Japanese grammar

Japanese is an agglutinative, synthetic, mora-timed language with simple phonotactics, a pure vowel system, phonemic vowel and consonant length, and a lexically significant pitch-accent. Word order is normally subject–object–verb with particles marking the grammatical function of words, and sentence structure is topic–comment. Its phrases are exclusively head-final and compound sentences are exclusively left-branching. Sentence-final particles are used to add emotional or emphatic impact, or make questions. Nouns have no grammatical number or gender, and there are no articles. Verbs are conjugated, primarily for tense and voice, but not person. Japanese adjectives are also conjugated. Japanese has a complex system of honorifics with verb forms and vocabulary to indicate the relative status of the speaker, the listener, and persons mentioned.

In language typology, it has many features different from most European languages.

Word order: head-final and left-branching
The modern theory of constituent order ("word order"), usually attributed to Joseph Harold Greenberg, identifies several kinds of phrases. Each one has a head and possibly a modifier. The head of a phrase either precedes its modifier (head-initial) or follows it (head-final). Some of these phrase types, with the head marked in boldface, are:
 * genitive phrase, i.e., noun modified by another noun ("the cover of the book", "the book's cover");
 * noun governed by an adposition ("on the table", "underneath the table");
 * comparison ("[X is] bigger than Y", i.e., "compared to Y, X is big").
 * noun modified by an adjective ("black cat").

Some languages are inconsistent in constituent order, having a mixture of head-initial phrase types and head-final phrase types. Looking at the preceding list, English for example is mostly head-initial, but nouns follow the adjectives which modify them. Moreover, genitive phrases can be either head-initial or head-final in English. By contrast, the Japanese language is consistently head-final:
 * genitive phrase:


 * noun governed by an adposition:


 * comparison:


 * noun modified by an adjective:

Head-finality in Japanese sentence structure carries over to the building of sentences using other sentences. In sentences that have other sentences as constituents, the subordinated sentences (relative clauses, for example), always precede what they refer to, since they are modifiers and what they modify has the syntactic status of phrasal head. Translating the phrase "the man who was walking down the street" into Japanese word order would be "street down walking was man".

Head-finality prevails also when sentences are coordinated instead of subordinated. In the world's languages, it is common to avoid repetition between coordinated clauses by optionally deleting a constituent common to the two parts, as in "Bob bought his mother some flowers and his father a tie", where the second bought is omitted. In Japanese, such "gapping" must proceed in the reverse order: "Bob mother for some flowers and father for tie bought". The reason for this is that in Japanese, sentences (other than occasional inverted sentences or sentences containing afterthoughts) always end in a verb (or other predicative words like adjectival verbs, adjectival nouns, auxiliary verbs)—the only exceptions being a few sentence-ending particles such as, , and. The particle turns a statement into a question, while the others express the speaker's attitude towards the statement.

Word class system
Japanese has five major lexical word classes: More broadly, there are two classes: uninflectable (nouns, including verbal nouns and nominal adjectives) and inflectable (verbs, with adjectives as defective verbs). To be precise, a verbal noun is simply a noun to which the light verb "do" (する) can be appended, while an adjectival noun is like a noun but uses -na (〜な) instead of -no (〜の) when acting attributively. Adjectives (-adjectives) inflect identically to the negative form of verbs, which end in na-i (ない). Compare don't eat (食べない) → didn't eat (食べなかった) and is hot (熱い) → was hot (熱かった).
 * nouns
 * verbal nouns (correspond to English gerunds like 'studying', 'jumping', which denote activities)
 * nominal adjectives (names vary, also called -adjectives or "adjectival nouns")
 * verbs
 * adjectives (so-called -adjectives)

Some scholars, such as Eleanor Harz Jorden, refer to adjectives instead as adjectivals, since they are grammatically distinct from adjectives: they can predicate a sentence. That is, atsui (熱い) is glossed as "hot" when modifying a noun phrase, as in hot food (熱いご飯), but as "is hot" when predicating, as in [the] food is hot (ご飯は熱い).

