# こそ: precisely; for sure; the very

> Learn how to use こそ, a JLPT N3 Japanese grammar point meaning precisely; for sure; the very, with structure, nuance, examples, mistakes, and comparisons.

JLPT level: N3 · Updated: 2026-05-17 · Canonical: https://hane-app.com/blog/n3-koso/

**こそ** means **precisely; for sure; the very**. It is a **JLPT N3** grammar pattern used to **emphasize the preceding word as the true or important one**.

This grammar point often appears in **neutral** Japanese. If you want to **emphasize the preceding word as the true or important one**, **こそ** is a useful pattern to learn.

## What does こそ mean?

Use **こそ** when you want to **emphasize the preceding word as the true or important one**.

Natural translations include:
- precisely; for sure; the very

The best translation depends on the sentence. Try to notice the writer's or speaker's purpose first, then choose the English phrase that fits that context.

## How to form こそ

Noun / phrase + こそ

Examples of the pattern:
- 今こそ
- こちらこそ
- 努力こそ

The form before the grammar point matters. In JLPT questions, the wrong answer choices often use a similar meaning but attach it to the wrong type of word.

## When is こそ used?

Use **こそ** in situations like:
- strong emphasis
- polite responses like こちらこそ
- stating what really matters

Tone and register:
- neutral
- Common in JLPT reading, grammar questions, and natural Japanese sentences

## こそ example sentences

- 今こそ行動するべきだ。 — Now is precisely the time to act.
- こちらこそありがとうございます。 — No, I should be the one thanking you.
- 努力こそ成功の鍵だ。 — Effort is the very key to success.
- あなたにこそ、この仕事を任せたい。 — You are exactly the person I want to entrust this work to.
- 失敗した時こそ、成長のチャンスだ。 — Times of failure are precisely chances to grow.

After reading each sentence, ask what job **こそ** is doing: emphasizing the preceding word as the true or important one. That makes the nuance easier to remember than a one-word translation.

## Nuance of こそ

The key nuance is **exclusive or corrective emphasis on what truly matters**.

This matters because **こそ** does more than translate one English phrase. It tells the reader how the speaker is framing the situation, whether as emphasis, contrast, obligation, approximation, or evidence.

For example:
- In context, it sounds natural when the surrounding sentence supports the nuance.
- Compared with **は**, it has a different focus and level of formality.

## こそ vs は

Both **こそ** and **は** can appear in related situations, but they are different.

**こそ**:
- means **precisely; for sure; the very**
- fits the specific N3 pattern and nuance explained above

**は**:
- は marks a topic; こそ highlights that topic as the exact or important one

Quick contrast examples:
- Target: 今こそ行動するべきだ。 — Now is precisely the time to act.
- Compare: Try replacing it with **は** and check whether the nuance still matches.

If both translations seem possible, check the tone. Is the sentence casual, formal, written, explanatory, or emotional? The tone often tells you which grammar point is natural.

## Common mistakes with こそ

Watch out for these mistakes:
- Putting こそ after the wrong word
- Overusing it in casual sentences where it sounds dramatic
- Confusing こちらこそ as a literal “this side” phrase

A helpful practice method is to write one sentence with **こそ**, then rewrite it with **は**. If the meaning or tone changes, explain that difference in your own words.

## Is こそ on the JLPT?

Yes. **こそ** is commonly taught as **JLPT N3** grammar.

That means learners should be able to:
- recognize it in reading
- understand its nuance in context
- use it in simple original sentences

For test preparation, study the grammar point in full sentences. JLPT questions often test whether you understand the surrounding context, not just the dictionary meaning.

## Practice questions for こそ

Try making your own sentences with these prompts:
- Say now is exactly the time.
- Reply “I should thank you.”
- Say effort is what matters.

Keep your first sentences simple. Once the structure feels natural, add more context so the nuance becomes clear.

## Learning path for こそ

To learn **こそ** efficiently, review the formation first, then compare it with the closest existing grammar point before writing your own sentence.

1. First, make sure you can form **こそ** without looking at the pattern chart.
2. Next, compare it with **は**. These patterns are close enough that choosing between them helps you understand the nuance.
3. Finally, write sentences where **こそ** is necessary; then check whether replacing it with **は** changes the meaning.

## Related grammar to review next

- [さて](/blog/n3-sate/) — because it helps connect ideas in explanations, transitions, or conclusions.
- [確かに（たしかに）](/blog/n3-tashika-ni/) — because it helps connect ideas in explanations, transitions, or conclusions.
- [むしろ](/blog/n3-mushiro/) — because it helps connect ideas in explanations, transitions, or conclusions.
- [すなわち](/blog/n3-sunawachi/) — because it helps connect ideas in explanations, transitions, or conclusions.

## Learn こそ with Hane

If you want to review **こそ** together with the related patterns above, Hane helps you connect grammar, kanji, and vocabulary in short, focused sessions.

Browse more lessons here:
- [All grammar lessons](/blog/)
- [JLPT N3 grammar lessons](/blog/n3/)