# も: as much as; surprisingly many

> Learn how to use も, a JLPT N4 Japanese grammar point meaning as much as; surprisingly many, with structure, nuance, examples, mistakes, and comparisons.

JLPT level: N4 · Updated: 2026-05-17 · Canonical: https://hane-app.com/blog/n4-mo/

**も** means **as much as; surprisingly many**. It is a **JLPT N4** Japanese grammar pattern used to express the N4 idea of “as many as; as much as” in natural Japanese.

This grammar point often appears in conversation, written explanations, formal notices, and JLPT-style reading questions. If you want to express the N4 idea of “as many as; as much as” in natural Japanese, **も** is a useful pattern to learn after the N5 basics.

## What does も mean?

Use **も** when you want to express the N4 idea of “as many as; as much as” in natural Japanese.

Natural translations include:
- as many as
- as much as
- up to

The exact English translation changes with context. Focus on what the grammar point does in the sentence first, then choose the English phrase that sounds natural.

## How to form も

Number / amount + も

Examples of the pattern:
- Number
- Number / amount
- も

Pay attention to the word form before the pattern. Many JLPT N4 mistakes happen because the meaning is understood, but the grammar is attached to the wrong form.

## When is も used?

Use **も** in situations like:
- explaining a condition, reason, decision, comparison, or time relationship
- making a sentence more specific than a basic N5 pattern
- understanding natural Japanese in conversation or reading

Tone and register:
- neutral unless the grammar itself is marked as casual, humble, honorific, or formal
- Common in daily speech, textbook examples, and JLPT N4 reading questions

## も example sentences

- 昨日は三時間も勉強しました。 — I studied for as much as three hours yesterday.
- パーティーに五十人も来ました。 — As many as fifty people came to the party.
- この本は一万円もします。 — This book costs as much as 10,000 yen.
- 駅まで一時間も歩きました。 — I walked as much as one hour to the station.
- 彼は漢字を百個も覚えました。 — He memorized as many as one hundred kanji.

Read the Japanese sentence first, then check the English translation. Try to notice what the grammar point contributes: condition, timing, limitation, possibility, decision, politeness, contrast, or emphasis.

## Nuance of も

The key nuance is **as many as; as much as in a sentence-specific context**.

This matters because **も** may look simple in English, but the Japanese form tells you whether the speaker is describing a time, a condition, a decision, a possibility, a contrast, or a social relationship.

For example:
- In context, **も** helps make the sentence more precise than a direct English translation.
- Compared with **だけ**, it has a different focus even when both patterns appear in similar sentences.

## も vs だけ

Both **も** and **だけ** can appear in related sentences, but they are different.

**も** (quantity emphasis):
- expresses that an amount is surprisingly large or considerable
- attached to a number or amount to show emphasis

**だけ** (limitation):
- expresses that an amount is limited to a certain number or quantity
- carries the sense of "only" rather than "as much as"

Quick contrast examples:
- 昨日は三時間も勉強しました。 — I studied for as much as three hours yesterday.
- 昨日は三時間だけ勉強しました。 — I studied for only three hours yesterday.

If you are unsure which one to use, identify the main job of the sentence before translating it into English.

## Common mistakes with も

Watch out for these mistakes:
- Using it with the wrong verb, noun, or adjective form
- Confusing it with **だけ** because the English translation can look similar
- Translating it too literally instead of reading the whole sentence context

A good study habit is to write one short sentence and then change only the grammar point. This makes the difference between similar patterns easier to feel.

## Is も on the JLPT?

Yes. **も** is connected to **JLPT N4** grammar in this blog.

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, do not only memorize the English gloss. Practice identifying the words around the grammar point, because JLPT questions often test structure and context together.

## Practice questions for も

Try making your own sentences with these prompts:
- Write one sentence using the basic pattern.
- Change the sentence into polite or casual style if possible.
- Compare it with the related pattern from the comparison section.

Keep the sentences short at first. Once the form feels natural, add time words, places, reasons, or contrast to make the sentence more realistic.

## Learning path for も

Use **も** as part of your **JLPT N4** listing, addition, and choice grammar toolkit. Use **も** to control how many items or reasons you present and how open-ended the list feels. Compare it with other listing and addition patterns so you can avoid making the sentence sound narrower than intended.

A good review order is: first make one short sentence with **も**, then compare it with [それに](/blog/n4-sore-ni/), and finally add [し](/blog/n4-shi/) or [でも](/blog/n4-demo/) to see how the nuance changes.

For practice, write one sentence that uses **も** in its most literal meaning, one sentence that changes the subject or time expression, and one sentence that contrasts it with one of the related patterns below.

## Related grammar to review next

- [それに](/blog/n4-sore-ni/) — adds another way to list, add, limit, or choose information.
- [し](/blog/n4-shi/) — adds another way to list, add, limit, or choose information.
- [でも](/blog/n4-demo/) — adds another way to list, add, limit, or choose information.
- [ばかり](/blog/n4-bakari/) — adds another way to list, add, limit, or choose information.

## Learn も with Hane

If you want to review **も** together with the related patterns above, Hane helps you practice Japanese in short, focused sessions.

Browse more lessons here:
- [All grammar lessons](/blog/)
- [JLPT N4 grammar lessons](/blog/n4/)