Here is a fact that changes how most English speakers approach Japanese: Japanese has only two truly irregular verbs. Every other verb — thousands of them — follows one of two predictable patterns. Once you understand those patterns, every conjugation form you ever need becomes a matter of applying a rule rather than memorising a separate table.
This guide covers every verb form you need, organised in the order you should learn them. It includes charts, formation rules, common mistakes, and JLPT level breakdowns — so whether you are just starting with ます form or working through causative-passive for N2, this is your complete reference.
At a Glance
| Form | JLPT Level | Core Usage |
|---|---|---|
| Dictionary form (plain) | N5 | Definitions, casual speech, before grammar patterns |
| ます form (polite) | N5 | Polite present/future |
| て form | N5 | Requests, sequences, ている, てもいいです |
| ない form | N5 | Negation, ないでください, なければなりません |
| た form | N5 | Plain past, たことがある, たほうがいい |
| Stem (ます stem) | N5 | ~たい, ~ながら, noun compounds |
| Potential form | N4 | Can do / ability |
| Volitional form | N4 | Let’s / intention ~ようと思う |
| Passive form | N3 | Passive, suffering passive (迷惑の受け身) |
| Causative form | N3 | Make/let someone do |
| Conditional forms (たら・ば・と・なら) | N3–N4 | If / when conditions |
| Causative-passive form | N2 | Being made to do (often reluctantly) |
| Imperative / prohibitive | N3 | Commands (rough register — use carefully) |
Why Japanese Verb Conjugation Is More Regular Than It Looks
Only two truly irregular verbs
In English, irregular verbs are everywhere: go/went, be/was/been, do/did/done. Japanese works very differently. Only する (to do) and くる (to come) behave irregularly. Every other Japanese verb belongs to one of two regular groups — and both groups follow fixed, learnable rules.
Godan and ichidan follow clear patterns
The two regular verb groups are called godan (五段, Group 1, often called U-verbs) and ichidan (一段, Group 2, often called RU-verbs). Each group changes endings in a consistent way across all conjugation forms. Learn the rule once, apply it everywhere.
Why English speakers find verb forms confusing
The challenge for English speakers is not the number of forms — it is the unfamiliarity of the categories. English encodes tense primarily through endings (walk/walked) and helpers (will walk, has walked). Japanese encodes not just tense but politeness level, aspect, permission, ability, obligation, and causation all through verb suffixes. The forms feel numerous because they are doing more work, not because the system is more chaotic.
How this guide is organised
This guide starts with the five forms every beginner needs, then moves through intermediate and advanced forms in learning-order sequence. Each section covers formation rules, key usage patterns, and the most common mistake English speakers make with that form. Charts and comparison tables appear throughout so you can use this as an ongoing reference.
The Three Japanese Verb Groups
Godan verbs (Group 1 / U-verbs)
Godan verbs (五段動詞) end in one of eight consonant sounds followed by the vowel u: く, ぐ, す, つ, ぬ, ぶ, む, or る (where the る follows a consonant). The name godan (five steps) comes from the fact that conjugation cycles through all five vowel rows of the Japanese syllabary. Examples: 書く (かく, to write), 飲む (のむ, to drink), 話す (はなす, to speak), 帰る (かえる, to return).
Ichidan verbs (Group 2 / RU-verbs)
Ichidan verbs (一段動詞) always end in る, where the syllable immediately before る contains an e or i vowel sound: 食べる (たべる, to eat), 見る (みる, to see), 起きる (おきる, to wake up). The name ichidan (one step) reflects that conjugation only ever changes the る ending — the stem stays the same across all forms.
Irregular verbs (する and くる)
Only two verbs are truly irregular: する (to do) and くる (to come). They must be memorised form by form. However, since する is the most common verb in Japanese (it converts nouns into verbs: 勉強する, 練習する, etc.) you will encounter it constantly and learn its forms quickly through exposure.
