の(所有)

N5

の(所有)

no (possessive)

of / possessive

N5

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Explication

の links two nouns and shows possession or relationship. It is similar to “of” or the possessive “’s” in English. The pattern is simple: Noun A の Noun B. Key points: • Noun A の Noun B = B of A / A’s B • It shows ownership, family, or description • It can link places and people: 学校の先生 • It is one of the most common particles For example, “私の本” means “my book.” “田中さんのかばん” means “Tanaka-san’s bag.” The first noun tells you who or what the second noun belongs to. の can also show relationships beyond ownership. “日本の食べ物” means “Japanese food,” and “学校の図書館” means “the school’s library.” It can also connect a place and a person: “東京の友だち” (a friend in Tokyo). You can chain の to make longer phrases: “田中さんの妹の本” (Tanaka-san’s younger sister’s book). This is common, but keep it short as a beginner. If you remember just one rule, it is: place the owner or descriptor first, then の, then the main noun. This creates clear, natural noun phrases in Japanese.

Structure

Modèle
Noun A の Noun B
Noun AOwner or descriptor
Exemples: , 田中さん, 日本
Links the two nouns
Exemples:
Noun BMain noun
Exemples: , かばん, 先生

Exemples

Exemple 1
私の本です。
Watashi no hon desu.
It is my book.
Détail
I, me
possessive
book
ですis (polite)
Remarque: Basic possession
Exemple 2
田中さんのかばんは新しいです。
Tanaka-san no kaban wa atarashii desu.
Tanaka-san's bag is new.
Détail
田中さんMr./Ms. Tanaka
possessive
かばんbag
topic marker
新しいnew
ですis (polite)
Remarque: Owner + item
Exemple 3
日本の食べ物はおいしいです。
Nihon no tabemono wa oishii desu.
Japanese food is tasty.
Détail
日本Japan
of
食べ物food
topic marker
おいしいtasty
ですis (polite)
Remarque: Relationship (country + food)
Exemple 4
学校の先生です。
Gakkou no sensei desu.
(He/She is) a school teacher.
Détail
学校school
of
先生teacher
ですis (polite)
Remarque: Place + person role

Grammaire Connexe