[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":-1},["ShallowReactive",2],{"blog-article-local-japanese-grammar-n3-complete-guide":3,"$fHZsWYl_LcdVZ5GxKwtR-ZqvCZbbUdo2_Fi6R_GQKiQM":4,"blog-article-cms-japanese-grammar-n3-complete-guide":6,"article-hreflang-japanese-grammar-n3-complete-guide":786,"blog-article-related-japanese-grammar-n3-complete-guide":787},null,{"approximate_member_count":5},20561,{"id":7,"documentId":8,"title":9,"description":10,"timestampUnix":11,"slug":12,"h1":13,"image":14,"tags":20,"lang":3,"body":23,"createdAt":780,"updatedAt":781,"publishedAt":782,"category":783,"featured":784,"timestamp":785,"locale":-1,"_dir":783},2829,"b1x86tnh85ta3hojmj36zspa","Basic Grammar Points You Need for JLPT N3 (Complete Guide)","Pass Japanese N3 with this breakdown of the basic grammar patterns, study strategies, and practice tips for JLPT N3 learners.","1771160400000","japanese-grammar-n3-complete-guide","Japanese Grammar Points You Need for JLPT N3 (Complete Guide)",{"alt":15,"src":16,"width":17,"height":18,"previewOnly":19},"All the grammar points you need for JLPT N3 - Banner","https:\u002F\u002Fmigaku-cms-assets.migaku.com\u002FScreenshot_2026_02_16_024013_73716e18db\u002FScreenshot_2026_02_16_024013_73716e18db.png",1000,316,false,[21,22],"fundamentals","grammar",{"data":24,"body":27,"toc":759},{"title":25,"description":26},"","So you've passed N4 and now you're staring down the barrel of JLPT N3 in your Japanese learning. Here's the thing: N3 is where Japanese gets real. You're moving past basic tourist phrases into grammar that lets you actually express nuanced thoughts. The test covers around 180-200 grammar points, and yeah, that sounds like a lot. But most of them build on patterns you already know from N4 and N5. This guide breaks down everything you need to master for the test, organized by category so you can actually make sense of it all.",{"type":28,"children":29},"root",[30,58,62,66,73,93,107,114,119,125,130,155,158,164,169,175,196,249,255,266,271,293,310,316,321,368,374,413,430,436,459,470,476,498,514,519,538,544,573,584,587,593,598,603,608,611,617,622,665,668,674,679,706,711,719,725,728,734,739,754],{"type":31,"tag":32,"props":33,"children":34},"element","p",{},[35,38,47,49,56],{"type":36,"value":37},"text","So you've passed N4 and now you're staring down the barrel of JLPT N3 in your ",{"type":31,"tag":39,"props":40,"children":44},"a",{"href":41,"rel":42},"https:\u002F\u002Fmigaku.com\u002Flearn-japanese",[43],"nofollow",[45],{"type":36,"value":46},"Japanese learning",{"type":36,"value":48},". Here's the thing: N3 is where Japanese gets real. You're moving past ",{"type":31,"tag":39,"props":50,"children":53},{"href":51,"rel":52},"https:\u002F\u002Fmigaku.com\u002Fblog\u002Fjapanese\u002Fbasic-japanese-phrases",[43],[54],{"type":36,"value":55},"basic tourist phrases",{"type":36,"value":57}," into grammar that lets you actually express nuanced thoughts. The test covers around 180-200 grammar points, and yeah, that sounds like a lot. But most of them build on patterns you already know from N4 and N5. This guide breaks down everything you need to master for the test, organized by category so you can actually make sense of it all.",{"type":31,"tag":59,"props":60,"children":61},"toc",{},[],{"type":31,"tag":63,"props":64,"children":65},"hr",{},[],{"type":31,"tag":67,"props":68,"children":70},"h2",{"id":69},"what-is-n3-level-of-japanese-kanji-vocabulary-and-grammar-knowledge",[71],{"type":36,"value":72},"What is N3 level of Japanese: Kanji, vocabulary, and grammar knowledge",{"type":31,"tag":32,"props":74,"children":75},{},[76,78,84,86,91],{"type":36,"value":77},"N3 sits right in the middle of the JLPT scale, and it's kind of the gatekeeper level. You need to understand about ",{"type":31,"tag":79,"props":80,"children":81},"strong",{},[82],{"type":36,"value":83},"650 JLPT kanji",{"type":36,"value":85}," and ",{"type":31,"tag":79,"props":87,"children":88},{},[89],{"type":36,"value":90},"3,700 vocabulary words",{"type":36,"value":92},". More importantly, you should be able to read everyday materials, follow conversations at near-natural speed, and express yourself beyond just basic needs.",{"type":31,"tag":32,"props":94,"children":95},{},[96,98,105],{"type":36,"value":97},"The test expects you to comprehend written materials about everyday topics, understand newspaper headlines, and follow slightly complicated instructions. You're looking at around 70 hours of study material if you're coming from N4, though that varies wildly depending on your ",{"type":31,"tag":39,"props":99,"children":102},{"href":100,"rel":101},"https:\u002F\u002Fmigaku.com\u002Fblog\u002Fjapanese\u002Fhow-a-university-student-learns-japanese",[43],[103],{"type":36,"value":104},"learning style",{"type":36,"value":106},".",{"type":31,"tag":108,"props":109,"children":111},"h3",{"id":110},"is-jlpt-n3-considered-fluent",[112],{"type":36,"value":113},"Is JLPT N3 considered fluent",{"type":31,"tag":32,"props":115,"children":116},{},[117],{"type":36,"value":118},"Not really. You're at an intermediate level where you can handle daily life in Japan and have real conversations, but you'd still struggle with news broadcasts, business meetings, or academic texts. Think of it as conversational competence rather than fluency.",{"type":31,"tag":108,"props":120,"children":122},{"id":121},"is-it-hard-to-master-japanese-n3",[123],{"type":36,"value":124},"Is it hard to master Japanese N3",{"type":31,"tag":32,"props":126,"children":127},{},[128],{"type":36,"value":129},"Yeah, N3 has a reputation for being tough. The jump from N4 to N3 is bigger than N5 to N4 was. You're dealing with way more grammar patterns that look similar but mean different things. The listening section speeds up considerably, and the reading passages get longer with more complex sentence structures.",{"type":31,"tag":32,"props":131,"children":132},{},[133,135,141,143,147,149,153],{"type":36,"value":134},"The pass rate hovers around 40-45%, which tells you something. But here's what makes it challenging: the grammar points start overlapping in meaning. You'll see patterns like ",{"type":31,"tag":136,"props":137,"children":140},"typo",{"lang":138,"syntax":139},"ja","ために[ために;h]",[],{"type":36,"value":142},", ",{"type":31,"tag":136,"props":144,"children":146},{"lang":138,"syntax":145},"ように[ように;h]",[],{"type":36,"value":148},", and ",{"type":31,"tag":136,"props":150,"children":152},{"lang":138,"syntax":151},"ような[ような;h]",[],{"type":36,"value":154}," that all express purpose or comparison but in slightly different contexts. Getting those nuances right takes practice.",{"type":31,"tag":63,"props":156,"children":157},{},[],{"type":31,"tag":67,"props":159,"children":161},{"id":160},"essential-jlpt-n3-grammar-points-by-category",[162],{"type":36,"value":163},"Essential JLPT N3 grammar points by category",{"type":31,"tag":32,"props":165,"children":166},{},[167],{"type":36,"value":168},"Here is the breakdown of the basic grammar categories you'll encounter. The JLPT N3 grammar list includes roughly 180 distinct patterns, and they fall into some clear groups.",{"type":31,"tag":108,"props":170,"children":172},{"id":171},"conditional-forms-and-hypotheticals-in-japanese-grammar",[173],{"type":36,"value":174},"Conditional forms and hypotheticals in Japanese grammar",{"type":31,"tag":32,"props":176,"children":177},{},[178,180,184,185,189,190,194],{"type":36,"value":179},"Conditionals are huge at N3 level. You've got your basic ",{"type":31,"tag":136,"props":181,"children":183},{"lang":138,"syntax":182},"たら[たら;h]",[],{"type":36,"value":142},{"type":31,"tag":136,"props":186,"children":188},{"lang":138,"syntax":187},"ば[ば;h]",[],{"type":36,"value":148},{"type":31,"tag":136,"props":191,"children":193},{"lang":138,"syntax":192},"と[と;h]",[],{"type":36,"value":195}," forms, but N3 adds complexity.",{"type":31,"tag":197,"props":198,"children":199},"ul",{},[200,216,233],{"type":31,"tag":201,"props":202,"children":203},"li",{},[204,208,210,214],{"type":31,"tag":136,"props":205,"children":207},{"lang":138,"syntax":206},"場合[ばあい;h]",[],{"type":36,"value":209},"\n (baai) means \"in the case of\" and shows up constantly. Example: \n",{"type":31,"tag":136,"props":211,"children":213},{"lang":138,"syntax":212},"雨[あめ;h]の 場合[ばあい;h]、中止[ちゅうし;h] します[します;h]",[],{"type":36,"value":215},"\n (In case of rain, we'll cancel).