How to identify verb groups
| Rule | Verb Group | Examples |
|---|---|---|
| Ends in anything except る | Godan | 書く, 飲む, 話す, 待つ, 泳ぐ |
| Ends in る with e/i before it | Ichidan (usually) | 食べる (tabe-ru), 見る (mi-ru), 起きる (oki-ru) |
| Ends in る with e/i before it, but is godan anyway | Godan (exceptions!) | 帰る (kaeru), 走る (hashiru), 切る (kiru) |
| する / くる | Irregular | 勉強する, 来る |
Warning: Some verbs ending in iru/eru are actually godan, not ichidan. The most common traps: 帰る (return), 走る (run), 切る (cut), 知る (know), 入る (enter). These must be memorised as godan exceptions.
Common verb group mistakes
The most frequent error beginners make is treating 帰る (かえる, to return) as ichidan because it ends in える. It is godan. Similarly, 走る (はしる) looks ichidan but is godan. When in doubt, check a dictionary — most learner dictionaries label verb groups explicitly.
Why verb group matters for every conjugation
Every conjugation form in this guide has different rules for godan and ichidan verbs. Getting the group right from the start means every form you learn applies correctly. Getting it wrong means every form will be wrong.
The Forms You Should Learn First
Before diving into every form, here is the priority order for beginners:
- Dictionary form — used in casual speech and before grammar patterns
- ます form — the foundation of polite conversation
- て form — the most structurally important form in the language
- ない form — negation for everything
- た form — plain past tense and related patterns
These five forms unlock the vast majority of everyday Japanese. Master them before moving to potential, passive, and causative.
Why these five forms unlock most beginner Japanese
With dictionary + ます + て + ない + た forms, you can make statements, ask questions, give instructions, express negation, describe sequences of actions, talk about the past, make requests, express ongoing states (ている), and ask for permission (てもいいですか). That is most of what a beginner needs for months.
Dictionary Form
What dictionary form is
The dictionary form (辞書形, じしょけい) is the base form of every verb — the form you find in dictionaries. It is also called the plain non-past form. All godan verbs end in an u-row sound: 書く, 飲む, 話す. Ichidan verbs end in る: 食べる, 見る.
When dictionary form is used
Dictionary form appears in: casual present/future statements (毎朝コーヒーを飲む = I drink coffee every morning), before grammar patterns (~つもり, ~はずだ, ~ことができる, ~前に), in definitions, and in written/formal registers where plain form is standard.
Dictionary form in casual speech
In casual speech between friends, dictionary form replaces ます form entirely. 行く instead of 行きます, 食べる instead of 食べます. This is the register you will hear in anime, between peers, and in many song lyrics.
Dictionary form before grammar patterns
Many grammar structures attach directly to the dictionary form: 行くつもりです (I intend to go), 食べる前に (before eating), 書くことができる (can write). Recognising that these structures follow dictionary form helps you parse and build sentences faster.
Common mistake: using dictionary form in formal contexts
I told my Japanese teacher 明日学校に行く. Was that rude?


Yes, to a teacher you should say 明日学校に行きます. Dictionary form is casual — save it for friends and informal writing.
ます Form
What ます form is
The ます form (ます形, ますけい) is the polite non-past form of verbs. It is the form you will use in most real-world situations: with teachers, shopkeepers, colleagues, and anyone you are not on casual terms with.
How to make ます form
| Group | Rule | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Godan | Change final u-sound to i-sound + ます | 書く → 書きます; 飲む → 飲みます; 話す → 話します |
| Ichidan | Remove る + ます | 食べる → 食べます; 見る → 見ます |
| する | Irregular: し + ます | 勉強する → 勉強します |
| くる | Irregular: き + ます | 来る → 来ます (きます) |
ます, ません, ました, ませんでした
| Form | Meaning | Example (書く) |
|---|---|---|
| ~ます | Polite present/future affirmative | 書きます (I write / will write) |
| ~ません | Polite present/future negative | 書きません (I don’t write) |
| ~ました | Polite past affirmative | 書きました (I wrote) |
| ~ませんでした | Polite past negative | 書きませんでした (I didn’t write) |
Common mistake: mixing polite and casual forms
A common beginner error is mixing register in a single sentence — for example, 昨日図書館に行って、本を読んだです. The final だ/です after plain form is the collision point. In polite speech, keep all verbs in ます/です forms. In casual speech, drop ます entirely.
