# 終わる: finish doing

> Learn how to use 終わる, a JLPT N4 Japanese grammar point meaning finish doing, with structure, nuance, examples, mistakes, and comparisons.

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

**終わる** means **finish doing**. It is a **JLPT N4** Japanese grammar pattern used to express the N4 idea of “to finish; finish doing” 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 “to finish; finish doing” in natural Japanese, **終わる** is a useful pattern to learn after the N5 basics.

## What does 終わる mean?

Use **終わる** when you want to express the N4 idea of “to finish; finish doing” in natural Japanese.

Natural translations include:
- to finish
- to end
- to finish; finish doing

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 終わる

<div class="formation">
  <div class="formula">
    <span class="ftoken t-stem">Verb masu-stem</span>
    <span class="fplus">+</span>
    <span class="ftoken t-core">終わる</span>
  </div>
</div>

Examples of the pattern:
- 読み終わる
- 食べ終わる
- 書き終わる

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 終わる used?

Use **終わる** 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

## 終わる example sentences

<div class="examples">
  <div class="example">
    <div class="example-jp"><ruby>本<rt>ほん</rt></ruby>を<ruby>読<rt>よ</rt></ruby>み<ruby>終<rt>お</rt></ruby>わりました。</div>
    <div class="example-en">I finished reading the book.</div>
    <div class="example-foot"><span class="example-tag">polite</span></div>
  </div>
  <div class="example">
    <div class="example-jp">ご<ruby>飯<rt>はん</rt></ruby>を<ruby>食<rt>た</rt></ruby>べ<ruby>終<rt>お</rt></ruby>わったら、<ruby>出<rt>で</rt></ruby>かけましょう。</div>
    <div class="example-en">Let’s go out after finishing eating.</div>
    <div class="example-foot"><span class="example-tag">casual</span> <span class="example-tag">conditional</span></div>
  </div>
  <div class="example">
    <div class="example-jp"><ruby>宿題<rt>しゅくだい</rt></ruby>を<ruby>書<rt>か</rt></ruby>き<ruby>終<rt>お</rt></ruby>わりました。</div>
    <div class="example-en">I finished writing my homework.</div>
    <div class="example-foot"><span class="example-tag">polite</span></div>
  </div>
  <div class="example">
    <div class="example-jp"><ruby>映画<rt>えいが</rt></ruby>を<ruby>見<rt>み</rt></ruby><ruby>終<rt>お</rt></ruby>わってから、<ruby>寝<rt>ね</rt></ruby>ました。</div>
    <div class="example-en">After finishing watching the movie, I slept.</div>
    <div class="example-foot"><span class="example-tag">te-form chain</span></div>
  </div>
  <div class="example">
    <div class="example-jp"><ruby>仕事<rt>しごと</rt></ruby>が<ruby>終<rt>お</rt></ruby>わりました。</div>
    <div class="example-en">Work finished.</div>
    <div class="example-foot"><span class="example-tag">standalone</span></div>
  </div>
</div>

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 終わる

The key nuance is **to finish; finish doing in a sentence-specific context**.

This matters because **終わる** 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, **終わる** helps make the sentence more precise than a direct English translation.
- Compared with **始める**, it has a different focus even when both patterns appear in similar sentences.

## 終わる vs 始める

<div class="compare">
  <div class="cmp">
    <div class="cmp-head">終わる</div>
    <div class="cmp-sub">finish doing; come to an end</div>
    <div class="cmp-when">This is the target JLPT N4 pattern in this lesson. It carries the specific nuance explained above.</div>
    <div class="cmp-eg"><ruby>本<rt>ほん</rt></ruby>を<ruby>読<rt>よ</rt></ruby>み<ruby>終<rt>お</rt></ruby>わりました。</div>
    <div class="cmp-eg-en">I finished reading the book.</div>
  </div>
  <div class="vs">vs</div>
  <div class="cmp">
    <div class="cmp-head">始める</div>
    <div class="cmp-sub">begin doing; start</div>
    <div class="cmp-when">This is useful for comparison because learners often mix it up. It may use a different form, tone, or sentence focus.</div>
    <div class="cmp-eg">Compare the form and ask whether the sentence is about timing, condition, ability, decision, contrast, or politeness.</div>
  </div>
</div>

