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The Japanese て-form: the connector that does everything

If there's one verb form to learn well, it's the -form. By itself it means almost nothing — it carries no tense and finishes no sentence. That's exactly why it's everywhere: it's the joint Japanese uses to hook a verb onto whatever comes next, whether that's a request, an ongoing action, permission, a rule, or simply the next thing that happens. Learn how to make it and a huge slice of everyday grammar opens up at once. The good news: it's built with the very same sound-changes as the plain past tense — if you know , you already know .

What the て-form is — and isn't

The -form is a connecting form. Think of it as ending a clause on a comma rather than a full stop: "having done X, …" or just "do X, and …". Because it doesn't lock in a tense or a level of politeness on its own, the words that follow it decide what the whole sentence means.

So this one form is the launchpad for a long list of patterns. First, how to build it.

How to make the て-form

Sort the verb into its group first, exactly as for every other form. -verbs and the two irregulars are trivial; -verbs use the onbin sound-changes.

る-verbs and irregulars
TypeRuleExample
る-verbdrop , add 食べる → 食べて
見る → 見て
irregularlearn themする → して
来る → 来て (kite)

For -verbs, the ending fuses with and shifts sound. It's the identical table as the plain past — just swap and :

う-verb て-form (the onbin groups)
EndingbecomesExample(cf. past)
…う / つ / る…って買う → 買って
待つ → 待って
帰る → 帰って
買った
…む / ぶ / ぬ…んで飲む → 飲んで
遊ぶ → 遊んで
死ぬ → 死んで
飲んだ
…く…いて書く → 書いて書いた
…ぐ…いで泳ぐ → 泳いで泳いだ
…す…して話す → 話して話した

The one exception: (iku, "to go") looks like a verb but goes (not ) — matching its past . It's the single common verb that breaks the rule, so burn it in early.

Adjectives have a て-form too

The -form isn't only for verbs — it's how you chain adjectives together ("cheap and tasty"). The two adjective types behave differently, as always:

TypeRuleExample
い-adjectivedrop , add 安い → 安くて
高い → 高くて
な-adjectiveadd 静か → 静かで
便利 → 便利で
noun + ですadd 学生 → 学生で

So = "cheap and tasty," and = "a quiet and pretty room." The irregular follows its usual habit of conjugating from : , never .

What you can do with it

Here's the payoff. Each of these is just the -form plus a small tail — learn the form once and all of them come almost for free.

1 · Make a request — 〜てください

The polite "please do …". Add to the -form:

2 · Ongoing action or state — 〜ている

Add for the progressive ("is ‑ing") and for resulting states ("is married," "is open"). In casual speech the often drops to :

3 · String actions in order

Use to chain "do this, then that." Only the final verb shows the tense and politeness — every earlier verb sits in plain -form:

4 · Give permission — 〜てもいい

"May / it's OK to …". Add ; with it asks permission:

5 · Forbid something — 〜てはいけない

"Must not …". Add (casual ):

6 · A couple more worth knowing

Putting it together

  1. Find the group. -verb? Drop , add . Irregular? / .
  2. う-verb? Apply the onbin shift — — exactly as for the past, with the lone exception.
  3. It carries no tense. Whatever follows the -form supplies the tense and politeness.
  4. Bolt on a tail. , , , — each is a whole pattern resting on this one form.
  5. Adjectives join with it too: , .

Common questions

How do you make the て-form of a verb?
-verbs drop and add (). -verbs use the same onbin shifts as the past, with : , , , , . The irregulars are and (kite), and is the one exception.
What is the て-form used for?
It's a connector, so it has many jobs: requests (), the progressive and states (), chaining actions (), permission () and prohibition (). It carries no tense itself, so the following word sets the meaning.
Is the て-form the same as the past tense?
No, but they share the same sound-changes, which is why they're learned together. The past ends in and means it happened (, drank). The -form ends in and carries no tense by itself (, "and drink / drinking …") — it waits for the next word.
What's the difference between てください and just the て-form?
The bare -form on its own is an abrupt, very casual command — fine between close friends but blunt otherwise. Adding makes it the standard polite request: ("wait!") vs ("please wait").
Do adjectives have a て-form?
Yes — it's how you join descriptions. -adjectives become (), and -adjectives and nouns add (). So = "cheap and tasty." goes .

Every tail is kana. The bits that do all the work here — , , , , , — are pure hiragana hooked onto a stem. The faster you read those tails, the faster the pattern jumps out at you. The kana typing game flashes a character and asks for its romaji against the clock, drilling exactly that reading reflex into a combo chase.

Play the kana game →

Next steps: see where it comes from in verbs & conjugation, chain it with the right markers on the particles page, or join descriptions with adjectives.