Verb Stem (ます Stem)
What the verb stem is
The verb stem (also called the ます stem or masu stem) is what remains when you remove ます from the ます form. It is the most versatile building block in Japanese grammar.
How to make the stem
書きます → 書き / 食べます → 食べ / します → し / きます → き
Stem + たい
[Verb stem] + たい = want to do. 食べたい (want to eat), 行きたい (want to go), 見たい (want to see). This is the standard first-person expression of desire for actions. Note: for wanting objects, use ほしい instead.
Stem + ながら
[Verb stem] + ながら = while doing. 音楽を聴きながら勉強する (study while listening to music). Both actions happen simultaneously, and the main action is the second verb.
Other uses of the stem
The stem also combines with: ~やすい/~にくい (easy/hard to do), ~すぎる (too much), ~方 (way of doing), ~始める/~続ける/~終わる (start/continue/finish doing), and is used to form compound nouns (読み方 = way of reading, 書き方 = way of writing).
て Form
What て form does
The て form is the connective backbone of Japanese. It links actions in sequence, forms requests, expresses states, asks for permission, and is the base for dozens of grammar patterns. Learning て form well is one of the highest-return investments a beginner can make.
How to make て form
| Godan ending | て form change | Example |
|---|---|---|
| く | いて | 書く → 書いて |
| ぐ | いで | 泳ぐ → 泳いで |
| す | して | 話す → 話して |
| つ | って | 待つ → 待って |
| る (godan) | って | 帰る → 帰って |
| う | って | 買う → 買って |
| ぬ | んで | 死ぬ → 死んで |
| ぶ | んで | 飛ぶ → 飛んで |
| む | んで | 飲む → 飲んで |
| Ichidan (any) | Remove る, add て | 食べる → 食べて |
| する | して | する → して |
| くる | きて | 来る → 来て (きて) |
Exception: 行く (いく, to go) → 行って (not 行いて). This is the only く-verb that breaks the いて rule.
てください
[て form] + ください = please do. 書いてください (please write), 待ってください (please wait), 食べてください (please eat). This is the standard polite request form for most situations.
てもいいです
[て form] + もいいです = it is okay to do / you may do. 食べてもいいです (you may eat). As a question: 入ってもいいですか (may I come in?). This is the standard way to ask for or give permission.
てはいけません
[て form] + はいけません = must not do / not allowed to do. 入ってはいけません (you must not enter). In casual speech: 入ってはだめ or 入っちゃだめ.
ている
[て form] + いる expresses either an ongoing action (今本を読んでいる = I am reading a book now) or a resulting state that continues (窓が開いている = the window is open [and remains open]). Which meaning applies depends on whether the verb is a process verb (action) or a change-of-state verb.
Common mistake: memorising て form without usage


I can make all the て forms perfectly but I still can’t use them in real sentences.


That’s the trap — て form alone does nothing. Pair each formation rule with a pattern: てください, てもいいですか, ている. Practice the pattern, not the form in isolation.
ない Form
What ない form is
The ない form is the plain negative form of a verb. It is the casual equivalent of ません, and is also the base for several important grammar patterns.
How to make ない form
| Group | Rule | Example | Note |
|---|---|---|---|
| Godan | Change final u-sound to a-sound + ない | 書く → 書かない; 飲む → 飲まない | う verbs: buy → 買わない (not 買あない) |
| Ichidan | Remove る + ない | 食べる → 食べない; 見る → 見ない | |
| する | Irregular: しない | 勉強する → 勉強しない | |
| くる | Irregular: こない | 来る → 来ない (こない) | |
| ある | Irregular: ない | ある → ない | Not あらない — this is an exception |
Important う-verb rule: When a godan verb ends in う, the a-row equivalent is wa (わ), not a (あ). So 買う (かう) → 買わない, not 買あない.
ないでください
[ない form] + でください = please do not. 入らないでください (please don’t enter). This is the standard polite negative request.
なければなりません
[ない form, remove い] + ければなりません = must do / have to do. 食べなければなりません (I have to eat). The casual contraction is なきゃ: 食べなきゃ. Note: なければ comes from the conditional form of ない.
なくてもいいです
[ない form, change い to く] + てもいいです = do not have to do / it is okay not to do. 食べなくてもいいです (you don’t have to eat). This is the negative counterpart of てもいいです.
