Verb Basics
Vocabulary
- 食べる 【た・べる】 (ru-verb) – to eat
- 見る 【み・る】 (ru-verb) – to see, watch
- 起きる 【お・きる】 (ru-verb) – to wake up
- 寝る 【ね・る】 (ru-verb) – to sleep
- 行く 【い・く】 (u-verb) – to go
- 書く 【か・く】 (u-verb) – to write
- 話す 【はな・す】 (u-verb) – to speak
- 読む 【よ・む】 (u-verb) – to read
- 買う 【か・う】 (u-verb) – to buy
- する (irregular) – to do
- 来る 【く・る】 (irregular) – to come
Japanese verbs always come at the end of the clause. There are two main categories of verbs: Ru-verbs and U-verbs.
Ru-verbs (Class 2)
To conjugate these, you simply drop the る and add the suffix.
Examples
- 食べる - to eat
- 見る - to see
- 起きる - to wake up
- 寝る - to sleep
U-verbs (Class 1)
These end in a u-sound (not necessarily just the character う). To conjugate, you often change the vowel sound.
Examples
- 行く - to go
- 書く - to write
- 話す - to speak
- 読む - to read
Irregular Verbs
There are only two main irregular verbs:
- する - to do
- 来る - to come
Dictionary Form
The basic form found in the dictionary is often called the “dictionary form” or “plain form”. It represents the non-past (present/future) affirmative tense.
Examples
- 食べる - eat / will eat
- 行く - go / will go
- 読む - read / will read
- 買う - buy / will buy