JLPT N5i-adjectiveDaily LifeShopping

新しい

あたらしい·atarashii

Meaning

new; novel; fresh; recent

Formality
Neutral

Nuance & Usage

新しい describes something new, fresh, or recently made/acquired. Its opposite is 古い (furui — old). It conjugates as an i-adjective: 新しくない (not new), 新しかった (was new). The kanji 新 appears in many compounds: 新聞 (shinbun — newspaper), 新幹線 (shinkansen — bullet train), 新年 (shinnen — new year), 新しく (atarashiku — newly, as an adverb). For food, 新鮮 (shinsen — fresh) is more specific.

Common Mistakes

Don't confuse 新しい (atarashii — new) with 若い (wakai — young, for people/animals). A new car is 新しい車, but a young person is 若い人, not 新しい人 (which sounds odd). Also, historically the word was あらたしい (aratashii), which survives in the formal/literary form 新たな (arata na — new, fresh). Modern Japanese always uses あたらしい in speech.

Example Sentences (3)

1

新しい靴を買いました。

あたらしいくつをかいました。

I bought new shoes.

2

新しい仕事はどうですか?

あたらしいしごとはどうですか?

How is your new job?

Business
3

この町に新しいレストランができました。

このまちにあたらしいれすとらんができました。

A new restaurant opened in this town.

Daily Life

Quick Quiz

Quick Quiz

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