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Japanese verbs: the three groups & how they change

Japanese verbs are far more regular than English ones — there's no "go / went / gone," and a verb never changes for who is doing the action. What it does change for is politeness, tense and whether it's positive or negative, and almost every verb follows one of just two patterns. Sort a verb into its group once and every other form falls out of it. Here's how the groups work, how to build the polite -form, and how the plain negative and past are made.

First, the easy part

Two facts make Japanese verbs gentler than you'd expect:

So conjugation isn't about matching a subject. It only answers three questions: is it polite or plain, past or not, and positive or negative? That's the entire job.

Two forms you'll meet first

Every verb has a dictionary (plain) form and a polite () form. They mean the same thing; they just set the register.

FormExampleWhere you use it
Dictionary / plain食べる taberuCasual speech, with friends, and as the building block for almost every other form. It's the form you look up.
Polite / 食べます tabemasuThe safe, neutral-polite form for strangers, teachers, work — what most courses teach first.

Dictionaries always list the plain form, and it ends in one of the -row sounds: . That ending is the clue to which group a verb belongs to.

The three groups

Sorting a verb into its group is the one decision that controls everything else. There are only three.

る-verbs · Group 2
食べ

taberu — to eat
Also called ichidan. End in with an i or e sound before it. To conjugate, just drop .

う-verbs · Group 1

nomu — to drink
Also called godan. End in any -row sound. The final sound shifts when they conjugate.

Irregular
する・来る

suru — to do · kuru — to come
Exactly two. They don't follow either pattern and are simply learned by heart.

Telling る-verbs from う-verbs

This is the one tricky part, and it has a clean rule:

The famous exceptions. A handful of verbs end in / but are う-verbs anyway: (kaeru, return), (hairu, enter), (kiru, cut), (hashiru, run), (shiru, know), (iru, need). They look like る-verbs but conjugate as う-verbs — there are only a dozen or so common ones, and they're worth memorising as a set.

Making the polite ます-form

The -form is the most useful target, so start here.

From the dictionary form to ます
GroupRuleExample
る-verbdrop , add 食べる → 食べます
見る → 見ます
う-verbfinal u-sound → its i-sound, add 飲む → 飲みます
書く → 書きます
待つ → 待ちます
買う → 買います
irregularlearn themする → します
来る → 来ます (kimasu)

For う-verbs the shift is a sound, not a letter: mu → mi, ku → ki, tsu → chi, u → i. Once it's in , the rest is mechanical — the polite negative and past all live in that same ending:

Meaning飲む (drink)
drink / will drink飲みます
don't drink飲みません
drank飲みました
didn't drink飲みませんでした

That four-cell box — — is the same for every verb in the language. Get a verb into its -stem and politeness, tense and negation are free.

The plain forms: negative ない and past た

The casual forms are built straight off the dictionary form. The negative ("don't / doesn't") is the tidy one:

Plain negative — …ない
GroupRuleExample
る-verbdrop , add 食べる → 食べない
う-verbfinal u-sound → its a-sound, add 飲む → 飲まない
書く → 書かない
う-verb ending in (not ), add 買う → 買わない
会う → 会わない
irregularする → しない
来る → 来ない (konai)

One verb breaks the rule worth flagging now: ("to exist," for things) has no — its plain negative is simply .

The past た — and the sound-changes behind it

For る-verbs and the irregulars, the plain past just swaps in : , , (kita). For う-verbs, though, the ending fuses with the and changes sound — these little euphonic shifts are called onbin, and they're the same shifts that produce the all-important -form (just swap , ).

う-verb plain past (the onbin groups)
EndingbecomesExample past→ て-form
…う / つ / る…った買う → 買った
待つ → 待った
帰る → 帰った
買って
…む / ぶ / ぬ…んだ飲む → 飲んだ
遊ぶ → 遊んだ
死ぬ → 死んだ
飲んで
…く…いた書く → 書いた書いて
…ぐ…いだ泳ぐ → 泳いだ泳いで
…す…した話す → 話した話して

One stubborn exception: (iku, "to go") looks like a verb but goes / (not ). It's the only common verb that breaks the rule, so it's worth burning in early.

If the onbin table looks like a lot, the comforting news is that it's finite — five endings, fixed shifts, no surprises — and the -form you get for free from it is the single most reused piece of Japanese grammar: it links clauses, makes requests (), and builds the progressive (, "is ‑ing"). Nailing this table pays off everywhere.

The two irregulars in full

Only and are truly irregular — and 's quirk is that its reading changes even though the kanji doesn't:

Formする (do)来る (come)
dictionaryする suru来る kuru
politeします来ます kimasu
plain negativeしない来ない konai
plain pastした来た kita
て-formして来て kite

is the workhorse of the language because it turns nouns into verbs: (study) → (to study), (phone) → (to call). Learn once and you've unlocked thousands of verbs.

Putting it together

  1. Find the group. Not ? う-verb. Ends in ? Check the vowel before it (and watch the -type exceptions).
  2. る-verbs are easy: drop , then add .
  3. う-verbs shift their final sound: i for , a for , and the onbin shifts for past/て.
  4. The box is universal: works for every verb.
  5. Just two irregulars: and — memorise their short tables and the rest of the language is regular.

Common questions

What are the three Japanese verb groups?
る-verbs (ichidan / Group 2), where you drop ; う-verbs (godan / Group 1), where the final u-sound shifts — ; and the two irregulars and . The group decides how every other form is built.
How do you make the polite ます-form?
る-verb: drop , add (). う-verb: change the final u-sound to its i-sound, add (, , ). Irregulars: and (kimasu).
How can you tell a る-verb from an う-verb?
If it doesn't end in , it's an う-verb. If it ends in , the vowel before it decides: a/u/o () is an う-verb; i/e () is usually a る-verb. A few i/e verbs — — are う-verbs anyway and must be memorised.
Why is 飲む's past 飲んだ but 書く's is 書いた?
Because う-verb past tense uses sound-changes (onbin) that depend on the ending: , , , , and . The same shifts build the -form (just ). The one exception is .
Do Japanese verbs change for I, you, he or she?
No — one form covers every subject, singular or plural. A verb changes only for politeness, tense and positive/negative, and it always sits at the end of the sentence.

Every ending is kana. The pieces that do all the work here — , , , , , — are pure hiragana bolted onto a stem. The quicker you read those tails, the quicker a verb's group and tense jump 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 the verb sits in word order & SOV, pair it with the right marker on the particles page, or learn the describing words in adjectives.