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

## Common mistakes with 終わる

<div class="mistakes">
  <div class="mline">
    <div class="mark bad">❌</div>
    <div class="mline-body">Using it with the wrong verb, noun, or adjective form</div>
  </div>
  <div class="mline">
    <div class="mark good">✅</div>
    <div class="mline-body">Attach <strong>終わる</strong> only to the masu-stem of a verb.</div>
  </div>
  <div class="mline">
    <div class="mark bad">❌</div>
    <div class="mline-body">Confusing it with <strong>始める</strong> because the English translation can look similar</div>
  </div>
  <div class="mline">
    <div class="mark good">✅</div>
    <div class="mline-body">Use <strong>終わる</strong> for completion and <strong>始める</strong> for starting.</div>
  </div>
  <div class="mline">
    <div class="mark bad">❌</div>
    <div class="mline-body">Translating it too literally instead of reading the whole sentence context</div>
  </div>
  <div class="mline">
    <div class="mark good">✅</div>
    <div class="mline-body">Read the full sentence to decide whether <strong>終わる</strong> is an auxiliary verb or the main predicate.</div>
  </div>
</div>

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 終わる on the JLPT?

<div class="jlpt-card">
  <div class="jlpt-shield">N4</div>
  <div class="jlpt-info">
    <p>Yes. <strong>終わる</strong> is connected to <strong>JLPT N4</strong> grammar.</p>
    <div class="jlpt-checks">
      <ul>
        <li>Recognize it in reading</li>
        <li>Understand its nuance in context</li>
        <li>Use it in simple original sentences</li>
      </ul>
    </div>
    <p>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.</p>
  </div>
</div>

## Practice questions for 終わる

<div class="prompts">
  <div class="prompt">
    <span class="prompt-num">1</span>
    <span class="prompt-text">Write one sentence using the basic pattern.</span>
    <span class="prompt-tag">production</span>
  </div>
  <div class="prompt">
    <span class="prompt-num">2</span>
    <span class="prompt-text">Change the sentence into polite or casual style if possible.</span>
    <span class="prompt-tag">style</span>
  </div>
  <div class="prompt">
    <span class="prompt-num">3</span>
    <span class="prompt-text">Compare it with the related pattern from the comparison section.</span>
    <span class="prompt-tag">contrast</span>
  </div>
</div>

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 終わる

<div class="path">
  <div class="path-step">
    <span class="step-num">1</span>
    <span class="step-body">Use <strong>終わる</strong> as part of your <strong>JLPT N4</strong> て-form action-flow and auxiliary verb grammar toolkit.</span>
  </div>
  <div class="path-step">
    <span class="step-num">2</span>
    <span class="step-body">Review the main <strong>て-form</strong> action first, then ask what the auxiliary adds: preparation, trial, completion, regret, movement, continuation, or a change over time. Build short verb chains before using longer sentences.</span>
  </div>
  <div class="path-step">
    <span class="step-num">3</span>
    <span class="step-body">Make one short sentence with <strong>終わる</strong>, then compare it with <a href="/blog/n4-te-de/">て / で</a>.</span>
  </div>
  <div class="path-step">
    <span class="step-num">4</span>
    <span class="step-body">Add <a href="/blog/n4-te-ita/">ていた</a> or <a href="/blog/n4-tsuzukeru/">続ける</a> to see how the nuance changes.</span>
  </div>
  <div class="path-step">
    <span class="step-num">5</span>
    <span class="step-body">For practice, write one sentence that uses <strong>終わる</strong> 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.</span>
  </div>
</div>

## Related grammar to review next

- [て / で](/blog/n4-te-de/) — compares another て-form auxiliary that changes action flow or completion.
- [ていた](/blog/n4-te-ita/) — compares another て-form auxiliary that changes action flow or completion.
- [続ける](/blog/n4-tsuzukeru/) — compares another て-form auxiliary that changes action flow or completion.
- [始める](/blog/n4-hajimeru/) — compares another て-form auxiliary that changes action flow or completion.

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

## Learn 終わる with Hane

If you want to review **終わる** 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/)