Verb conjugation groups
Conjugation reveals whether a verb is present/past, positive/negative and more.
What are the 3 verb types?
- Group 1 (Godan/ă/consonant-root)
- Group 2 verbs (Ichidan/ă/vowel-root)
- Irregular verbs
Godan Verbs
Verb examples:
- čŞă - to read
- ć¸ă - to write
- 芹ă - to speak
- čă - to listen
Notice that each of these end in a character on the ă-line of the hiragana chart when they are in the plain/dictionary form, which explains why they're often called "ă-verbs" in textbooks. As these verbs conjugate, the ă-line character will shift through the five vowel sounds in the hiragana chart (ă, ă, ă, ă, ă). This is where they get the name äşćŽľ (five-level) verbs
Let's check this out with one of our example verbs, čă (to listen):
Hiragana Chart Line | Japanese | Romaji | English |
ă /a/ | čăăŞă | kikanai | not listen |
ă /i/ | čăăžă | kikimasu | listen (polite) |
ă /u/ | čă | kiku | listen (plain) |
ă /e/ | čăă | kikeru | can listen |
ă /o/ | čăă | kikou | let's listen |
Ichidan
Hiragana Chart Line | Japanese | Romaji | English |
ă /e/ | éŁăšăŞă | tabenai | not eat |
éŁăšăžă | tabemasu | eat (polite) | |
éŁăšă | taberu | eat (plain) | |
éŁăšăăă éŁăšăă (ăćă) | taberareru tabereru | can eat | |
éŁăšăă | tabeyou | let's eat |
Sourcs used
- http://tofugu.com/japanese-grammar/verb-conjugation-groups