Japanese/Grammar/Verbs
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Japanese verbs, (動詞; どうし), inflect heavily to indicate formality, tense or mood, primarily in their ending. There are two tenses, several levels of formality and three classes of verbs, depending on their inflection. The two tenses are perfective (often considered past tense) and present (or technically, non-past, as the future tense is not indicated). Out of the several levels of formality, two are the most common: plain and polite.
Japanese verbs are officially categorised into five classes,[1] but as two of these inflect much the same and another two only contain one verb each, these are usually merged into three when Japanese is taught as a foreign language. These are the consonant stem-, vowel stem- and irregular classes.[2]
Dictionaries use the plain present positive form (commonly known as dictionary form) as the headword for verbs.
Verbs are classed based on their conjugations. Their endings don't determine the class, but are a general indicator.
Form | Endings |
---|---|
vowel-stem verbs (ichidan)[3] | All of these end with (い)る or (え)る, but some with that ending are consonant stem verbs. |
consonant-stem verbs (godan)[4] | End in う, く, ぐ, す, つ, ぬ, ぶ, む or る. |
irregular verbs | Only two verbs: する (e. to do) and |
Different inflections can also have suffixes. These may also be verbs with their own conjugations. Not all suffixes can be used on all verb inflections and others may only follow the verb stem. Examples are conjunctive + いる, せる・させる (causative), and られる (potential).
Ignoring the formality and the negative conjugations, the following is a list of verb conjugations
- non-past
- past
- causative
- causative-passive
- conjunctive
- conditionals
- passive
- potential
- imperative
- volitional
- provisional
Ichidan class
[edit | edit source]Vowel-stem verbs end on a full syllable (hence the term: vowel-stem). In a sense, the final "る" of the dictionary form is dropped and the respective endings just added on.
The Japanese term "
The following table shows a few forms of the verb "食べる" (たべる, e. to eat):
Form | Word |
---|---|
Plain present positive | 食べる |
Plain past positive | 食べた |
Plain present negative | 食べない |
Plain past negative | 食べなかった |
Imperative | 食べろ or 食べよ |
Volitional | 食べよう |
Conjunctive | 食べて |
Conditional | 食べれば |
Godan class
[edit | edit source]Consonant-stem verbs end in the middle of a syllable (hence the term; consonant-verb). That syllable changes depending on the form. The plain form has an う u sound (u, tsu, ru, ku, gu, bu, mu, su), the ~ます -masu form has an い i sound (i, chi, ri, ki, gi, bi, mi, shi), and the negative form has an あ a sound (wa, ta, ra, ka, ga, ba, ma, sa). The potential form has an え e sound (e, te, re, ke, ge, be, me, se) and the volitional form has an おう ō sound (ō, tō, rō, kō, gō, bō, mō, sō), so putting these together with the sounds above shows that verb conjugations follow the vowel syllabary of the Japanese character set: あ a, い i, う u, え e and お o.
The Japanese term "
The following table shows a few forms of the consonant-stem verb "話す" (はなす e. to speak).
Form | Word | Row | Syllable Morph | Conjugation Suffix |
---|---|---|---|---|
Plain present positive | 話す | う | ||
Plain past positive | 話した | い | す -> し | た/った/いた/んだ |
Plain present negative | 話さない | あ | す -> さ | ない |
Plain past negative | 話さなかった | あ | す -> さ | なかった |
Imperative[5] | 話せ | え | す -> せ | |
Volitional[6] | 話そう | お | す -> そ | う |
Conjunctive | 話して | い | す -> し | て/って/いて/んで |
Conditional | 話せば | え | す -> せ | ば |
The て-form (conjunctive) and past positive form of a consonant-stem verb change the root for euphony according to the last syllable of the root (example in parentheses):
stem | て-form | past | example | て-form | past | reading (meaning) | |
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〜う | って | った | 買う | 買って | 買った | かう (to buy) | |
〜く | いて | いた | 書く | 書いて | 書いた | かく (to write) | |
〜ぐ | いで | いだ | 泳ぐ | 泳いで | 泳いだ | およぐ (to swim) | |
〜す | して | した | 話す | 話して | 話した | はなす (to speak, to talk) | |
〜つ | って | った | 勝つ | 勝って | 勝った | かつ (to win) | |
〜ぶ | んで | んだ | 学ぶ | 学んで | 学んだ | まなぶ (to study) | |
〜ぬ | んで | んだ | 死ぬ | 死んで | 死んだ | しぬ (to die) | |
〜む | んで | んだ | 佇む | 佇んで | 佇んだ | ただずむ (to stand still) | |
〜る | って | った | 去る | 去って | 去った | さる (to leave) |
行く (いく) (to go) has an exceptional て-form 行って (いって).
If the verb stem ends on "う" such as in the verb 買う(かう, e. to buy) then its negative stem becomes -わ as in 買わない ("to not buy"). This is because the root is treated as kawu (despite the "wu" syllable not existing in modern Japanese).