The two inflected classes, verb and adjective, are closed classes, meaning they do not readily gain new members. Instead, new and borrowed verbs and adjectives are conjugated periphrastically as verbal noun + (e.g. do studying; study (勉強する)) and adjectival noun +. This differs from Indo-European languages, where verbs and adjectives are open classes, though analogous "do" constructions exist, including English "do a favor", "do the twist" or French "faire un footing" (do a "footing", go for a jog), and periphrastic constructions are common for other senses, like "try climbing" (verbal noun) or "try parkour" (noun). Other languages where verbs are a closed class include Basque: very few Basque verbs (albeits very common ones) have synthetic conjugation, all the others are only formed periphrastically. Conversely, pronouns are closed classes in Western languages but open classes in Japanese and some other East Asian languages.

In a few cases new verbs are created by appending -ru (〜る) suffix to a noun or using it to replace the end of a word. This is most often done with borrowed words, and results in a word written in a mixture of katakana (stem) and hiragana (inflectional ending), which is otherwise very rare. This is typically casual, with the most well-established example being skip class; play hooky (サボる) (circa 1920), from sabotage (サボタージュ), with other common examples including write a memo (メモる), from memo (メモ), and make a mistake (ミスる) from mistake (ミス). In cases where the borrowed word already ends with a ru (ル), this may be punned to a ru (る), as in to google (ググる), from Google (グーグル), and to double (ダブる), from double (ダブル).

New adjectives are extremely rare; one example is yellow (黄色い), from adjectival noun kiiro (黄色), and a more casual recent example is gross (きもい), by contraction of bad-feeling (気持ち悪い). By contrast, in Old Japanese -shiki (〜しき) adjectives (precursors of present -adjectives ending in -shi-i (〜しい), formerly a different word class) were open, as reflected in words like pitiful (痛々しい), from the adjective painful, hurt (痛い), and heavenly, sublime (神々しい), from the noun god (神) (with sound change). Japanese adjectives are unusual in being closed class but quite numerous – about 700 adjectives – while most languages with closed class adjectives have very few. Some believe this is due to a grammatical change of inflection from an aspect system to a tense system, with adjectives predating the change.

The conjugation of -adjectives has similarities to the conjugation of verbs, unlike Western languages where inflection of adjectives, where it exists, is more likely to have similarities to the declension of nouns. Verbs and adjectives being closely related is unusual from the perspective of English, but is a common case across languages generally, and one may consider Japanese adjectives as a kind of stative verb.

Japanese vocabulary has a large layer of Chinese loanwords, nearly all of which go back more than one thousand years, yet virtually none of them are verbs or "-adjectives" – they are all nouns, of which some are verbal nouns and some are adjectival nouns. In addition to the basic verbal noun + form, verbal nouns with a single-character root often experienced sound changes, such as -suru (〜する) → -zuru (〜ずる) (rendaku) → -jiru (〜じる), as in forbid (禁じる), and some cases where the stem underwent sound change, as in reach (達する), from tatsu (達).

Verbal nouns are uncontroversially nouns, having only minor syntactic differences to distinguish them from pure nouns like 'mountain'. There are some minor distinctions within verbal nouns, most notably that some primarily conjugate as -o suru (〜をする) (with a particle), more like nouns, while others primarily conjugate as -suru (〜する), and others are common either way. For example, to experience (経験をする) is much more common than keiken suru (経験する), while to pardon (勘弁する) is much more common than kanben o suru (勘弁をする). Nominal adjectives have more syntactic differences versus pure nouns, and traditionally were considered more separate, but they, too, are ultimately a subcategory of nouns.

There are a few minor word classes that are related to adjectival nouns, namely the adjectives and  adjectives. Of these, adjectives are fossils of earlier forms of  adjectives (the  adjectives of Old Japanese), and are typically classed separately, while  adjectives are a parallel class (formerly  adjectives in Late Old Japanese), but are typically classed with  adjectives.

Japanese as a topic-prominent language
In discourse pragmatics, the term topic refers to what a section of discourse is about. At the beginning of a section of discourse, the topic is usually unknown, in which case it is usually necessary to explicitly mention it. As the discourse carries on, the topic need not be the grammatical subject of each new sentence.