\n",{"type":31,"tag":201,"props":217,"children":218},{},[219,221,225,227,231],{"type":36,"value":220},"You'll also see ",{"type":31,"tag":136,"props":222,"children":224},{"lang":138,"syntax":223},"限り[かぎり;h]",[],{"type":36,"value":226}," (kagiri) for \"as long as\" conditions and ",{"type":31,"tag":136,"props":228,"children":230},{"lang":138,"syntax":229},"ない限り[かぎり;h]",[],{"type":36,"value":232}," for \"unless.\"",{"type":31,"tag":201,"props":234,"children":235},{},[236,238,242,244,247],{"type":36,"value":237},"The pattern ",{"type":31,"tag":136,"props":239,"children":241},{"lang":138,"syntax":240},"としたら[としたら;h]",[],{"type":36,"value":243}," adds a hypothetical nuance that's more tentative than regular ",{"type":31,"tag":136,"props":245,"children":246},{"lang":138,"syntax":182},[],{"type":36,"value":248},". These subtle differences matter for the test.",{"type":31,"tag":108,"props":250,"children":252},{"id":251},"causative-and-passive-forms",[253],{"type":36,"value":254},"Causative and passive forms",{"type":31,"tag":32,"props":256,"children":257},{},[258,260,264],{"type":36,"value":259},"This is where students trip up. The causative-passive (",{"type":31,"tag":136,"props":261,"children":263},{"lang":138,"syntax":262},"させられる[させられる;h]",[],{"type":36,"value":265},") combines both meanings: being made to do something.",{"type":31,"tag":32,"props":267,"children":268},{},[269],{"type":36,"value":270},"Example sentences help here:",{"type":31,"tag":197,"props":272,"children":273},{},[274],{"type":31,"tag":201,"props":275,"children":276},{},[277,281,283,287],{"type":31,"tag":136,"props":278,"children":280},{"lang":138,"syntax":279},"子供[こども;h]の 時[とき;h]、ピアノを 習[なら;h] わせられました[わせられました;h]",[],{"type":36,"value":282},"\n \n",{"type":31,"tag":284,"props":285,"children":286},"br",{},[],{"type":31,"tag":288,"props":289,"children":290},"em",{},[291],{"type":36,"value":292},"When I was a kid, I was made to learn piano.",{"type":31,"tag":32,"props":294,"children":295},{},[296,298,302,304,308],{"type":36,"value":297},"Regular causatives (",{"type":31,"tag":136,"props":299,"children":301},{"lang":138,"syntax":300},"させる[させる;h]",[],{"type":36,"value":303},") express making someone do something, while passives (",{"type":31,"tag":136,"props":305,"children":307},{"lang":138,"syntax":306},"られる[られる;h]",[],{"type":36,"value":309},") show receiving an action. N3 expects you to use these naturally in various contexts, including the suffering passive where something unpleasant happens to you.",{"type":31,"tag":108,"props":311,"children":313},{"id":312},"expressing-purpose-and-reason",[314],{"type":36,"value":315},"Expressing purpose and reason",{"type":31,"tag":32,"props":317,"children":318},{},[319],{"type":36,"value":320},"Purpose patterns multiply at this level.",{"type":31,"tag":197,"props":322,"children":323},{},[324,332,340,357],{"type":31,"tag":201,"props":325,"children":326},{},[327,330],{"type":31,"tag":136,"props":328,"children":329},{"lang":138,"syntax":139},[],{"type":36,"value":331},"\n works for both \"for the purpose of\" and \"because of,\" depending on whether it follows a verb or noun.\n",{"type":31,"tag":201,"props":333,"children":334},{},[335,338],{"type":31,"tag":136,"props":336,"children":337},{"lang":138,"syntax":145},[],{"type":36,"value":339},"\n expresses purpose with potential verbs or negative forms.