This lesson shows you how to use and pronounce Japanese dates.

tanjoubi-date

Key Topics Covered

Content: Birthday
Grammar: Dates

Dialogue 1

The following conversation is a polite conversation between two people who know each other, perhaps colleagues or neighbours.


Japanese:
吉田: ええと、今日は9月30日ですよね?
田中: いいえ、10月一日ですよ。
吉田: 本当ですか? もうすぐ むすめ の たんじょうび だわ。
田中: いつですか?
吉田: 四日です。
田中: おめでとうございます。
吉田: ありがとうございます。

Roomaji:
Yoshida: Eeto, kyou wa kugatsu sanjuunichi desu yo ne?
Tanaka: Iie, juugatsu tsuitachi desu yo.
Yoshida: Hontou desu ka? Mousugu musume no tanjoubi da wa.
Tanaka: Itsu desu ka?
Yoshida: Yokka desu.
Tanaka: Omedetou gozaimasu.
Yoshida:
Arigatou gozaimasu.
English:
Yoshida: Um, today’s the 30th of September, isn’t it?
Tanaka: No, it’s the first of October.
Yoshida: Really? We’ll have my daughter’s birthday soon.
Tanaka: When is it?
Yoshida: It’s the fourth.
Tanaka: Happy birthday (to her // all of you)!
Yoshida: Thank you very much.


Vocabulary

よね? yo ne? isn’t it? // right? (This is used when confirming someone’s statement.)
Read more in the lesson on casual vocabulary
本当
(ほんとう)
hontou really, true
ほんとう です か? hontou desu ka? (Is it/that) really/true?
もうすぐ mousugu soon
むすめ musume daughter
たんじょうび tanjoubi birthday
da am/is/are (This is the plain form of “です”.)
Read more in the Language Reference.
wa (Feminine sentence ending, this is often used by women unconsciously.)
いつですか? itsu desu ka? When (is it/that)?
おめでとう ございます。 Omedetou gozaimasu. Congratulations (here: Happy birthday!)

Grammar Notes

The key topic of this article is to learn how to say dates. Let’s look at some examples.

今日は9月30日です。
Kyou wa kugatsu sanjuunichi desu.
Today is the 30th of September.

Like above, you say the month first, and the date after that. In the dialogue, we sometimes another word like “今月 (kongetsu – this month)” and “来月 (raigetsu – next month)” instead of a name of the month. For example, when the date is near the end, we often use this latter way to confirm exactly if it’s this month or next one.

Days of the month

To say a day of the month, one says the number followed by a counter word for days – which is sometimes pronounced “ka” (for the 2nd through 10th, and for the special cases 14th and 24th) and sometimes “nichi” (most of the rest of the days). There are also some special words for two dates; tsuitachi for the first of the month and hatsuka for the twentieth of the month.

一日 tsuitachi the 1st (day) 十一日 juuichinichi the 11th
二日 futsuka the 2nd 十二日 juuninichi the 12th
三日 mikka the 3rd 十三日 juusannichi the 13th
四日 yokka the 4th 十四日 juuyokka the 14th
(Note: special case!)
五日 itsuka the 5th 十五日 juugonichi the 15th
六日 muika / muyoka the 6th 十六日 juurokunichi the 16th
七日 nanoka the 7th 十七日 juushichinichi the 17th
八日 youka the 8th 十八日 juuhachinichi the 18th
九日 kokonoka the 9th 十九日 juukunichi the 19th
十日 tooka the 10th 二十日 hatsuka the 20th

For the 21nd to 29th, use “nijuu” instead of “juu” in the words for the 12th to 19th. And for 30th and 31st use “sanjuu”.

二十一日 nijuuichinichi the 21st
二十四日 nijuuyokka the 24th (Note: special case!)
三十日 sanjuunichi the 30th
三十一日 sanjuuichinichi the 31st

The names of months in Japanese are constructed simply by the number in order, and the word for month, gatsu. Note that April is shigatsu and July is shichigatsu; they cannot be said with the alternative readings for four (yon) and seven (nana).

一月/1月 ichigatsu January
二月/2月 nigatsu February
三月/3月 sangatsu March
四月/4月 shigatsu April
五月/5月 gogatsu May
六月/6月 rokugatsu June
七月/7月 shichigatsu July
八月/8月 hachigatsu August
九月/9月 kugatsu September
十月/10月 juugatsu October
十一月/11月 juuichigatsu November
十二月/12月 juunigatsu December

Questions

The basic patterns for asking what date it is can be as follows. The expression “nan nichi” implies that you ask for the day of the month, while itsu is a time or day in general. So if asking for nan nichi, you probably know the month.

Nan nichi desu ka?
What date (of the month) is it?

Itsu desu ka?
When is it?

If asking about another day, for instance today or tomorrow, you can just add “___wa” in front of the previous pattern. In daily speach, the wa is usually omitted and just replaced with a short pause (comma). Look at the following examples.

Kyou wa nan nichi desu ka?
What date (of the month) is it today?

Ashita, nan nichi desu ka?
What date (of the month) is tomorrow?

Tanakasan no tanjoubi wa nannichi desu ka?
What date (of the month) is Tanakasan’s birthday?

Writing

As for how to write the days in Japanese, we usually write “1日”, “2日” rather than “一日” and “二日” . Originally the Japanese language was written from top to bottom, but nowadays writing from left to right as in Western writing is quite common, and Roman numerals are used more and more.

Practise

How do you say the following dates:

  1. 4 July  (Answer: )
  2. 2 January  (Answer: )
  3. 12 February (Answer: )
  4. 14 March (Answer: )
  5. 20 November (Answer: )
  6. 24 December (Answer: )

How do you ask the following questions?

  1. What date is the day after tomorrow  (Answer: )
  2. When will you go to Japan? (Answer: )
  3. When is (your) birthday? (Answer: )

What is the answer to the following question? Use the pattern “___ wa ___ desu”.

  1. What date is Christmas eve? (Answer: )
  2. What date is the first day of the year? (Answer: )

Tip: “The first day of the year” is called 年の最初の日 (toshi no saisho no hi).

Links

Author

Written by Shizu and Johan, and edited by the StudyJapanese team.

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