Common mistake: confusing ないで and なくて
Both ないで and なくて are negative て forms, but they function differently. ないで means “do [the main action] without doing X” or “please don’t do X”: 朝ご飯を食べないで学校に行った (I went to school without eating breakfast). なくて expresses cause or reason: お金がなくて、買えなかった (because I didn’t have money, I couldn’t buy it). The test: if you can replace it with “without doing,” use ないで; if you can replace it with “because not,” use なくて.
た Form
What た form is
The た form is the plain past affirmative form. Its formation rules are identical to the て form — just swap て/で for た/だ. If you can make て form, you already know た form.
How to make た form
Apply the same rules as て form, replacing て with た and で with だ: 書く → 書いた, 泳ぐ → 泳いだ, 食べる → 食べた, 飲む → 飲んだ, 話す → 話した, する → した, くる → きた.
たことがある
[た form] + ことがある = have experienced doing / have done before. 富士山に登ったことがある (I have climbed Mt. Fuji). This is the standard “have you ever” pattern in Japanese.
たほうがいい
[た form] + ほうがいい = you should do / it would be better to do. 早く寝たほうがいい (you should sleep early). For negative advice: 食べないほうがいい (you shouldn’t eat that).
Common mistake: treating た as only simple past
た form is not just simple past. It appears in たことがある (experience), たほうがいい (advice), たら conditional (if/when X happened), たばかり (just did), and more. Treat た as a base for patterns, not just a past tense marker.
Potential Form
What potential form means
The potential form (可能形, かのうけい) expresses ability or possibility: “can do,” “is able to do.” 日本語が話せる = I can speak Japanese.
How to make potential form
| Group | Rule | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Godan | Change u-sound to e-sound + る | 書く → 書ける; 飲む → 飲める; 話す → 話せる |
| Ichidan | Remove る + られる | 食べる → 食べられる; 見る → 見られる |
| する | Irregular: できる | 勉強する → 勉強できる |
| くる | Irregular: こられる | 来る → 来られる (こられる) |
Ra-nuki (ら抜き) speech: In casual spoken Japanese, many ichidan potential forms drop the ら: 食べられる → 食べれる, 見られる → 見れる. This is widely used in speech but considered non-standard in formal writing.
できる vs potential form
できる is the potential form of する, but it is also used standalone for general ability: 泳ぐことができる = 泳げる (can swim). Both are correct. できる is slightly more formal; the conjugated potential form is more common in casual speech.
見える vs 見られる; 聞こえる vs 聞ける
見える (みえる) = can see / is visible (naturally, without effort). 見られる (みられる) = can watch / able to see (with the ability to do so). 富士山が見える (Mt. Fuji is visible) vs 映画が見られる (I can watch the movie). Similarly, 聞こえる = can be heard (naturally), 聞ける = able to listen (ability). These distinctions matter in real usage.
Common mistake: overusing できる
English speakers sometimes translate “I can” as できる for all verbs. For non-する verbs, the conjugated potential form (書ける, 飲める) sounds more natural than 書くことができる in casual contexts.
Passive Form
What passive form means
The passive form (受け身形, うけみけい) indicates that the subject receives the action of a verb. Japanese passive differs significantly from English passive — particularly with the indirect suffering passive, which has no clean English equivalent.
How to make passive form
| Group | Rule | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Godan | Change u-sound to a-sound + れる | 書く → 書かれる; 飲む → 飲まれる |
| Ichidan | Remove る + られる | 食べる → 食べられる; 見る → 見られる |
| する | Irregular: される | 批判する → 批判される |
| くる | Irregular: こられる | 来る → 来られる (こられる) |
Note for ichidan verbs: Passive 食べられる and potential 食べられる are identical in form. Context — particularly the particles used (に marks the agent in passive; が marks the experiencer in potential) — disambiguates them.
Direct passive
In direct passive, the thing receiving the action becomes the subject: 先生に褒められた (I was praised by the teacher). The agent (teacher) is marked by に.
