Using 感じ to express your feelings in japanese
A lot of people seem to think that expressing your feelings in Japanese is difficult, and while it can be, there are a lot of different variations used in Japanese to express feelings. I promise it isn’t that bad!
First, let’s start with some vocabulary:
喜怒哀楽
きどあいらく = human emotions (joy, anger, humor, etc)
Common Nouns: In Japanese, い-adjectives can often become nouns (高い = tall, 高さ = height). Be careful not to use adjectives on accident when you should use nouns!
気持ち (きもち): feeling(s)
気分 (きぶん): feeling(s)/mood
感情 (かんじょう): emotions
喜び (よろこび): delight
幸せ(しあわせ)happiness
怒り (いかり): anger
悲しみ(かなしみ): sadness
Common Verbs: Similarly, a lot of adjectives/nouns and verbs share the same stems, but will have different endings. Be careful!
喜ぶ (よろこぶ): to be delighted
悲しむ (かなしむ): to be sad
怒る (おこる): to be/get angry
激怒する (げきどする): to be furious
憤慨する (ふんがいする): to be furious
You’ll commonly see these verbs appear in て-form in order to describe a present state, such as 怒っている (to be in a state of anger) or 喜んでいる (to be in a state of delight).
Common Adjectives:
嬉しい (うれしい): happy
悲しい (かなしい): sad
楽しい (たのしい) : fun
辛い (つらい) : hard/tough/painful
きつい : hard/tough
凄い (すごい) : wow, great
やばい : expresses various things
When describing your own happiness, it’s more natural to use 嬉しい and not 喜んでいる. However, when describing someone else’s happiness, you should use 喜んでいる and not 嬉しい.
辛い(辛い)and 辛い(からい)look the exact same, but one means “tough” and the other means “spicy.” Pay attention to context!
Expressing your emotions
When describing your own emotions, it’s actually quite uncommon to use any first person pronouns (such as 私) unless the subject is not at all clear. Likely, though, the subject is you and the listener knows this.
Joy & Happiness
あ〜、嬉しいな!: I’m happy!
な is often used in Japanese when expressing your feelings
あ, ああ, and あ : are also often used
やった〜!: Yay!
イェーイ!: Yaaay!
楽しい!: Fun!
楽しすぎる : Using すぎる can express the nuance of “too much fun”
ワクワクする : I’m getting excited!
It’s common in Japanese to use onomatopoeia to express emotion!
すごい!: Wow! Great!
This is commonly used in variations (すご〜い!すげえ!and so on)
Relief & Surprise
あ〜、よかった!: I’m relieved!
安心した (あんしん): I feel relieved.
え〜!: What?
うそ! : No way!
まさか : No way! It can’t be true.
まじ : Really? No way! Seriously?
まじか : Really? No way! Seriously?
This one is sometimes seen as more masculine
信じられない : I can’t believe it
Nervousness & Sadness
緊張する (きんちょう): I’m nervous…
Really common, and can also be used in its て-form!
ドキドキする : I feel nervous.
悲しい (かなしい): I’m sad.
寂しい (さみしい / さびしい): I’m lonely / I miss someone
憂鬱 (ゆううつ): Depression
気が滅入る (きがめいる): I feel depressed
がっかり : I’m disappointed
落ち込む (おちこむ): I’m getting upset!
Anger
ひどい!: That’s terrible! You’re awful!
イライラする : I feel irritated
頭にきた : I’m so pissed off
ムカつく : I’m angry
Embarrassment: 恥ずかしい (はずかしい): I’m embarrassed.
Fear: 怖い (こわい): I’m scared.
Envy: 羨ましい (うらやましい) : I’m jealous.
Using 感じ and 感じる
If you talk to a Japanese person for any length of time, you’ll hear this come up quite often. The readings are “かんじ” and “かんじる”. Remember that the meaning of 感 is “feeling,” so if you see it in kanji compounds you’re likely dealing with someone to do with feeling (emotion or otherwise).
感じ is the noun form and 感じる is the verb form:
どんな感じがしましたか?How did you feel?
どんな感じましたか?How did you feel?
These feelings can be both physical and emotional.
変な感じがした…
へんなかんじがした…
I felt strange…
彼女はなんか冷たい感じがするね。
かのじょはなんかつめたいかんじがするね。
She seems to be kind of cold, huh?
地震があったみたいだけど何も感じなかった。
じしんがあったみたいだけどなにもかんじなかった。
It seems there was an earthquake but I didn’t feel anything.
There are a lot of colloquial uses as well, particularly: って感じ, which is a really common way for Japanese to express the feeling of “it’s like…”
学校はね…もういいかなって感じ。
I think I’ve had enough with school.
私ばかり働いているって感じ。
I feel like I’m the only one that works.
You can use って感じ in a lot of ways, and it’s especially common when speaking.
気がする
Use this when expressing that you sense something/feel something but can’t quite understand why you feel that way.
If you’re breaking up with your significant other, you might say something like 私たち、もう終わりのような気がする which roughly translates to “I feel like we’re over now.”
面白いことが起きるみたいな気がする…
おもしろいことがおきるみたいなきがする…
I feel like something interesting will happen…
旅行したい気がする。
りょこうしたいきがする。
I feel like going on a trip.
食べる気がしない。
たべるきがしない。
I don’t feel like eating.
—
Try to express your emotions as much as possible when talking to people, especially if you’re talking about your day or something that you did with that person. It adds a personal touch and will make sure your conversation remains warm for both of you.
頑張ってください!
Related Post:
Useful vocabulary for train travel in Japan
Vocabulary about sickness in Japanese