JLPT N5 Chapter 11 of 19

Verbs II: Past Tense and まだ

Good news: the polite past is the easiest conjugation in Japanese — swap ます for ました and you're done. In this chapter you'll talk about yesterday and last week, and answer the all-important question "have you done it yet?" with もう and まだ.

The easiest conjugation you'll ever learn

In the last chapter you did the hard part: finding a verb's ます-stem. This chapter is the reward. To put any polite verb in the past, swap ます for ました. That's it — no exceptions, no irregular verbs, no sound changes. Even Japanese's two genuinely irregular verbs behave: します (do) becomes しました, and ます (come) becomes ました.

The negative past is just as mechanical: take ません and add でした — the same でした you already know from あめでした. Four forms, one stem, zero surprises.

From the gameOffice · Past tense

Listen: past tense at the office

Bob and Rose talk about what already happened — ました and ませんでした live. Tap to listen.

BobBob

この書類は誰にもらいましたか?

kono shorui wa dare ni moraimashita ka?

Who did you receive this document from?

Tip: <dare> = who, which person <moraimasu> = to receive, to obtain
RoseRose

店長にもらいました

tenchō ni moraimashita

I received it from the manager

Tip: <ni> = in this context this particle indicates the person from which you received something.
BobBob

どうしてローズさんだけにあげましたか?

dōshite rōzu san dake ni agemashita ka?

Why were you, Rose, the only one who received it?

Tip: <dōshite> = why, for what reason <dake> = only <agemasu> = to give to others (not used to say "give me")
RoseRose

昨日遅くまで残業しましたから

kinō osoku made zangyō shimashita kara

Because I worked overtime until very late yesterday

Tip: <osoku> = late <zangyō> = overtime work <zangyō shimasu> = to work over time
Open the full lesson & quiz →
From the gameOffice · Not yet

Listen: not yet

まだ in action — the natural way to say something has not happened yet.

PX296PX296

メールはもう送りましたか?

mēru wa mō okurimashita ka?

Have you already sent the email?

Tip: <mēru> = e-mail <okurimasu> = to send <[verb] + mastita> = I did do something / I have done something. To use this structure take away the "masu" ending and replace it with "mashita". <Yasumimasu> = to rest, to have a break <Yasumimashita> = I have taken a break, I took a break
BobBob

いいえ、まだです

īe, mada desu

No, not yet

PX296PX296

へえ?まだですか?

hē? mada desu ka?

Eh? No yet?

PX296PX296

時間がほとんどありませんよ

jikan ga hotondo arimasen yo

There is almost no time left

Tip: <hotondo> = almost
Open the full lesson & quiz →
JLPT N5

ました — the polite past

〜ました

Take the ます form, remove ます, add ました (mashita). The result covers every English past at once: はたらきました is "worked", "did work" and "have worked" alike.

Past sentences usually open with a time word that sets the scene:

Relative time words like these stand alone at the start of the sentence — no に particle needed.

昨日きのう部屋へや片付かたづけました。

kinō, heya o katazukemashita.

I tidied my room yesterday.

ます → ました is the only change from 片付けます — the rest of the sentence is untouched.

先週せんしゅううみおよぎました。

senshū, umi de oyogimashita.

I swam in the sea last week.

さっき、メールをおくりました。

sakki, mēru o okurimashita.

I sent the email just now.

さっき is perfect for things you finished only minutes ago.

JLPT N5Guide extra · not in the game

ませんでした — didn't

〜ませんでした

For "didn't", take the polite negative ません and add でした: およぎません (don't swim) → およぎませんでした (didn't swim). It looks long, but it's two pieces you already own — ません + でした — and nothing inside the verb changes.

昨日きのうはたらきませんでした。

kinō wa hatarakimasen deshita.

I didn't work yesterday.

は after 昨日 adds light contrast: yesterday, unlike other days, I didn't work.

電気でんきしませんでした。

denki o keshimasen deshita.

I didn't switch off the light.