Irregular verbs
[edit | edit source]Two common verbs do not share a conjugation pattern with any other verb. They are therefore commonly classed as "irregular" verbs. Formally, they are called "変格" (へんかく) verbs, as opposed to the regular "正格" (せいかく) verbs. This construction is made to use verbs and nouns of Chinese origin, for instance, from Chinese "確認" (què rèn, confirmation) is formed in Japanese the verb "確認する" (かくにんする), or "約分" (yuē fēn, simplify a fraction (math.)) which derives into "約分する" (やくぶんする). The forms are "する" (e. to do, as in the examples) and "
Form | する | 来る |
---|---|---|
Plain present positive | する | くる |
Plain past positive | した | きた |
Plain present negative | しない | こない |
Plain past negative | しなかった | こなかった |
Imperative | せよ or しろ | こい |
Volitional | しよう | こよう |
Conjunctive | して | きて |
Conditional | すれば | くれば |
Many verbs end on "〜する" and can be grouped in three categories:
- Verbalised nouns. These are nouns which form verbs by appending "〜する". Examples:
勉強 する,注意 する, "過労死 する,長生 きする and値 する. - Verbs that cannot stand alone without the "する" suffix. Examples:
発 する,接 する and達 する. - Verbs that cannot stand alone, end on an "ん" and therefore take the voiced "ずる". Examples:
存 ずる,感 ずる,先 んずる and重 んずる. These verbs are commonly inflected the same as the ichidan forms, with "ずる" being replaced by "じる" thus:存 じる,感 じる,先 んじる and重 んじる.
The only commonly-used combination with "来る" is "やってくる", meaning "to come".[7]
Polite forms
[edit | edit source]The polite (or formal) forms are simple as all of the consonant-stem verbs sit in the い-line (行く→行き) and the inflections are the same for consonant- and vowel-stem verbs.
The following table shows the polite forms for "行く" (いく, e. to go):
Form | Word |
---|---|
Polite present positive | 行きます |
Polite past positive | 行きました |
Polite present negative | 行きません |
Polite past negative | 行きませんでした |
Polite volitional | 行きましょう |
Polite conjunctive | 行きまして[8] |
Polite conditional | 行きますれば[8] |
The imperative (〜ませ) is not used in formal forms except for a few polite verbs (see below).
Other irregularities
[edit | edit source]A small number of verbs tend to be conjugated differently from the groups that they are normally placed in.
Polite language
[edit | edit source]The verbs below are all consonant stem verbs but conjugate differently. While the regular forms also exist, they are seldom used.
Verb | polite present positive | Imperative |
---|---|---|
くださる | くださいます | ください |
なさる | なさいます | なさい |
いらっしゃる | いらっしゃいます | いらっしゃい |
おっしゃる | おっしゃいます | おっしゃい |
The conjunctive and past forms of the first two verbs, "くださる" and "なさる", also have the alternative forms "くだすって/くだすった" and "なすって/なすった", in addition to the normal regular conjugations "くださって/くださった" and "なさって/なさった". These alternative forms have, however, fallen into disuse. While they are often encountered when reading texts from a few decades ago, the regular conjugations are usually used today.
The first three of the above verbs are also the only ones where the imperative form "ませ" of the auxiliary verb, "ます", is used to add an extra level of politeness:
- くださいませ, なさいませ, いらっしゃいませ
Additionally, ございます, which originally came from the now-defunct yodan (四段, e. four-row) classical Japanese verb "ござる", is also used, although in modern usage, it is always used with the ます auxiliary verb ending. There is no imperative form (i.e. you cannot use ませ like above).
得る
[edit | edit source]得る (うる/える, e. to get, or to be able to) is the only surviving nidan (二段, e. two-row) class verb in modern Japanese. It has conjugations as in the below table:
Form | Word | Reading |
---|---|---|
Non-past | 得る | うる/える |
Past | 得た | えた |
Negative non-past | 得ない | えない |
Negative past | 得なかった | えなかった |
Imperative | 得ろ | えろ |
Volitional | 得よう | えよう |
Conjunctive | 得て | えて |
Conditional | 得れば | うれば |
"得る" can be read both as "える" in its terminal form (at the end of the sentence, or in situations such as attaching to べき). The "うる" reading is also used in those situations and in the attributive form (e.g. when attached to nouns). It is therefore incorrect to say "えるもの" as the correct form would be "うるもの". The combination "あり得る" is normally read "ありうる" in the present forms. All other conjugations follow the table above.
Miscellaneous irregularities
[edit | edit source]The vowel stem verb "呉れる" (くれる e. ) imperative form "くれ" (rather than the expected "くれろ"). Other "くれる" verbs of other unrelated meanings conjugate to the usual "くれろ".
The consonant stem verb "ある" expresses existence, but absence is expressed with the adjective "ない". Note that many textbooks also treat "ない" as a verb. The reader may also wish to be aware that more formal "ぬ" negative form and its conjunctive form, "ず", are still used: "あらぬ"/"あらず".
Summary of verb conjugations
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^a The only example of this form. See the Wikipedia entry on Japanese irregular verbs for more. |
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See the adjective inflection Wikipedia page for present negative, past and past negative forms of i and na adjectives.
Notes and references
[edit | edit source]- ↑
These are
五段 上一段 (the single-row conjugation verbs ending in iru)下一段 (the single-row conjugation verbs ending in eru)- カ
行 変格 (only来 る - サ
行 変格 (only する)
- ↑ These go by various names in English. The consonant stem class is also called godan class or five-row class while the vowel stem class is also called ichidan class or one-row class. The irregular verbs are not known as such in Japanese, but
変格 , literally: different case, indicating that it's different from normal, but not irregular in itself. - ↑
一段動詞 , also known as a type II verb. - ↑
五段動詞 , also known as a type I verb. - ↑ The plain imperative as seen above is quite rude, and its use is generally limited to close male friends or colleagues if the intent is not to insult.
- ↑ The volitional indicates a presumption or suggestion on the speaker's part to do something, and in addition to being used in a few verb phrase constructions, a verb in volitional form corresponds to "let's {verb}"
- ↑ "やる" is a common prefix with flexible meaning that implies action.
- ↑ a b The polite conjunctive and -conditional are rarely used. The plain forms are usually used in their place.
- ↑ Rita Lampkin (14 May 2010). Japanese Verbs & Essentials of Grammar, Third Edition. McGraw-Hill Education. pp. 14–40. ISBN 978-0-07-171363-4.