Starting with Middle Japanese, the grammar evolved so as to explicitly distinguish topics from nontopics. This is done by two distinct particles (short words which do not change form). Consider the following pair of sentences:

In the first sentence the dog (犬) is not a discourse topic—not yet; in the second sentence it is a discourse topic. In linguistics (specifically, in discourse pragmatics) a sentence such as the second one (with ) is termed a presentational sentence because its function in the discourse is to present dog as a topic, to "broach it for discussion". Once a referent has been established as the topic of the current monolog or dialog, then in (formal) modern Japanese its marking will change from to.

To better explain the difference, the first sentence can be translated to "There's a dog eating a sandwich", while the second sentence can be translated to "You know the dog? It's eating a sandwich"; these renderings reflect a discourse fragment in which "the dog" is being established as the topic of an extended discussion. The first sentence answers the question "What is going on?," whereas the second sentence answers the question "What is the dog doing?"

Liberal omission of the subject of a sentence
The grammatical subject is commonly omitted in Japanese, as in

Subjects are mentioned when a topic is introduced, or in situations where an ambiguity might result from their omission. The preceding example sentence would most likely be uttered in the middle of a discourse, where who it is that "went to Japan" will be clear from what has already been said (or written).

Sentences, phrases and words
Text (文章) is composed of sentences (文), which are in turn composed of phrases (文節), which are its smallest coherent components. Like Chinese and classical Korean, written Japanese does not typically demarcate words with spaces; its agglutinative nature further makes the concept of a word rather different from words in English. The reader identifies word divisions by semantic cues and a knowledge of phrase structure. Phrases have a single meaning-bearing word, followed by a string of suffixes, auxiliary verbs and particles to modify its meaning and designate its grammatical role.

Some scholars romanize Japanese sentences by inserting spaces only at phrase boundaries (i.e., ""), treating an entire phrase as a single word. This represents an almost purely phonological conception of where one word ends and the next begins. There is some validity in taking this approach: phonologically, the postpositional particles merge with the structural word that precedes them, and within a phonological phrase, the pitch can have at most one fall. Usually, however, grammarians adopt a more conventional concept of word (単語), one which invokes meaning and sentence structure.

Phrasal movement
In Japanese, phrasal constituents can be moved to the beginning or the end of the sentence. Leftward movement of a phrasal constituent is referred to as "scrambling".

Word classification
In linguistics generally, words and affixes are often classified into two major word categories: lexical words, those that refer to the world outside of a discourse, and function words—also including fragments of words—which help to build the sentence in accordance with the grammar rules of the language. Lexical words include nouns, verbs, adjectives, adverbs, and sometimes prepositions and postpositions, while grammatical words or word parts include everything else. The native tradition in Japanese grammar scholarship seems to concur in this view of classification. This native Japanese tradition uses the terminology independent words (自立語), for words having lexical meaning, and auxiliary words (付属語), for words having a grammatical function.

Classical Japanese had some auxiliary verbs (i.e., they were independent words) which have become grammaticized in modern Japanese as inflectional suffixes, such as the past tense suffix (which might have developed as a contraction of ).

Traditional scholarship proposes a system of word classes differing somewhat from the above-mentioned. The "independent" words have the following categories.
 * katsuyōgo (活用語), word classes which have inflections
 * dōshi (動詞), verbs
 * keiyōshi (形容詞), -type adjectives
 * keiyōdōshi (形容動詞), -type adjectives
 * hikatsuyōgo (非活用語) or mukatsuyōgo (無活用語), word classes which do not have inflections
 * meishi (名詞), nouns
 * daimeishi (代名詞), pronouns
 * fukushi (副詞), adverbs
 * setsuzokushi (接続詞), conjunctions
 * kandōshi (感動詞), interjections
 * rentaishi (連体詞), prenominals

Ancillary words also divide into a nonconjugable class, containing grammatical particles (助詞) and counter words (助数詞), and a conjugable class consisting of auxiliary verbs (助動詞). There is not wide agreement among linguists as to the English translations of the above terms.