先週せんしゅうはしりませんでした。

senshū wa hashirimasen deshita.

I didn't run last week.

Guide extra · not in the game

The four-cell polite verb table

Here is every polite form a JLPT N5 verb can take, using ちます (to wait):

Non-pastPast
Affirmativeちますちました
Negativeちませんちませんでした

Compare it with the です table you met earlier in this guide — the layout is identical. Non-past covers both present and future ("I wait" / "I will wait"), so these four cells really are the whole polite system. Learn a verb's ます form and the other three come free.

JLPT N5

もう and まだ — already and not yet

もう〜ました / いいえ、まだです

もう with a past verb means "already": もうおくりました — I've already sent it. Questions of the shape もう〜ましたか ("have you … yet?") are everywhere in daily life, and N5 gives you two ways to say "not yet":

One trap to avoid: don't answer with まだ〜ませんでした. The ませんでした form closes the case — "I didn't, full stop" — while まだ keeps it open. (The full form まだ〜ていません arrives with the て-form later in the guide.)

もうあらいましたか。

mō te o araimashita ka.

Have you washed your hands yet?

はい、もうあらいました。

hai, mō araimashita.

Yes, I've already washed them.

いいえ、まだです。

iie, mada desu.

No, not yet.

まだです works as a complete answer for any "not yet" situation — no verb needed.

バスはまだません。

basu wa mada kimasen.

The bus still hasn't come.

まだ + negative non-past: it hasn't happened, and we're still waiting.

From the game

Chapter vocabulary

Sixteen more verbs from the game — every one of them takes ました and ませんでした in exactly the same way.

katazukeruclear up
kesuswitch off
tsukeruturn on
akeruopen
shimeruclose
arauwash
okurumail
tsukurumake
tsukauuse
hatarakuwork
yasumurest
matsuwait
hanasutalk
arukuwalk
hashirurun
oyoguswim

Tap ► to hear the native audio from the game, or tap a word to open its dictionary entry.

「しました」 — the workplace "done"

Ask a colleague in a Japanese office 「メールをおくりましたか。」 and the reply is often a crisp 「はい、おくりました。」 — or simply 「しました。」, "(I) did (it)." Because Japanese happily drops subjects and objects, a bare past-tense verb is a complete, polite report.

しました is the past of します (to do), so it pairs with the many noun + します verbs you'll keep meeting: 電話でんわしました (I phoned), 掃除そうじしました (I cleaned). Japanese workplaces put real value on reporting finished and unfinished work clearly, so しました and its honest partner まだです do a surprising amount of professional heavy lifting.

Test yourself

Seven questions on the past tense, もう and まだ.

7 quick questions on this chapter.

Common questions

Quick answers about this chapter's grammar.

Are there irregular past tense verbs in polite Japanese?

No — and that's the headline of this chapter. Every verb without exception forms its past as stem + ました and its negative past as stem + ませんでした, even the two irregular verbs します (→ しました) and きます (→ きました). The only real work is finding the ます-stem in the first place, which is chapter 10's job.

Why can't I say まだ食べませんでした for "I haven't eaten yet"?

Because ませんでした describes a closed past period — "I didn't eat, and that's the end of it" — while "not yet" keeps the door open: you still might. At N5, answer もう〜ましたか questions with いいえ、まだです。 Later you'll learn the full form まだべていません, which uses the て-form.

Do time words like きのう (yesterday) need a particle?

Relative time words — きのう (yesterday), せんしゅう (last week), さっき (just now), あした (tomorrow) — take no particle and usually sit at the start of the sentence. Specific clock and calendar times do take に: 三時さんじに (at three o'clock). Tense lives only in the verb ending, so there's no "-ed" to add anywhere else.

What's the difference between もう and まだ?

もう means "already" with a past verb (もうべました — I've already eaten) and "no longer" with a negative (もうべません — I'm not eating any more). まだ means "still" or "not yet": まだです (not yet), バスはまだません (the bus still hasn't come). Think of them as mirror images — もう closes a topic, まだ keeps it open.

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