Nihongo Online School, every lesson is fully tailored to your level and pace, with a native teacher who corrects you as you go.

