Master How to Say : More than, As not as in Japanese
Comparing things is something we do all the time — whether we’re talking about food, weather, or preferences. In Japanese, there are a few simple but powerful structures you can use to express comparisons. In this post, we’ll break down three essential comparison expressions: ~より (yori), ~のほうが (no hoo ga), and ~ほど (hodo). Let’s dive in!
1. ~より: “More than”
~より is used to show what something is being compared against.
✅ Structure:
A は B より + adjective
This means “A is more ___ than B.”
🔸 Example:
- 東京は大阪より大きいです。 → Tokyo is bigger than Osaka.
- このりんごはそのりんごよりあまいです。 → This apple is sweeter than that apple.
2. ~のほうが: “More”
~のほうが puts emphasis on the thing that has the stronger quality.
✅ Structure:
A のほうが B より + adjective
This is essentially the same as the above structure, but it puts more focus on A.
🔸 Example:
- 東京のほうが大阪より大きいです。
→ Tokyo is bigger than Osaka (with more emphasis on Tokyo). - 日本のほうがアメリカより安全です。
→ Japan is safer than America.
Note: You can also just say A のほうが + adjective when the comparison is already clear.
- サッカーのほうが好きです。
→ I prefer soccer. (Implied: more than something else, like baseball.)
3. ~ほど: “Not as… as” (Negative Comparison)
~ほど is used in negative sentences to say “not as ___ as ___.”
✅ Structure:
A は B ほど + negative form of adjective
This means “A is not as ___ as B.”
🔸 Example:
- 東京は大阪ほど暑くないです。
→ Tokyo is not as hot as Osaka. - このテストは前のテストほど難しくなかったです。
→ This test wasn’t as hard as the last one.
📝 Comparison Chart
| Expression | Meaning | Example | Translation |
|---|---|---|---|
| A は B より~ | A is more ___ than B | パンはごはんよりやすい | Bread is cheaper than rice |
| A のほうが B より~ | A is more ___ than B (emphasizing A) | 犬のほうが猫よりかわいい | Dogs are cuter than cats |
| A は B ほど~ない | A is not as ___ as B | 英語は日本語ほど難しくない | English is not as hard as Japanese |
🎯 Practice Time!
Try making your own comparison sentences using the following prompts:
- Compare two cities you know.
→ (____は____よりにぎやかです。) - Compare two foods you like.
→ (____のほうが____よりおいしいです。) - Make a negative comparison about food.
→ (____は____ほどおいしくないです。)
💡 Quick Tips
- You can use どちらのほうが to ask “Which one is better?”
- どちらのほうが安いですか? → Which one is cheaper?
- For casual speech, you can drop the です at the end:
- 東京のほうが暑いよ。
- When comparing more than two things, use いちばん (the most):
- この中で、りんごがいちばん好きです。 → Among these, I like apples the most.
📌 Summary
| Grammar | Use |
| ~より | To say something is more ___ than something else |
| ~のほうが | To emphasize the thing that is more ___ |
| ~ほど~ない | To say something is not as ___ as something else |
Let’s keep practicing comparing things in Japanese! The more you use these patterns, the more natural they’ll feel.
Which do you like better: summer or winter? Try saying it in Japanese using what you learned today!
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