Week 1 · understand & speak · Day 3 of 100

Saying what you like

This is where it gets personal — and personal is what sticks. Today you say what you like with one of the most-used patterns in the language: ___ が すきです.

Understand this — tap “Hear it”
watashi wa すし ga すき desu
I like sushi.
わたし watashi — I wa — (topic)すし sushi — sushi ga — (subject)すき suki — likeです desu — is
neko ga すき desu
I like cats.
ねこ neko — cat ga — (subject)すき suki — likeです desu — is
koohii ga daisuki desu
I love coffee.
コーヒー koohii — coffee ga — (subject)だいすき daisuki — loveです desu — is
The pattern you can now use
___ が すきです
___ ga suki desu
I like ___.

すき literally means “liked / likeable,” so it behaves like an adjective and takes です — not a verb. The thing you like gets marked with が. Want to say you really love something? Swap すき for だいすき.

Words to use today — tap a row to hear
koohii koohiicoffee
ocha ochatea
ongaku ongakumusic
eiga eigamovies
inu inudogs
nihon nihonJapan
すき sukilike
daisuki daisukilove
Your turn — say it, then check
Say: “I like dogs.”
inu ga すき desu inu ga suki desu
Say: “I like music.”
ongaku ga すき desu ongaku ga suki desu
Say: “I love Japan.”
nihon ga daisuki desu nihon ga daisuki desu
Quick check
Which particle marks the thing you like?
Why does すき take です, not a verb ending?
because すき acts like an adjective (“liked”), not a verb
⤷ Kana side-quest — ~2 min · tap to hear, watch the strokes
sa
shi
su
se
so
ta
chi
tsu
te
to

Drill these in the quiz →

👀 Today’s input · ~5 min — where fluency actually comes from
Train your ears
You can’t read much yet — so listen. Put on one “Complete Beginner” video from Comprehensible Japanese: all visual, all Japanese, zero English. You’ll understand more than you’d expect, and this is where real fluency actually comes from — a little every day.
Comprehensible Japanese — Complete Beginner (free, YouTube) →

Notice すし and すき are showing up in real characters now — your reading is catching up to your speaking. Tomorrow: asking for what you want.

Audio by your browser.