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How Japanese Verbs Work

Peter Payne by Peter Payne
15 years ago
in Your Friend in Japan

Like Turkish, Basque and Korean, the Japanese language is an “agglutinative” language, which just means that a lot of information is stored in the verb’s conjugation. This is good in a way, since some of the ridiculously complex grammar in English — “she would have been able to go if her car hadn’t been stolen” — just plain don’t exist in Japanese. But it unfortunately means that for every given verb, you’ve got quite a few different forms to memorize. For a word like “to eat” you have 食べる taberu (the “informal” or dictionary form, since that’s what’s listed in a dictionary, which covers both “I eat (everyday)” and “I will eat”), and 食べます tabemasu (the “formal” form, used in situations when more politeness is called for), 食べない・食べません tabenai / tabemasen (negative informal/formal forms meaning “I will not eat”), 食べた・食べました tabeta / tabemashita (informal/formal past tense, “I ate it”), 食べよう・食べましょう tabeyo / tabemashou (informal/formal forms meaning “let’s eat”), and 食べろ・食べなさい tabero / tabenasai (informal/formal command forms, “eat!”). There are other forms that express “to be able to eat,” one for passive voice (“the food was eaten by me”), plus a few I’m probably forgetting. Learning these forms seemed daunting to me at first, but they all follow easy-to-pick-up patterns that you can tackle one at a time. Incidentally we have some pretty cool study books for anyone wanting to learn Japanese, including an awesome monthly magazine published in English and Japanese plus a book that specifically helps you memorize verb forms.

Conjugating verbs like “to eat” is one of the more arduous tasks of learning Japanese.

Tags: foodJapanese languageLearning JapaneseMonogatariTeaching English (ESL)

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