Indirect suffering passive (迷惑の受け身)
The suffering passive (迷惑の受け身, めいわくのうけみ) is distinctly Japanese. The speaker is negatively affected by someone else’s action, even when they are not the direct object: 雨に降られた (I was rained on — the rain fell and it affected me negatively). 友達に来られて、勉強できなかった (My friend came over [unexpectedly] and I couldn’t study). There is no clean English translation — the grammar encodes inconvenience or suffering.


Why does 犬に噛まれた mean “I was bitten by the dog” — isn’t the dog the one who bit?


Exactly right. The dog did the biting (に marks the agent), but you are the subject — you received that action. Japanese passive puts the affected person as the topic or subject.
Passive in formal writing
Japanese uses passive frequently in formal and academic writing, often to sound objective or impersonal. 〜と考えられる (it is thought that…), 〜と言われる (it is said that…) are classic examples in news and academic texts.
Common mistake: copying English passive too much
English speakers often over-use passive because “The book was written by Natsume Soseki” maps neatly to 夏目漱石によって書かれた. But many English passives translate more naturally into Japanese active sentences with は/が structure. Use passive intentionally for suffering, formality, or when the affected subject matters.
Causative Form
What causative form means
The causative form (使役形, しえきけい) expresses making or letting someone do something. Whether it means “force” or “allow” depends on context.
How to make causative form
| Group | Rule | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Godan | Change u-sound to a-sound + せる | 書く → 書かせる; 飲む → 飲ませる |
| Ichidan | Remove る + させる | 食べる → 食べさせる; 見る → 見させる |
| する | Irregular: させる | する → させる; 勉強させる |
| くる | Irregular: こさせる | 来る → 来させる (こさせる) |
Making someone do something (〜させる)
先生は学生に宿題をやらせた (The teacher made the students do homework). The person being caused to act is marked with に or を depending on whether the verb is transitive or intransitive.
Letting someone do something (〜させてあげる)
[causative] + てあげる = let someone do (as a favour to them). 子供に好きな物を食べさせてあげた (I let the child eat what they liked). The addition of あげる shifts the nuance from “make” to “allow” as a gift.
Common mistake: confusing させる direction
English speakers sometimes produce sentences like 私は母に宿題をさせた intending “My mother made me do homework.” But this says “I made my mother do homework.” In causative sentences, the grammatical subject (は/が) is the one who causes. The one being made to act is marked with に/を.
Causative-Passive Form
What causative-passive means
The causative-passive form (使役受け身形) means “to be made to do something.” It typically carries a nuance of reluctance, inconvenience, or compulsion. This is an N2-level form but appears frequently in everyday speech about obligations.
How to make causative-passive form
Apply passive form to the causative: causative (させる) → させられる.
| Group | Full form | Contracted (spoken) | Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| Godan | a-row + せられる | a-row + される (す verbs cannot contract) | 飲む → 飲まされる; 書く → 書かされる |
| Ichidan | させられる | No contraction | 食べる → 食べさせられる |
| する | させられる | — | させられる |
| くる | こさせられる | — | こさせられる |
Being made to do something
毎日残業させられた (I was made to work overtime every day — and I resented it). 嫌いな野菜を食べさせられた (I was made to eat vegetables I hated). The form consistently encodes that the speaker did not choose to do the action.
Common mistake: confusing causative and passive
Beginners sometimes mix up させる (causative — I make/let others do) and される (passive — I receive an action from others) and させられる (causative-passive — I am made to do). Keeping the direction of agency clear is key: who is acting on whom?
Volitional Form
What volitional form means
The volitional form (意向形, いこうけい) expresses “let’s do” or a speaker’s intention to do something. In polite speech it appears as ましょう. In plain speech it uses a different vowel shift.
How to make volitional form
| Group | Rule | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Godan | Change u-sound to o-sound + う | 書く → 書こう; 飲む → 飲もう; 話す → 話そう |
| Ichidan | Remove る + よう | 食べる → 食べよう; 見る → 見よう |
| する | Irregular: しよう | する → しよう |
| くる | Irregular: こよう | 来る → 来よう (こよう) |
| Polite (all) | ます stem + ましょう | 書きましょう, 食べましょう, しましょう |
〜ようと思う
[Volitional] + と思う = I think I will do / I am thinking of doing. 来週日本に行こうと思う (I’m thinking of going to Japan next week). This expresses a tentative intention or a decision the speaker is considering.
