Verbs ~て (~Te) form

Posted by Diposting oleh INYOMAN INDRA S ( UNJ ) On 09.29

Japanese Verbs ~て (~Te) form
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Most "learn japanese" web sites proceed to a ~te form(~て)(or some call it ~te base or base 6) right after the dictionary form. Some say "If there is one type of verb conjugation to learn and learn extremely well it would be this".

I feel bit guilty (or guil~te :) for ignoring it for so long. So, what is the ~て form/base?

Surprisingly, most sources tend to avoid direct definition of ~ て, saying something like:

* "The -te form of a verb which does not have a tense or mood combines with other verb forms."
* "It does not indicate tense by itself, however it combines with other verb forms to create other tenses."
* "The ~て form of a Japanese verb is used when the verb has some kind of connection to the following words."

Fundamentally dissatisfied with such a "negative" definition, I tried to figure out what ~て IS rather than what it IS NOT. So here is what I found:

~て form definition / usage

Conjugation
The ~て form has the same meaning as continuous tenses in English that use the auxiliary verbs am, are, is, was and were:

* I am riding the train.
* I was riding the train.
* He is talking to a friend.
* He was talking to a friend.

Continuous Actions
Actions that occur in the present or occurred in the past. The ~て form has the same meaning as the English continuous tense:

* I am watching television.
* I am listening to music.
* I was doing my homework.
* I was eating with a friend.

Incomplete tasks
You're left with a sense an action not taking place:

* I haven't done any studying for the test.
* I haven't done the homework yet.

Habitual
This form may also be used to describe a habitual activity.

* I read the USA Today newspaper.

Stative vs Non-stative verbs
Much like English, there are verbs that describe a state of the subject, rather than an action. These type of verbs are called stative. You may want to think of these as actions that started in the past, arrived to a state, and this state persists to the present.

* The library is open.
* ~ has come, has gone, has returned

There are few other cases where ~て is in use (most likely will be discussed later).

~て form conjugation

The conjugation of the ~て form is similar to the conjugation of the past tense.

Since ~ください kudasai (please) is one of the most useful ~て endings, one that is indispensable for polite and proper speech, I have decided to learn it first, along with the ~て conjugation.

To say "please + verb" form you add~てください (te+kudasai) to the verb stem. ~て (te) plus ください (kudasai) someimes called Polite Affirmative . So when using "te+kudasai" you politely ask/allow/command your counterpart to do/proceed (with)something.

Group 1: ~ U ending verbs (godan)

to speak(話す) hanasu はなす hanashimasu はなします  
hanashite はなして hanashitekudasai はな
to write(書く) kaku かく kakimasu かきます
kaite かいて kaitekudasai かいてください
to listen (聞く) kiku きく kikimasu ききます
kiite きいて kiitekudasai きいてください
to wait(待つ) matsu まつ machimasu まちます
matte まって mattekudasai まってください
to drink(飲む)momimasu のみます nomimashimasu のみまします
nomimashite のみまして nomimashitekudasai のみましてください

Group 2: ~ Iru and ~ Eru ending verbs (yodan)

to wear (着る) kiru きる kimasu きます
kite きて kitekudasai きてください
to see (見る) miru みる mimasu みます
mite みて mitekudasai みてください
to get up (起きる) okiru おきる okimasu おきます
okite おきて okitekudasai おきてください
to get off (降りる) oriru おりる orimasu おります
orite おりて oritekudasai おりてください
to believe(信じる) shinjiru しんじる shinjimasu しんじます
shinjite しんじて shinjitekudasai しんじてください

As always, yodan is a snap.

Group 3: Irregular Verbs くる (kuru) and ~する (~suru)

to come (来る) kuru きる kimasu きます
kite きて kitekudasai きてください
to do (する) suru する shimasu します
shite して shitekudasai してください
to study(勉強する)benkyou-suru べんきょうする benkyou-shimasu べんきょうします
benkyou-shite べんきょうして benkyou-shitekudasai べんきょうしてください

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