Breakdown of kyonen ha yuki ga takusan hurimasita.
はha
topic particle
がga
subject particle
たくさんtakusan
a lot
去年kyonen
last year
雪yuki
snow
降るhuru
to snow
Questions & Answers about kyonen ha yuki ga takusan hurimasita.
What does the particle は after 去年 indicate in this sentence?
Why don’t we see に after 去年? Wouldn’t “in last year” be 去年に?
Why is 雪 marked with が instead of を or は?
In 雪がたくさん降りました, the verb 降る (“to fall,” used for weather) takes the thing that falls (雪) as its subject, so you use が. を marks direct objects (not applicable here), and は would topicalize “snow” rather than simply identify it as what fell.
Could we say 雪はたくさん降りました instead?
You could, but 雪は would set up “snow” as the topic (“As for snow…”), which implies a contrast or follow-up comment. To state the simple fact “Snow fell a lot,” Japanese uses 雪が to mark the subject.
What’s the difference between 雪がたくさん降りました and たくさんの雪が降りました?
Why is たくさん positioned before 降りました rather than right before 雪?
Why do we use the verb 降る for snow?
In Japanese, weather phenomena like rain, snow, hail, etc., all “fall.” So you say 雨が降る (rain falls), 雪が降る (snow falls).
What’s the function of ました in 降りました?
ました is the polite past tense ending for verbs. The dictionary form 降る becomes 降ります (polite present/future) and then 降りました (polite past), meaning “(it) fell.”
Can we omit 去年は and just say 雪がたくさん降りました?
Yes—but then you haven’t specified when. Listeners will assume a contextually obvious time. If you want to state “last year,” you need 去年は (or simply 去年).
How do you ask “Did a lot of snow fall last year?” in Japanese?
Keep the same structure and add the question particle か at the end:
去年は雪がたくさん降りましたか?
Are there other ways to say “a lot” besides たくさん?
Yes. Common alternatives include:
• いっぱい (informal) – 去年は雪がいっぱい降りました。
• 多く (おおく, more formal) – 去年は雪が多く降りました。
• 大いに (おおいに, very formal) – 去年は雪が大いに降りました。
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“How do verb conjugations work in Japanese?”
Japanese verbs conjugate based on tense, politeness, and mood. For example, the polite present form adds ‑ます to the verb stem, while the past tense uses ‑ました. Unlike English, Japanese verbs don't change based on the subject — the same form works for "I", "you", and "they".
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