〜ようとする
[Volitional] + とする = to try to do / to be about to do. ドアを開けようとしたが、開かなかった (I tried to open the door, but it wouldn’t open). This expresses an attempt or near-action.
Common mistake: confusing volitional and intention
〜ようと思う (thinking of doing — uncertain/tentative) and つもりだ (firm intention / plan) are often confused. Use ようと思う when you are considering something or have just decided. Use つもり when the plan is more settled: 来年日本に行くつもりだ (I plan to go to Japan next year).
Imperative and Prohibitive Forms
Command forms
The imperative form (命令形, めいれいけい) is the blunt command form. Godan: change u-sound to e-sound (書け!, 飲め!, 話せ!). Ichidan: remove る, add ろ or よ (食べろ!, 見ろ!). Irregular: しろ!, こい!
な prohibition
To command someone not to do something, attach な directly to the dictionary form: 行くな! (Don’t go!), 食べるな! (Don’t eat that!). This is extremely blunt.
When these forms sound rough
Both imperative and な prohibition are very rough register. They are used by parents to children, coaches to athletes, or between close male friends. In most adult social situations, they come across as aggressive or rude.
Safer alternatives for learners
For requests and instructions, use: てください (please do), てもらえますか (could you please do?), or なさい (for mild parental instruction). For prohibition: ないでください (please don’t) or てはいけません (must not). These cover all practical situations without the rough edge.
Anime and manga warning
Anime and manga use imperative and な prohibition constantly — characters shout 行けー! and やめろ! frequently. This creates a false impression that these forms are normal speech. They are normal for drama. Using them in real life will startle people.
Conditional Verb Forms
たら
たら is the most versatile conditional. Formed from た form + ら. It covers “when/if X happens” and can refer to completed conditions (when something is done): 家に帰ったら電話してください (When you get home, please call me). Works for hypotheticals too: もっとお金があったら旅行したい (If I had more money, I’d travel).
ば
ば (the ba-conditional) is formed by changing the u-sound of godan verbs to e-sound + ば (書けば), or removing る from ichidan and adding れば (食べれば). It often implies that the condition is sufficient for the result: 行けばわかる (If you go, you’ll understand). It appears frequently in proverbs and formal writing.
と
と conditional (dictionary form + と) expresses an inevitable, automatic, or natural result: 右に曲がると、駅が見える (If you turn right, you’ll see the station). It is typically used for directions, instructions, and natural cause-effect. It cannot be used for intentional actions in the result clause.
なら
なら is used when responding to or building on information just received: 日本語を勉強するなら、ひらがなから始めたほうがいい (If you’re going to study Japanese, it’s better to start with hiragana). It implies “given that that’s the case” or “speaking of.”
How conditional forms differ
| Conditional | Best use | Key nuance |
|---|---|---|
| たら | When/if (most versatile) | Condition seen as a completed point in time |
| ば | Sufficient condition | If this is done, that follows; proverbs, formal |
| と | Automatic/natural result | Result always follows; used for directions |
| なら | Contextual / responsive | Based on what you just said / if that’s the situation |
Verb Form Comparison Guide
ている vs てある
ている: describes an ongoing action or a resulting state (窓が開いている = the window is open (resulting state)). てある: describes a state resulting from a deliberate action left in place (窓が開けてある = the window has been opened [and left that way intentionally]). てある always implies someone did something on purpose; ている is neutral on intent.
ておく vs てある
ておく: do something in advance / do and leave it ready (明日のために準備しておく = prepare in advance for tomorrow). てある: describes the resulting state after such preparation. ておく focuses on the action of doing in advance; てある focuses on the resulting state.
てしまう vs ちゃう
てしまう: expresses completion with regret or unintentional completion (宿題を忘れてしまった = I unfortunately forgot my homework; 全部食べてしまった = I ended up eating everything). ちゃう/じゃう: casual contracted form of てしまう (忘れちゃった). Same meaning, more conversational register.