\n",{"type":31,"tag":201,"props":341,"children":342},{},[343,345,349,351,355],{"type":36,"value":344},"Then you've got ",{"type":31,"tag":136,"props":346,"children":348},{"lang":138,"syntax":347},"おかげで[おかげで;h]",[],{"type":36,"value":350}," for positive results and ",{"type":31,"tag":136,"props":352,"children":354},{"lang":138,"syntax":353},"せいで[せいで;h]",[],{"type":36,"value":356}," for negative ones.",{"type":31,"tag":201,"props":358,"children":359},{},[360,362,366],{"type":36,"value":361},"The grammar point ",{"type":31,"tag":136,"props":363,"children":365},{"lang":138,"syntax":364},"上[うえ;h] で[で;h]",[],{"type":36,"value":367}," means \"after doing\" or \"for the purpose of\" depending on context. Yeah, it gets messy.",{"type":31,"tag":108,"props":369,"children":371},{"id":370},"giving-and-receiving-verbs",[372],{"type":36,"value":373},"Giving and receiving verbs",{"type":31,"tag":32,"props":375,"children":376},{},[377,379,383,384,388,389,393,395,399,401,405,407,411],{"type":36,"value":378},"The Japanese system of ",{"type":31,"tag":136,"props":380,"children":382},{"lang":138,"syntax":381},"あげる[あげる;h]",[],{"type":36,"value":142},{"type":31,"tag":136,"props":385,"children":387},{"lang":138,"syntax":386},"くれる[くれる;h]",[],{"type":36,"value":148},{"type":31,"tag":136,"props":390,"children":392},{"lang":138,"syntax":391},"もらう[もらう;h]",[],{"type":36,"value":394}," extends to grammar patterns at N3. You'll see ",{"type":31,"tag":136,"props":396,"children":398},{"lang":138,"syntax":397},"てあげる[てあげる;h]",[],{"type":36,"value":400}," (Doing something for someone), ",{"type":31,"tag":136,"props":402,"children":404},{"lang":138,"syntax":403},"てくれる[てくれる;h]",[],{"type":36,"value":406}," (Someone doing something for you), and ",{"type":31,"tag":136,"props":408,"children":410},{"lang":138,"syntax":409},"てもらう[てもらう;h]",[],{"type":36,"value":412}," (Receiving a favor).",{"type":31,"tag":32,"props":414,"children":415},{},[416,418,422,424,428],{"type":36,"value":417},"The nuance matters. ",{"type":31,"tag":136,"props":419,"children":421},{"lang":138,"syntax":420},"手伝[てつだ;h]って あげた[あげた;h]",[],{"type":36,"value":423}," (I helped them) versus ",{"type":31,"tag":136,"props":425,"children":427},{"lang":138,"syntax":426},"手伝[てつだ;h]って くれた[くれた;h]",[],{"type":36,"value":429}," (They helped me) changes the whole sentence meaning. The test loves checking if you understand these perspectives.",{"type":31,"tag":108,"props":431,"children":433},{"id":432},"expressing-change-and-progression",[434],{"type":36,"value":435},"Expressing change and progression",{"type":31,"tag":32,"props":437,"children":438},{},[439,441,445,447,451,453,457],{"type":36,"value":440},"Patterns showing change include ",{"type":31,"tag":136,"props":442,"children":444},{"lang":138,"syntax":443},"ようになる[ようになる;h]",[],{"type":36,"value":446}," (To reach a point where), ",{"type":31,"tag":136,"props":448,"children":450},{"lang":138,"syntax":449},"ことになる[ことになる;h]",[],{"type":36,"value":452}," (It has been decided that), and ",{"type":31,"tag":136,"props":454,"children":456},{"lang":138,"syntax":455},"ことにする[ことにする;h]",[],{"type":36,"value":458}," (To decide to).",{"type":31,"tag":32,"props":460,"children":461},{},[462,464,468],{"type":36,"value":463},"つつある shows gradual change in progress, while ",{"type":31,"tag":136,"props":465,"children":467},{"lang":138,"syntax":466},"ばかり[ばかり;h]",[],{"type":36,"value":469}," indicates something just happened. These progression markers help you describe timelines and developments naturally.",{"type":31,"tag":108,"props":471,"children":473},{"id":472},"comparison-and-similarity",[474],{"type":36,"value":475},"Comparison and similarity",{"type":31,"tag":32,"props":477,"children":478},{},[479,481,485,487,490,492,496],{"type":36,"value":480},"N3 introduces sophisticated comparison patterns. ",{"type":31,"tag":136,"props":482,"children":484},{"lang":138,"syntax":483},"ほど[ほど;h]",[],{"type":36,"value":486}," shows extent (Not as much as), ",{"type":31,"tag":136,"props":488,"children":489},{"lang":138,"syntax":151},[],{"type":36,"value":491}," means \"like\" or \"similar to,\" and ",{"type":31,"tag":136,"props":493,"children":495},{"lang":138,"syntax":494},"みたい[みたい;h]",[],{"type":36,"value":497}," works as a casual comparison.",{"type":31,"tag":32,"props":499,"children":500},{},[501,502,506,508,512],{"type":36,"value":237},{"type":31,"tag":136,"props":503,"children":505},{"lang":138,"syntax":504},"に 比[くら;h] べて[べて;h]",[],{"type":36,"value":507}," directly compares two things, while ",{"type":31,"tag":136,"props":509,"children":511},{"lang":138,"syntax":510},"によって[によって;h]",[],{"type":36,"value":513}," shows variation depending on circumstances.",{"type":31,"tag":32,"props":515,"children":516},{},[517],{"type":36,"value":518},"Example:",{"type":31,"tag":197,"props":520,"children":521},{},[522],{"type":31,"tag":201,"props":523,"children":524},{},[525,529,530,533],{"type":31,"tag":136,"props":526,"children":528},{"lang":138,"syntax":527},"人[ひと;h] によって 意見[いけん;h]が 違[ちが;h] う[う;h]",[],{"type":36,"value":282},{"type":31,"tag":284,"props":531,"children":532},{},[],{"type":31,"tag":288,"props":534,"children":535},{},[536],{"type":36,"value":537},"Opinions differ depending on the person.",{"type":31,"tag":108,"props":539,"children":541},{"id":540},"obligation-and-suggestion",[542],{"type":36,"value":543},"Obligation and suggestion",{"type":31,"tag":32,"props":545,"children":546},{},[547,549,553,555,559,561,565,567,571],{"type":36,"value":548},"Beyond basic ",{"type":31,"tag":136,"props":550,"children":552},{"lang":138,"syntax":551},"なければならない[なければならない;h]",[],{"type":36,"value":554},", N3 adds softer obligations. ",{"type":31,"tag":136,"props":556,"children":558},{"lang":138,"syntax":557},"べき[べき;h]",[],{"type":36,"value":560}," expresses \"should\" based on moral obligation or common sense. ",{"type":31,"tag":136,"props":562,"children":564},{"lang":138,"syntax":563},"ことだ[ことだ;h]",[],{"type":36,"value":566}," gives advice, and ",{"type":31,"tag":136,"props":568,"children":570},{"lang":138,"syntax":569},"たらどう[たらどう;h]",[],{"type":36,"value":572}," makes suggestions.",{"type":31,"tag":32,"props":574,"children":575},{},[576,578,582],{"type":36,"value":577},"The negative ",{"type":31,"tag":136,"props":579,"children":581},{"lang":138,"syntax":580},"べきではない[べきではない;h]",[],{"type":36,"value":583}," means \"shouldn't,\" which is stronger than just saying something isn't necessary. These gradations of obligation show up frequently in reading passages.",{"type":31,"tag":63,"props":585,"children":586},{},[],{"type":31,"tag":67,"props":588,"children":590},{"id":589},"exam-structure-and-scoring-requirements",[591],{"type":36,"value":592},"Exam structure and scoring requirements",{"type":31,"tag":32,"props":594,"children":595},{},[596],{"type":36,"value":597},"The JLPT N3 test runs 140 minutes total, split into three sections. Language Knowledge (Vocabulary\u002FGrammar) takes 30 minutes, Reading gets 70 minutes, and Listening takes 40 minutes. You need to score at least 95 points out of 180 total to pass, but there's a catch: you also need to hit minimum scores in each section.",{"type":31,"tag":32,"props":599,"children":600},{},[601],{"type":36,"value":602},"The grammar section mixes multiple choice questions testing individual grammar points with longer passages where you choose the right particle or conjugation. They love testing similar patterns against each other, so you really need to understand the nuances.",{"type":31,"tag":32,"props":604,"children":605},{},[606],{"type":36,"value":607},"Scoring works on a scaled system, so raw scores get adjusted. Generally, you want to aim for around 60% correct answers to feel safe, though the exact curve varies by test administration.",{"type":31,"tag":63,"props":609,"children":610},{},[],{"type":31,"tag":67,"props":612,"children":614},{"id":613},"study-strategies-and-common-mistakes",[615],{"type":36,"value":616},"Study strategies and common