ある

N5

ある

aru

Existence (inanimate)

N5

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Explanation

ある is the verb used to say that things or places exist. It is used for inanimate objects such as books, tables, and buildings. The polite form is あります. Key points: • Use ある/あります for things and places • The pattern is Location に Thing が あります • が marks the thing that exists • に marks the location For example, “机の上に本があります” means “There is a book on the desk.” The book is the thing that exists (が), and the location is marked by に. When talking about where something is, あります is the polite default. If the subject is a person or animal, switch to います. This is a core difference in Japanese existence verbs. You can also use ある to say that you have something, such as “時間があります” (I have time). For beginners, focus on location sentences first, then notice this “have” meaning later.

Structure

Pattern
Location に Inanimate が ある/あります
Location にWhere something exists
Examples: 机の上に, 部屋に, 駅の近くに
Inanimate がThing or place that exists
Examples: 本が, 店が, いすが
ある/ありますExistence verb for inanimate things
Examples: ある, あります

Examples

Example 1
机の上に本があります。
Tsukue no ue ni hon ga arimasu.
There is a book on the desk.
Breakdown
desk
of
top
location marker
book
subject marker
ありますexists (polite)
Note: Location + object
Example 2
駅の近くにコンビニがあります。
Eki no chikaku ni konbini ga arimasu.
There is a convenience store near the station.
Breakdown
station
of
近くnear
location marker
コンビニconvenience store
subject marker
ありますexists (polite)
Note: Place exists near another place
Example 3
この町に大きい公園があります。
Kono machi ni ookii kouen ga arimasu.
There is a big park in this town.
Breakdown
このthis
town
location marker
大きいbig
公園park
subject marker
ありますexists (polite)
Note: Adjective + noun with ある
Example 4
時間があります。
Jikan ga arimasu.
I have time.
Breakdown
時間time
subject marker
ありますexists (polite)
Note: “Have” meaning

Related Grammar