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Danosh
A question about Japanese verbs
こんいしわ :)
I have a problem with Japanese verbs
I know that verbs are divided into 3 groups but how can we get the present,past,negative,stem form and te form of the verbs of each group
I mean what is the rule ?
7 de jun. de 2010 11:27
Respuestas · 4
Three groups? Hmm.... I always thought that (for conjugation) there were 2 groups: Ru verbs and U verbs..... But, not all verbs that end in "ru" are Ru verbs. Only verbs that end in "iru" or "eru" (like "okiru" and "taberu").... And, there are still a few exceptions.... (Aren't there always!)
For plain form:
Present is just the verb, with no changes (I think....). "taberu" and "Kau"
Past is a little lengthy to explain.... http://www.guidetojapanese.org/pastverb.html
Negative: drop "Ru"(for Ru verbs) "U" (for U verbs, then add "A" row hiragana chart sound) and add "nai". Tabenai and Kawanai (verbs that end in only "U" are slightly irregular, as they drop the "U", and add "Wa", while other "U" verbs only drop the "U" and add the "A". (Ku--> Ka. Yaku --> Yakanai.)
Stem: Drop Ru (for Ru verbs), or "U" (for U verbs, then add "I" row hiragana chart sound (AKA: Change the "U" to an "I"-- Ex. Hanasu --> Hanashi). "Tabe" and "Kai" (I think..... ^-^*)
Te: Add "Te" to stem form. Tabete and Katte (Thank you Jamie! ^.^)
If you need help with more polite and formal forms, (or if I've made this explanation too confusing...), please send me a message! ^-^
I hope I've helped! ^-^
BTW, please let me know what three groups you've learned to divide verbs into... It might help me help other people...... Plus, then I can change the form of my answer to better help you.....
http://www.learnjapanesefree.com/basic-verb-forms-in-japanese.html
http://www.guidetojapanese.org/learn/grammar#contents
http://www.all-about-teaching-english-in-japan.com/Japanesegrammar.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_verb_conjugations_and_adjective_declensions
If you're looking for a beginner's book for learning Japanese, I suggest "Japanese for Dummies"... I still find it useful.
9 de junio de 2010
James is right, just google this question or grab a grammar book. It is too difficult to explain everything here. The best way to learn is to sit down with the hiragana table and look for patterns in how the verbs change.
@megumi - te form of kau is katte btw
Also not all verbs ending in iru/eru are ru verbs. What about shaberu, siru, suberu etc? (^_^)'
9 de junio de 2010
Do you have any examples?
7 de junio de 2010
This is a big question. Maybe you should consult a grammer book or look for the answer on Japanese-learning websites?
7 de junio de 2010
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Danosh
Competencias lingüísticas
Árabe, Inglés, Francés, Japonés, Español
Idioma de aprendizaje
Inglés, Francés, Japonés, Español
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