mistakes",{"type":31,"tag":32,"props":618,"children":619},{},[620],{"type":36,"value":621},"Here's what actually works for mastering N3 grammar.",{"type":31,"tag":623,"props":624,"children":625},"ol",{},[626,631,655,660],{"type":31,"tag":201,"props":627,"children":628},{},[629],{"type":36,"value":630},"First, stop trying to memorize grammar rules in isolation. You need to see them in context, multiple times, before they stick. Read example sentences out loud, write your own sentences using new patterns, and pay attention to which particles pair with which grammar points.",{"type":31,"tag":201,"props":632,"children":633},{},[634,636,639,640,643,645,648,650,653],{"type":36,"value":635},"Common mistakes include mixing up ",{"type":31,"tag":136,"props":637,"children":638},{"lang":138,"syntax":139},[],{"type":36,"value":85},{"type":31,"tag":136,"props":641,"children":642},{"lang":138,"syntax":145},[],{"type":36,"value":644}," for purpose, confusing ",{"type":31,"tag":136,"props":646,"children":647},{"lang":138,"syntax":449},[],{"type":36,"value":649}," with ",{"type":31,"tag":136,"props":651,"children":652},{"lang":138,"syntax":455},[],{"type":36,"value":654},", and using the wrong giving\u002Freceiving verb for the situation. These aren't random errors, they happen because the patterns overlap.",{"type":31,"tag":201,"props":656,"children":657},{},[658],{"type":36,"value":659},"Make comparison charts. Seriously, write out similar grammar points side by side with clear examples showing the difference. When you encounter a new pattern, immediately check if you already know something similar and note the distinction.",{"type":31,"tag":201,"props":661,"children":662},{},[663],{"type":36,"value":664},"Practice with full sentences, not just fill-in-the-blank exercises. The Japanese language proficiency test wants you to understand grammar in natural usage, which means reading passages and listening to conversations where multiple grammar points appear together.",{"type":31,"tag":63,"props":666,"children":667},{},[],{"type":31,"tag":67,"props":669,"children":671},{"id":670},"resources-to-practice-jlpt-n3-grammar-list",[672],{"type":36,"value":673},"Resources to practice JLPT N3 grammar list",{"type":31,"tag":32,"props":675,"children":676},{},[677],{"type":36,"value":678},"You need varied practice materials.",{"type":31,"tag":623,"props":680,"children":681},{},[682,696,701],{"type":31,"tag":201,"props":683,"children":684},{},[685,687,694],{"type":36,"value":686},"Official JLPT ",{"type":31,"tag":39,"props":688,"children":691},{"href":689,"rel":690},"https:\u002F\u002Fmigaku.com\u002Fblog\u002Fjapanese\u002Fbest-japanese-online-courses",[43],[692],{"type":36,"value":693},"practice tests",{"type":36,"value":695}," show you the exact question format and difficulty level. Do at least three full practice tests under timed conditions before your actual exam.",{"type":31,"tag":201,"props":697,"children":698},{},[699],{"type":36,"value":700},"Workbooks with dedicated grammar exercises help drill individual patterns, but balance that with reading practice using real Japanese materials. News articles written for learners, short stories, and manga all expose you to grammar in natural contexts.",{"type":31,"tag":201,"props":702,"children":703},{},[704],{"type":36,"value":705},"Online resources offer thousands of practice questions. Look for ones that explain why wrong answers are wrong, which helps you understand the distinctions between similar patterns. Video explanations can clarify tricky concepts when text descriptions don't click.",{"type":31,"tag":32,"props":707,"children":708},{},[709],{"type":36,"value":710},"Anyway, if you want to practice these grammar points with real Japanese content, Migaku's browser extension and app let you look up words and grammar patterns instantly while watching shows or reading articles. Makes immersion learning way more practical. 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