Controversy over the characterization of nominal adjectives
Uehara (1998) observes that Japanese grammarians have disagreed as to the criteria that make some words inflectional and others not, in particular, the nominal adjectives – keiyōdōshi (形容動詞) or -adjectives. (It is not disputed that nouns like 'book' are non-inflectional and that verbs and -adjectives are inflectional.) The claim that nominal adjectives are inflectional rests on the claim that the element, regarded as a copula by proponents of non-inflectional nominal adjectives, is really a suffix—an inflection. That is, 'it is pretty' is a one-word sentence, not a two-word sentence,. However, numerous constructions show that is less bound to the roots of nouns and nominal adjectives than  and  are to the roots of -adjectives and verbs, respectively.


 * (1) Reduplication for emphasis
 * 'See! It a book!'
 * 'See! It pretty!'
 * 'See! It old!' (the adjectival inflection cannot be left off)
 * 'See! It go!' (the verbal inflection cannot be left off)
 * (2) Questions. In Japanese, questions are formed by adding the particle (or in colloquial speech, just by changing the intonation of the sentence).
 * 'Is it a book?'
 * 'Is it pretty?'
 * 'Is it old? ( cannot be left off)
 * 'Does it go?' ( cannot be left off)
 * (3) Several epistemic modality predicates, e.g., 'seem like'
 * 'It seems to be a book'
 * 'It seems to be pretty'
 * 'It seems to be old' ( cannot be left off)
 * 'It seems to go' ( cannot be left off)

On the basis of such constructions, Uehara finds that the copula is not suffixal and that nominal adjectives pattern with nouns in being non-inflectional.

Similarly, Eleanor Jorden considers this class of words a kind of nominal, not adjective, and refers to them as -nominals in her textbook Japanese: The Spoken Language.

Nouns
Japanese has no grammatical gender, number, or articles; though the demonstrative "that, those" (その), is often translatable as "the". Thus, linguists agree that Japanese nouns are noninflecting: neko (猫) can be translated as "cat", "cats", "a cat", "the cat", "some cats" and so forth, depending on context. However, as part of the extensive pair of grammatical systems that Japanese possesses for honorification (making discourse deferential to the addressee or even to a third party) and politeness, nouns too can be modified. Nouns take politeness prefixes (which have not been regarded as inflections): for native nouns, and  for Sino-Japanese nouns. A few examples are given in the following table. In a few cases, there is suppletion, as with the first of the examples given below, '飯(meal/rice)'. (Note that while these prefixes are almost always written in hiragana as o- (お〜) or go- (ご〜), the 御 kanji represents both and  in formal writing.)

Lacking number, Japanese does not differentiate between count and mass nouns. A small number of nouns have collectives formed by reduplication (possibly accompanied by voicing and related processes (rendaku)); for example: 'person' (人) and 'people' (人々). Reduplication is not productive. Words in Japanese referring to more than one of something are collectives, not plurals. , for example, means "a lot of people" or "people in general"; it is never used to mean "two people". A phrase like would be taken to mean "the people of Edo", or "the population of Edo", not "two people from Edo" or even "a few people from Edo". Similarly, means "many mountains".

A limited number of nouns have collective forms that refer to groups of people. Examples include 'we' (私たち); 'you' [plural] (あなたたち); 'we' (less formal, more masculine) (僕ら). One uncommon personal noun, 'I', or in some cases, 'you' (我), has a much more common reduplicative collective form: 'we' (我々).

The suffixes -tachi (達) and -ra (等) are by far the most common collectivizing suffixes. These are, again, not pluralizing suffixes: does not mean "some number of people named Taro", but instead indicates the group including Taro. Depending on context, might be translated into "Taro and his friends", "Taro and his siblings", "Taro and his family", or any other logical grouping that has Taro as the representative. Some words with collectives have become fixed phrases and (commonly) refer to one person. Specifically, 'child' (子供) and 'friend' (友達) can be singular, even though and  were originally collectivizing in these words; to unambiguously refer to groups of them, an additional collectivizing suffix is added: 'children' (子供たち) and 'friends' (友達たち), though  is somewhat uncommon. is sometimes applied to inanimate objects, 'car' (車) and 'cars' (車たち), for example, but this usage is colloquial and indicates a high level of anthropomorphisation and childlikeness, and is not more generally accepted as standard.

