✨ Basic Meaning
🎯 Primary Function
📋 Grammar Structure
🎭 Usage Contexts
Used with ‘~ことはありません’ to provide formal advice or instructions.
Used with ‘~ことはない’ or ‘~ことはないよ’ when talking to friends or subordinates.
Used in manuals, advice columns, and essays to state that certain actions are unnecessary.
Very common in advice and comforting phrases.
💡 Common Applications
📌 Important Points
⚠️ Common Mistakes
🏛️ Cultural Context
🔍 Subtle Differences
📝 Conjugation Notes
Always use the dictionary form (u-form) of the verb before ‘koto wa nai’. Do not use past or negative forms.
🔊 Pronunciation Tips
In casual speech, the ‘wa’ is sometimes dropped (‘koto nai’), but for N3 level, focus on the full ‘koto wa nai’ or ‘koto wa arimasen’.
🧠 Memory Tips
Think of it literally: ‘The thing (koto) of [verb]ing does not exist (nai).’ In Japanese logic, if the ‘thing’ doesn’t exist, the ‘necessity’ isn’t there.
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