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What are particles in Japanese?

In Japanese, the word for “particles” is “joshi” (助詞).

(eg.,) を、に、が、と、で、へ、より、から、まで…

Particles are an important aspect of Japanese grammar and indicate the relationships and grammatical roles between words in a sentence.
They are written in hiragana, and some are specially pronounced (i.e., へ as /e/ (not /he/), は as /wa/, を as /o/)

Here’s an example,

(1) わたしりんごたべます
– I eat apples.

In (1), わたし[は] indicates わたし as the subject of the sentence.
Then, the particle [を] (o) is used to mark the direct object of a sentence.

Although there are differences between grammar books, the general classification is as follows.

Case markers (格助詞, kaku-joshi)
が, の, を, に, へ, と, で, から, より, まで

Parallel markers (並列助詞, heiretsu-joshi)
か, の, や, に, と, やら, なり, だの
(雨風が強いです)

Sentence ending particles (終助詞, shū-joshi)
か, の, や, な, わ, とも, かしら, さ, よ, ね
(雨がふるかしら?)

Focus particle (取り立て助詞, toritate-joshi) also known as Adverbial particles (副助詞, fuku-joshi)
ばかり, まで, だけ, ほど, くらい, など, なり, やら
(6月は雨がふってばかりだ)

Conjunctive particles (接続助詞, setsuzoku-joshi)
ば, や, が, て, のに, ので, から, ところが, けれども, くせに
(雨がふれ、寒くなる -If it rains, it gets colder)

Phrasal particles (準体助詞, juntai-joshi)
の, から
(僕は新しい – Mine is new.)It means 僕のものは新しい.

So complicated!!

Learning how to use particles correctly is essential for mastering Japanese grammar and communication.

Common particles include;
“は” (wa), which is used to mark the topic of a sentence,
“が” (ga), which is used to mark the subject of a sentence,
and “に” (ni), which is used to indicate a direction or a point in time.

Some words have the same form but different kinds of parts of speech;
(noun, case marker particle…)
(case marker particle, parallel marker, conjunctive marker… )
(case marker, conjunctive marker…)

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