Genki Grammar #20: Describing Where Things Are

Cover of "Genki Grammar #20: Describing Where Things Are," illustrating Japanese grammar points for describing the location of objects on a table.
Photo by Elio Santos on Unsplash

Introduction

In our previous post on “koko/soko/asoko/doko,” we learned how to ask for and give the location of an item. Now, we’ll dive into describing the location of one item relative to another, like “X is in front of Y.”

What It Means

Describing locations involves using specific words to explain where something is in relation to something else. In Japanese, this structure is often “XはYのZです” (X wa Y no Z desu), where Z is the location word, meaning “X is [location word] Y.”

Here are some common location words and their positions in sentences:

  • (みぎ): to the right of
    XはYのです。
    (X wa Y no migi desu.)
    X is to the right of Y.
  • (ひだり): to the left of
    XはYのです。
    (X wa Y no hidari desu.)
    X is to the left of Y.
  • (まえ): in front of
    XはYのです。
    (X wa Y no mae desu.)
    X is in front of Y.
  • 後ろ (うしろ): behind
    XはYの後ろです。
    (X wa Y no ushiro desu.)
    X is behind Y.
  • (なか): inside
    XはYのです。
    (X wa Y no naka desu.)
    X is inside Y.
  • (うえ): on/above
    XはYのです。
    (X wa Y no ue desu.)
    X is on/above Y.
  • (した): under/beneath
    XはYのです。
    (X wa Y no shita desu.)
    X is under/beneath Y.
  • 近く (ちかく): near
    XはYの近くです。
    (X wa Y no chikaku desu.)
    X is near Y.
  • (となり): next to
    XはYのです。
    (X wa Y no tonari desu.)
    X is next to Y.
  • (あいだ): between
    XはYとZのです。
    (X wa Y to Z no aida desu.)
    X is between Y and Z.

When You Use It

You use these words to describe the precise location of one item relative to another. 

Examples:

  1. レストランはあのホテルのです。
    (Resutoran wa ano hoteru no mae desu.)
    The restaurant is in front of that hotel.
  2. スターバックスは図書館のとなりです。
    (Sutaabakkusu wa toshokan no tonari desu.)
    Starbucks is next to the library.
  3. かばんはテーブルのしたです。
    (Kaban wa teeburu no shita desu.)
    The bag is under the table.
  4. レストランはホテルと病院のです。
    (Resutoran wa hoteru to byouin no aida desu.)
    The restaurant is between the hotel and the hospital.

Note

  • そば (soba): Another word for “near,” commonly used like 近く (chikaku).
  • となり (tonari) vs. よこ (yoko):
    “Tonari” is used when two people, buildings, or places are next to each other. “Yoko” is used more broadly for things that are beside each other, not just people, buildings, or places.
  • You can use these location words with verbs to describe where an event happens. To do this, you need the particle で (de).
    私はデパートの前マリアさんを待ちました。
    (Watashi wa depaato no mae de Maria-san o machimashita.)
    I waited for Maria in front of the department store.

Conclusion

Understanding how to describe where things are in relation to each other helps you navigate and explain locations more accurately in Japanese.

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