ないで vs なくて
ないで: do X without doing Y / please don’t do Y. 朝ご飯を食べないで出かけた (I left without eating breakfast). なくて: because of not doing / not being the case. お金がなくて困っている (I’m in trouble because I don’t have money). Test: “without doing” = ないで; “because not” = なくて.
られる vs できる
Both express ability. られる (potential form of ichidan verbs): 食べられる, 見られる. できる: potential of する, or ことができる pattern for all verbs. In casual speech, できる sounds slightly more formal/bookish when used for non-する verbs; the conjugated potential form is preferred: 泳げる > 泳ぐことができる in casual contexts.
ましょう vs ましょうか
ましょう: “Let’s do” — speaker includes themselves in the invitation. 行きましょう (Let’s go). ましょうか: “Shall I do” or “Shall we do?” — offering to do something for someone or proposing. 手伝いましょうか (Shall I help you?). The か makes it a question/offer rather than a declaration.
ようと思う vs つもり
ようと思う: tentative intention, just decided, or considering. 来週から運動しようと思う (I’m thinking of starting to exercise next week). つもり: firm plan or settled intention. 来年日本に行くつもりだ (I plan to go to Japan next year). つもり also has a secondary meaning of “I consider myself to be” (運動しているつもりだ = I consider myself to be exercising [though maybe others disagree]).
Verb Conjugation by JLPT Level
| JLPT Level | Forms to Master |
|---|---|
| N5 | Dictionary form, ます form (ます/ません/ました/ませんでした), て form + basic patterns (てください, ている, てもいいです), ない form (ないでください), た form (past tense) |
| N4 | Stem + たい, stem + ながら, potential form, volitional form (ましょう + plain), たら conditional (basic usage) |
| N3 | Passive form (direct + suffering passive), causative form, all four conditionals (たら/ば/と/なら), てある, ておく, てしまう, なければならない |
| N2 | Causative-passive, advanced conditionals, ようと思う vs つもり distinctions, formal passive writing patterns |
| N1 | Literary/classical forms (べし, ざる, たる), formal written patterns, advanced nuance in passive/causative, non-standard potential (ら-nuki in analysis) |
Common Verb Conjugation Mistakes English Speakers Make
Misidentifying godan and ichidan verbs
Treating 帰る, 走る, 知る as ichidan leads to wrong conjugations in every form. Check these common godan exceptions in a dictionary until you have memorised them. There are only a few dozen truly ambiguous verbs.
Forgetting irregular verbs
Beginners sometimes try to apply godan or ichidan rules to する and くる. しない, できる, して, しよう, させる, される — all must be memorised separately. The good news: there are only two, and you will use them so frequently they become automatic.
Mixing polite and casual forms
Using dictionary form verb + です (食べるです) is a common intermediate mistake. In polite speech, use 食べます. In casual speech, drop です entirely. 食べるです does not exist as a natural form.
Using て form incorrectly


I said 行くてください. My teacher looked confused.


て form of 行く is 行って — not 行くて. The dictionary form never directly attaches to て. You must conjugate first: 行ってください.
Confusing passive and potential
For ichidan verbs, passive and potential forms are identical: 食べられる can mean “can eat” (potential) or “is eaten” (passive). Read the particles: が食べられる (potential — can eat) vs に食べられる (passive — eaten by). Context is your guide.
Overusing English-style passive
Not all English passives translate to Japanese passive. “This book is sold everywhere” is more naturally この本はどこでも売っている than この本はどこでも売られている. When something is simply a state, ている often works better.
Avoiding output practice
The biggest mistake is studying conjugation tables without using the forms in sentences. Verb forms only become automatic through repetition in context. Write example sentences. Say them aloud. Use them in conversation. The goal is not to recognise forms — it is to produce them without thinking.
