You already know の as the possessive "of": 私の本 (my book). But の has another identity — as a formal noun (nominalizer) that turns verbs and adjectives into nouns, allowing them to take particles.
Why Do We Need Nominalization?
Japanese particles (は, が, を...) can only attach to nouns. If you want to say "I hate noisy things," there's a problem — "noisy" is an adjective and can't directly take は or が.
That's where の comes in:
うるさい + の → うるさいの (noisy things / the noisy one)
の transforms うるさい from an adjective into a noun, which can then take particles.
Basic Usage
Adjective + の
| Japanese | Structure | English |
|---|---|---|
| うるさいのは嫌いです。 | うるさい + の + は | Noisy things, I hate them. |
| うるさいのが嫌いです。 | うるさい + の + が | I hate noisy things. |
| 大きいのをください。 | 大きい + の + を | The big one, please. |
| 赤いのが好きです。 | 赤い + の + が | I like the red one. |
は vs が Review
Notice the first two examples — same meaning ("hate noise") but different nuance with は and が:
うるさいのは嫌いです。 → Noisy things, well, I hate them. (は sets topic, implies other things might be OK) うるさいのが嫌いです。 → I hate noisy things. (が marks object, neutral statement)
Verb + の
の can also nominalize verbs:
| Japanese | English |
|---|---|
| 食べるのが好きです。 | I like eating. |
| 走るのは大変です。 | Running is tough. |
| 泳ぐのが上手です。 | (Someone) is good at swimming. |
食べる (to eat) → 食べるの (the act of eating) → 食べるのが好きです (I like eating)
This の Is Not "of"
Be sure to distinguish the two identities of の:
| Usage | Example | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| Possessive (of) | 私の本 | My book |
| Formal noun | 大きいの | The big one |
How to tell: の followed by a noun → possessive; の followed by a particle or at sentence end → formal noun.
| After の | Identity | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Noun | Possessive | 私の本 |
| は, が, を... | Formal noun | 大きいのが |
Practical Use: Shopping
The formal noun の is especially handy when shopping — no need to repeat the noun:
Clerk: どれがいいですか。(Which one would you like?) You: 赤いのをください。 (The red one, please.)
Here, 赤いの = 赤い + の = "the red one (thing)." の stands in for the specific noun, making the sentence more concise.
Summary
- Adjective/Verb + の = nominalization (turns non-nouns into nouns)
- Once nominalized, you can attach は, が, を and other particles
- の followed by a noun → possessive ("of")
- の followed by a particle → formal noun ("the one that is...")
- In shopping, の can replace a noun to avoid repetition
Practice Questions
Q1. What's the role of の in 「食べるのが好きです」?
Show Answer
It's a formal noun (nominalizer) that turns the verb 食べる into a noun.
食べる (to eat) → 食べるの (the act of eating) → 食べるのが好きです (I like eating).
Q2. Translate: "The big one, please."
Show Answer
大きいのをください。
大きい + の (formal noun) = the big one. Add を + ください for "please give me."
Q3. What's the difference between の in 「私の本」 and 「大きいの」?
Show Answer
- 私の本 → の is possessive ("my" book), followed by a noun.
- 大きいの → の is a formal noun ("the big one"), followed by a particle or at sentence end.
How to tell: check what follows の — a noun means possessive, a particle means formal noun.