Grammatical case
Grammatical cases in Japanese are marked by particles placed after the nouns. A distinctive feature of Japanese is the presence of two cases which are roughly equivalent to the nominative case in other languages: one representing the sentence topic, other representing the subject. The most important case markers are the following:


 * Nominative – ga (が) for subject, wa (は) for the topic
 * Genitive – no (の)
 * Dative – ni (に)
 * Accusative – o (を)
 * Lative – e (へ), used for destination direction (like in "to some place")
 * Ablative – kara (から), used for source direction (like in "from some place")
 * Instrumental/Locative – de (で)

Pronouns
Although many grammars and textbooks mention pronouns (代名詞), Japanese lacks true pronouns. ( can be considered a subset of nouns.) Strictly speaking, linguistic pronouns do not take modifiers, but Japanese do. For example, lit. "tall he" (背の高い彼) is valid in Japanese. Also, unlike true pronouns, Japanese are not closed-class; new  are introduced and old ones go out of use relatively quickly.

A large number of referring to people are translated as pronouns in their most common uses. Examples: he (彼); she (彼女); I (私); see also the adjoining table or a longer list. Some of these "personal nouns" such as I (exceedingly humble) (己), or I (young male) (僕), also have second-person uses: onore (おのれ) in second-person is an extremely rude "you", and in second-person is a diminutive "you" used for young boys. and also mean "boyfriend" and "girlfriend" respectively, and this usage of the words is possibly more common than the use as pronouns.

Like other subjects, personal are seldom used and are de-emphasized in Japanese. This is partly because Japanese sentences do not always require explicit subjects, and partly because names or titles are often used where pronouns would appear in a translation:

The possible referents of are sometimes constrained depending on the order of occurrence. The following pair of examples from Bart Mathias illustrates one such constraint.

Reflexive pronouns
English has a reflexive form of each personal pronoun (himself, herself, itself, themselves, etc.); Japanese, in contrast, has one main reflexive, namely jibun (自分), which can also mean 'I'. The uses of the reflexive (pro)nouns in the two languages are very different, as demonstrated by the following literal translations (*=impossible, ??=ambiguous):

If the sentence has more than one grammatical or semantic subject, then the target of is the subject of the primary or most prominent action; thus in the following sentence  refers unambiguously to Shizuko (even though Makoto is the grammatical subject) because the primary action is Shizuko's reading.

In practice the main action is not always discernible, in which case such sentences are ambiguous. The use of in complex sentences follows non-trivial rules.

There are also equivalents to such as. Other uses of the reflexive pronoun in English are covered by adverbs like which is used in the sense of "by oneself". For example,

Change in a verb's valency is not accomplished by use of reflexive pronouns (in this Japanese is like English but unlike many other European languages). Instead, separate (but usually related) intransitive verbs and transitive verbs are used. There is no longer any productive morphology to derive transitive verbs from intransitive ones, or vice versa.

Demonstratives

 * 1) irregular formation
 * 2) colloquially contracted to -cchi
 * 3)  is represented by

Demonstratives occur in the, , and series. The (proximal) series refers to things closer to the speaker than the hearer, the  (medial) series for things closer to the hearer, and the  (distal) series for things distant to both the speaker and the hearer. With, demonstratives turn into the corresponding interrogative form. Demonstratives can also be used to refer to people, for example

Demonstratives limit, and therefore precede, nouns; thus kono hon (この本) for "this/my book", and sono hon (その本) for "that/your book".

When demonstratives are used to refer to things not visible to the speaker or the hearer, or to (abstract) concepts, they fulfill a related but different anaphoric role. The anaphoric distals are used for shared information between the speaker and the listener.

instead of would imply that B does not share this knowledge about Sapporo, which is inconsistent with the meaning of the sentence. The anaphoric medials are used to refer to experience or knowledge that is not shared between the speaker and listener.

