GrammarN58 min read2026-02-13

これ vs この — The Complete Guide to Japanese Demonstratives

What's this? That book is mine. — Japanese has two sets of words for 'this/that/which': the これ series and the この series. Mix them up and your sentence breaks.

In English, "this" and "that" are all you need. Japanese takes pointing at things to a whole new level — not only do you distinguish between "this / that (near you) / that (over there) / which," but there are also two separate series with completely different grammar rules. Don't worry though — the rules are actually quite simple.

The Four-Distance System: コ・ソ・ア・ド

Japanese demonstratives are divided into four groups based on distance:

SeriesDistanceEnglish Equivalent
(ko)Near the speakerthis
(so)Near the listenerthat (near you)
(a)Far from boththat (over there)
(do)Unknown → questionwhich

Imagine you and a friend standing face to face:

  • Something is near you → use the series
  • Something is near your friend → use the series
  • Something is far away from both of you → use the series
  • You don't know where it is → use the series to ask

Two Series: これ vs この

Once you've got the distance sorted, here's the most important distinction: the これ series and the この series follow completely different rules.

これ・それ・あれ・どれ: Stand-alone use

This set directly refers to things and cannot be followed by a noun. They can only be followed by particles or です.

これ + は / も / です …

JapaneseEnglish
これは本です。This is a book.
それは私のです。That is mine.
あれは何ですか。What is that (over there)?
どれですか。Which one is it?

この・その・あの・どの: Must be followed by a noun

This set must be immediately followed by a noun, like English "this book," "that dog," "which one."

この + noun

JapaneseEnglish
この本は私のです。This book is mine.
その辞書は山田さんのです。That dictionary is Yamada's.
あの犬は大きいです。That dog (over there) is big.
どの鍵ですか。Which key is it?

The Core Rule in One Table

Stand-alone (+ particle/です)Before a noun
Near (this)これこの + noun
Middle (that)それその + noun
Far (that)あれあの + noun
Question (which)どれどの + noun

Memory trick: Ends in れ = stands alone; ends in の = needs a noun.

Common Mistakes

Many beginners make this error:

WrongCorrectWhy
これ本この本これ cannot directly precede a noun
このですこれですこの must be followed by a noun

Here are three sentences to feel the difference when saying "this book is mine":

  1. この本は私のです。 → This book is mine. (この + 本)
  2. これは私の本です。 → This is my book. (これ + は)
  3. 先生の本はこれです。 → The teacher's book is this one. (これ + です)

All three mean roughly the same thing, but notice how これ/この are placed differently depending on what follows them.

あの人 vs あの方

When referring to someone in the distance, both あの人 (あのひと) and あの方 (あのかた) work:

JapaneseRegisterEnglish
あの人は誰ですか。CasualWho is that person?
あの方はどなたですか。PoliteWho is that person? (formal)

方 (かた) is the polite form of 人 (ひと). Use あの方 in formal situations or when speaking about someone senior.

を + お願いします: Making requests with demonstratives

Once you know demonstratives, combining them with request phrases lets you order food, ask for things, and more:

これをお願いします。 → This one, please.

The particle marks "the thing you want," and お願いします means "please / I'd like":

JapaneseEnglish
503室の鍵をお願いします。Room 503's key, please.
このノートをお願いします。This notebook, please.

Summary

  • これ/それ/あれ/どれ: Stand-alone use, followed by particles or です — cannot directly precede a noun
  • この/その/あの/どの: Must be immediately followed by a noun — cannot stand alone
  • Four distances: コ (near me), ソ (near you), ア (far away), ド (which → question)
  • 方 (かた) is the polite version of 人 (ひと)
  • ~をお願いします is a universal request phrase — combine it with demonstratives for shopping and hotel situations

Practice

Q1. How do you say "This book is mine" in Japanese? (Hint: "book" is a noun that follows the demonstrative)

Show Answer

この本は私のです。

Since "book" is a noun, use この (not これ). この本 (this book) + は + 私の (mine) + です.

Q2. Which sentence is correct? A. これ本は私のです。 B. これは私の本です。

Show Answer

B is correct.

A is wrong — これ cannot directly precede the noun 本. To say "this book," you need この本. In sentence B, これ is followed by the particle は, so it's grammatically fine.

Q3. At a hotel, how do you ask for the key to room 503?

Show Answer

503室の鍵をお願いします。

503室の鍵 (room 503's key) + を (marks the requested object) + お願いします (please).

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