Japanese Past Tense for -i Adjectives (in romaji) (Pt. 2)

Since I personally focus on speaking Japanese and use romaji to learn, this post will only cover the spoken side; no hiragana, katakana, or kanji here. If you’re learning to read Japanese, I recommend using other resources or asking ChatGPT for guidance.
(Feel free to check out the r/languagelearning and r/LearnJapanese subreddits for extra resources or recommendations).

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This is the second part of the past tense series focusing on -i adjectives in Japanese. In this post, we’ll cover both past and negative past tense forms.

Since I’m only using romaji here, it’s easier to recognize -i adjectives compared to na-adjectives, especially when using hiragana. While most -i adjectives end with -i, be aware that a few na-adjectives also end in -i (like kirei or yuumei), so they can be tricky.

πŸ”— If you haven’t learned how to make the negative form of -i adjectives yet, check out my post on that first!
πŸ‘‰ Japanese negations for adjectives


βœ… How to Form the Past Tense of -i Adjectives

To turn an -i adjective into past tense:

  • Drop the final -i
  • Add -katta

If you want to make it polite, add desu at the end of your sentence.

βœ… Examples:

  • aoi β†’ aokatta (blue β†’ was blue)
  • abunai β†’ abunakatta (dangerous β†’ was dangerous)
  • ii β†’ yokatta (good β†’ was good)
    • Note: ii becomes yoi when conjugated!
  • osoi β†’ osokatta (slow β†’ was slow)
  • karui β†’ karukatta (light β†’ was light)
  • suzushii β†’ suzushikatta (cool β†’ was cool, used for temperature/weather)

πŸ“ Sentence Examples (Past Tense):

  • Tabeta no sushi wa mazukatta. – The sushi I ate tasted bad.
  • Nii-chan no heya wa kitanakatta. – My brother’s room was dirty.
  • Ano eiga wa tsumanakatta. – That movie was boring.
  • Gakkou no kyoushitsu wa hirokatta. – The school classroom was spacious.
  • Oba-chan wa yasashikatta. – Grandma was kind.
  • Ahh, atarashii no Pokemon gemu ga hoshikatta. – Ahh, I wanted that new PokΓ©mon game.

❌ How to Form the Negative Past Tense of -i Adjectives

This is a two-step process:

  1. Change the -i to kunai (present negative)
  2. Then drop the final -i in kunai and add -katta
    β†’ You’ll get kunakatta

❌ Examples:

  • isogashii β†’ isogashikunai β†’ isogashikunakatta
    (busy β†’ not busy β†’ was not busy)
  • kurai β†’ kurakunai β†’ kurakunakatta
    (dark β†’ not dark β†’ was not dark)
  • takai β†’ takakunai β†’ takakunakatta
    (expensive β†’ not expensive β†’ was not expensive)
  • sabishii β†’ sabishikunai β†’ sabishikunakatta
    (lonely β†’ not lonely β†’ was not lonely)
  • itai β†’ itakunai β†’ itakunakatta
    (painful β†’ not painful β†’ was not painful)
  • yowai β†’ yowakunai β†’ yowakunakatta
    (weak β†’ not weak β†’ was not weak)

πŸ“ Sentence Examples (Negative Past Tense):

  • Ano kuma wa ookikunakatta.
    β†’ That bear was not big.
  • Yuenchi ni ita wa tanoshikunakatta to omou.
    β†’ I think the amusement park I went to wasn’t fun.
  • Kaze wa tsuyokunakatta.
    β†’ The wind wasn’t strong.
  • Watashi no neko wa kowakunakatta.
    β†’ My cat wasn’t scared.
  • Eki wa tooikunakatta.
    β†’ The station wasn’t far.
  • Ano hon wa omoshirokunakatta.
    β†’ That book wasn’t interesting.

🧾 Summary

βœ… Past Tense:

Drop -i, add -katta
πŸ”Ή Example: omoshiroi β†’ omoshirokatta

❌ Negative Past Tense:

Change -i to kunai, then kunai β†’ kunakatta
πŸ”Ή Example: takai β†’ takakunai β†’ takakunakatta

πŸ”Ή Add desu for polite sentences

This is one of the most essential patterns in Japanese, especially when describing things or people in the past. It gets easier with practice, and since pronunciation isn’t tone-sensitive like Chinese, don’t worry too much about stressing the endings, just make sure it’s clear in writing, especially if you ever switch to hiragana.


🧱 Why I Learn This Way

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