JLPT (Japanese-Language Proficiency Test) Exam Cheat Sheets
JLPT (Japanese-Language Proficiency Test) prep with official-format practice questions, flashcards, and coverage for levels N5, N4, N3, N2, and N1 — kanji and vocabulary (moji-goi), grammar (bunpou), reading (dokkai), and listening (choukai) skills.. Review compact domain weights, decision trees, formulas, contrasts, mnemonics, traps, and last-minute checklists before moving into practice questions.
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Cheat sheets
174
Reference items
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Related exam IDs
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Quick facts
41
Decision tools
22
Reference groups
Free JLPT (Japanese-Language Proficiency Test) cheat sheets
Open the exact exam sheet first. Each page compresses official facts, dense reference groups, decision logic, traps, and source links for final review.
JLPT N5 Cheat Sheet
A high-density JLPT N5 cheat sheet for last-minute review. Covers core particles, verb and adjective forms, ~100 essential kanji, counters, question words, greetings, N5 grammar patterns, listening and reading tactics, plus common traps.
JLPT N2 Cheat Sheet
A high-density JLPT N2 cheat sheet for last-minute Japanese proficiency review. Covers vocabulary/kanji, grammar patterns, reading comprehension, listening, and the 90/180 + section-minimum pass rule.
Cheat sheets are final-review tools
Use these pages after you understand the underlying study guide. If a term, formula, domain weight, or decision rule is unfamiliar, open the matching study guide before relying on the compact sheet.
Related free exam resources
Use cheat sheets for compact review, then continue into matching practice questions, study guides, flashcards, videos, and related resources.
JLPT (Japanese-Language Proficiency Test) cheat sheet FAQ
What should I review first for JLPT (Japanese-Language Proficiency Test)?
Open the cheat sheet for your exact exam first, then use this family page to compare shared high-yield rules, formulas, terms, and traps. This page includes 174 reference items across 2 cheat sheets, including JLPT N5 (Japanese-Language Proficiency Test), JLPT N2 (Japanese-Language Proficiency Test).
Do JLPT (Japanese-Language Proficiency Test) cheat sheets replace a study guide?
No. Cheat sheets are dense final-review resources. Use the full study guide for explanations, use flashcards for memorization, and use practice questions to test whether you can apply the rules under exam-style pressure.
Why are multiple JLPT (Japanese-Language Proficiency Test) exams grouped together?
OpenExamPrep groups related credentials by taxonomy family so candidates can compare closely related exams, reuse shared concepts, and move between cheat sheets, practice questions, study guides, and flashcards without browsing unrelated domains.
When should I use JLPT (Japanese-Language Proficiency Test) cheat sheets in my study plan?
Use them during final review, after each practice block, or when you need a compact memory reset. If a cheat-sheet item is unfamiliar, return to the study guide before relying on it on exam day.

