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JLPT N4 — Grammar Patterns for the JLPT Exam
N4 introduces significantly more grammar complexity than N5. Key patterns include: て-form connections (〜てから/after doing, 〜ている/ongoing state), conditional forms (〜たら/if, 〜ば/if), ability expressions (〜ことができる/can do), and experience expressions (〜たことがある/have experienced). These form the backbone of everyday Japanese.
Locale-specific study guides
Pass-rate data, regulatory context, and study tips for JLPT N4 — Grammar Patterns all change by candidate locale. Pick your context:
- JLPT N4 — Grammar Patterns · United StatesCalibrated for American candidates
- JLPT N4 — Grammar Patterns · United KingdomCalibrated for British candidates
- JLPT N4 — Grammar Patterns · IndiaCalibrated for Indian candidates
- JLPT N4 — Grammar Patterns · PhilippinesCalibrated for Filipino candidates
- JLPT N4 — Grammar Patterns · NigeriaCalibrated for Nigerian candidates
Common failure modes
These are the patterns that cause most candidates to lose marks on this topic. Recognising them in advance is half the work.
- !Confusing the usage of different conditional forms (〜たら vs 〜ば vs 〜と)
- !Incorrect て-form conjugation of irregular verbs (する→して, くる→きて)
- !Mixing up 〜ている (ongoing action vs resulting state)
Study tips
- 1Master the て-form for all verb types — it is needed for at least 10 important N4 grammar patterns.
- 2Drill each conditional pattern with 5 example sentences before moving to the next.
- 3Use the Genki II textbook grammar sections for comprehensive N4 pattern coverage.
Sample JLPT JLPT N4 — Grammar Patterns questions
These sample items mirror the format and difficulty of real JLPT questions. Practice with thousands more on the free Koydo question bank.
- 1
Which sentence correctly uses 〜たことがある to express past experience?
- A日本に行くことがあります。
- B日本に行ったことがあります。Correct
- C日本に行ていることがあります。
- D日本に行きたいことがあります。
Why this answer?
"〜たことがある" (ta-koto-ga-aru) expresses having experienced something. The verb must be in the past tense (た-form): "行った" (itta/went) + ことがあります = "I have been to Japan." Using the plain form (行く) is incorrect for this pattern.
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