Verb Conjugation Charts
Godan verb conjugation chart: 書く (かく, to write)
| Form | Conjugation |
|---|---|
| Dictionary | 書く |
| ます (polite) | 書きます |
| て form | 書いて |
| ない form | 書かない |
| た form (plain past) | 書いた |
| Stem | 書き |
| Potential | 書ける |
| Passive | 書かれる |
| Causative | 書かせる |
| Causative-passive | 書かされる |
| Volitional (plain) | 書こう |
| Volitional (polite) | 書きましょう |
| Imperative | 書け |
| Conditional (たら) | 書いたら |
| Conditional (ば) | 書けば |
Ichidan verb conjugation chart: 食べる (たべる, to eat)
| Form | Conjugation |
|---|---|
| Dictionary | 食べる |
| ます (polite) | 食べます |
| て form | 食べて |
| ない form | 食べない |
| た form | 食べた |
| Stem | 食べ |
| Potential | 食べられる (casual: 食べれる) |
| Passive | 食べられる |
| Causative | 食べさせる |
| Causative-passive | 食べさせられる |
| Volitional (plain) | 食べよう |
| Volitional (polite) | 食べましょう |
| Imperative | 食べろ |
| Conditional (たら) | 食べたら |
| Conditional (ば) | 食べれば |
Irregular verb chart: する and くる
| Form | する | くる (来る) |
|---|---|---|
| Dictionary | する | 来る (くる) |
| ます | します | 来ます (きます) |
| て form | して | 来て (きて) |
| ない form | しない | 来ない (こない) |
| た form | した | 来た (きた) |
| Stem | し | 来 (き) |
| Potential | できる | 来られる (こられる) |
| Passive | される | 来られる (こられる) |
| Causative | させる | 来させる (こさせる) |
| Causative-passive | させられる | 来させられる (こさせられる) |
| Volitional | しよう | 来よう (こよう) |
| Imperative | しろ | 来い (こい) |
て form quick reference chart
| Verb ending | て form rule | Example |
|---|---|---|
| く | → いて | 書く → 書いて (exception: 行く → 行って) |
| ぐ | → いで | 泳ぐ → 泳いで |
| す | → して | 話す → 話して |
| つ, る (godan), う | → って | 待つ → 待って; 帰る → 帰って; 買う → 買って |
| ぬ, ぶ, む | → んで | 死ぬ → 死んで; 飛ぶ → 飛んで; 飲む → 飲んで |
| Ichidan (る) | Remove る, + て | 食べる → 食べて; 見る → 見て |
| する | → して | する → して |
| くる | → きて | 来る → 来て |
Potential/passive/causative comparison chart
| Form | Godan (書く) | Ichidan (食べる) | する | くる |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Potential | 書ける | 食べられる | できる | 来られる |
| Passive | 書かれる | 食べられる | される | 来られる |
| Causative | 書かせる | 食べさせる | させる | 来させる |
| Causative-passive | 書かされる | 食べさせられる | させられる | 来させられる |
Japanese Verb Conjugation Practice
Start with one verb group
Pick five godan verbs you actually use (飲む, 書く, 話す, 聞く, 行く) and drill every form for those five verbs before moving to ichidan. Depth before breadth. Once you internalise the godan pattern with real verbs, the pattern generalises automatically.
Drill one form at a time
Do not try to learn all forms simultaneously. Spend a week on て form alone — formation and usage in てください, ている, てもいいですか. Then move to ない form. Stack forms on the ones you already know. This sequenced approach builds a solid foundation rather than a fragile overview.
Use real sentences, not isolated forms
書いて by itself means nothing in practice. 手紙を書いてください (Please write a letter) is real. Make example sentences that you would actually say or hear. Write them down. Review them. The form sticks because the meaning sticks.
Say the forms aloud
Japanese verb forms have rhythms and sounds that become intuitive with speaking practice. If 書いた sounds right and 書くた sounds wrong to your ear, you no longer need to consciously apply the rule — your ear does the work. This takes exposure time, but it is the goal.
Quick Quiz: Verb Conjugation
Test yourself — answers below.
- What is the て form of 飲む?
- What is the ない form of 買う?
- What is the passive form of 書く?
- Which form: 食べ____ことがある (have you ever eaten…)?
- What is the causative-passive of 飲む in its contracted spoken form?
Answers: 1. 飲んで — 2. 買わない (not 買あない — う verbs use わ) — 3. 書かれる — 4. 食べた (たことがある) — 5. 飲まされる
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Daisuke is the creator of JP YoKoSo — a Japanese learning site for English speakers. Every article is written to explain Japanese clearly, with real examples, grammar notes, and practical tips for learners at every level.
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