How This Particle Test Works
Ask any Japanese learner what confuses them most and the answer is particles — those little words like は, が, を, に and で that carry the grammar English handles with word order. This test gives you 60 original fill-in-the-blank sentences in three groups: core particles (は・が・を・の), place and time (に・で・へ・から・まで), and connecting particles (と・も・や・か・ね・よ). Every question was written so that exactly one of the four options is grammatical — and where two particles would both be correct in real Japanese (like に and へ for destinations), the second one is deliberately never offered as a wrong option, so you're never punished for knowing too much.
The Traps This Test Targets
The question bank concentrates on the mistakes that actually happen: 東京で住んでいます instead of 東京に住んでいます (住む always takes に), バスを乗ります instead of バスに乗ります (you board onto a bus), and its mirror image 電車を降ります (you exit out of a train). In practice mode, every answer — right or wrong — comes with a one-line explanation of the rule and a full translation, so each question doubles as a micro-lesson. For the full theory behind every particle, keep the particles master guide open in another tab; this test is where you check the theory actually stuck.
How to Use It
Start with the core group in practice mode and read every explanation, even for correct answers — confirming why you were right is how intuition forms. Then move to place-and-time, which carries the highest error rate for beginners, and finish with an exam-mode run across everything. Bookmark the sentences that fool you and re-drill just those. Like our kana, kanji and vocabulary tests, your progress and the Particle Master badge track are saved in your browser — and the Daily Challenge serves the same ten sentences to every visitor, so you can compare scores with classmates fairly.