Again, is inappropriate here because Sato does not (did not) know Tanaka personally. The proximal demonstratives do not have clear anaphoric uses. They can be used in situations where the distal series sound too disconnected:

Stem forms
Conjugative suffixes and auxiliary verbs are attached to the stem forms of the affixee. In modern Japanese, there are six stem forms, ordered following from the endings that these forms have in 5-row (五段) verbs (according to the あ、い、う、え、お collation order of Japanese), where terminal and attributive forms are the same for verbs (hence only 5 surface forms), but differ for nominals, notably -nominals.
 * Irrealis form (未然形) (and ): is used for plain negative (of verbs), causative and passive constructions. The most common use of this form is with the  auxiliary that turns verbs into their negative (predicate) form. (See Verbs below.) The  version is used for volitional expression and formed by a euphonic change (音便).
 * Continuative form (連用形) : is used in a linking role (a kind of serial verb construction). This is the most productive stem form, taking on a variety of endings and auxiliaries, and can even occur independently in a sense similar to the ending. This form is also used to negate adjectives.
 * Terminal form (終止形) : is used at the ends of clauses in predicate positions. This form is also variously known as plain form (基本形) or dictionary form (辞書形) – it is the form that verbs are listed under in a dictionary.
 * Attributive form (連体形) : is prefixed to nominals and is used to define or classify the noun, similar to a relative clause in English. In modern Japanese it is practically identical to the terminal form, except that verbs are generally not inflected for politeness; in old Japanese these forms differed. Further, -nominals behave differently in terminal and attributive positions; see Adjectival verbs and nouns, below.
 * Hypothetical form (仮定形) : is used for conditional and subjunctive forms, using the ending.
 * Imperative form (命令形) : is used to turn verbs into commands. Adjectives do not have an imperative stem form.

The application of conjugative suffixes to stem forms follow certain euphonic principles (音便).

Verbs
Verbs (動詞) in Japanese are rigidly constrained to the end of a clause. This means that the predicate position is always located at the end of a sentence.

The subject and objects of the verb are indicated by means of particles, and the grammatical functions of the verb (primarily tense and voice) are indicated by means of conjugation. When the subject and the dissertative topic coincide, the subject is often omitted; if the verb is intransitive, the entire sentence may consist of a single verb. Verbs have two tenses indicated by conjugation, past and non-past. The semantic difference between present and future is not indicated by means of conjugation. Usually there is no ambiguity as context makes it clear whether the speaker is referring to the present or future. Voice and aspect are also indicated by means of conjugation, and possibly agglutinating auxiliary verbs. For example, the continuative aspect is formed by means of the continuative conjugation known as the gerundive or  form, and the auxiliary verb "to be"; to illustrate, "to see" (見る) → "to be seeing" (見ている).

Verbs can be semantically classified based on certain conjugations. There are other possible classes, and a large amount of overlap between the classes.
 * Stative verbs: indicate existential properties, such as "to be" (いる), "to be able to do" (出来る), "to need" (要る), etc. These verbs generally do not have a continuative conjugation with because they are semantically continuative already.
 * Continual verbs: conjugate with the auxiliary to indicate the progressive aspect. Examples: "to eat" (食べる), "to drink" (飲む), "to think" (考える). To illustrate the conjugation, "to eat" (食べる) → "to be eating" (食べている).
 * Punctual verbs: conjugate with to indicate a repeated action, or a continuing state after some action. Example: "to know" (知る) → "to be knowing" (知っている); "to hit" (打つ) → "to be hitting (repeatedly)" (打っている).
 * Non-volitional verb: indicate uncontrollable action or emotion. These verbs generally have no volitional, imperative or potential conjugation. Examples: "to like / to prefer" [emotive] (好む), "to be visible" [non-emotive] (見える).
 * Movement verbs: indicate motion. Examples: "to walk" (歩く), "to return" (帰る). In the continuative form (see § Verbal adverbs) they take the particle to indicate a purpose.

Lexically, nearly every verb in Japanese is a member of exactly one of the following three regular conjugation groups (see also Japanese godan and ichidan verbs).
 * Group 2a (上一段): verbs with a stem ending in . The terminal stem form always rhymes with . Examples: "to see" (見る), "to wear" (着る).
 * Group 2b (下一段): verbs with a stem ending in . The terminal stem form always rhymes with . Examples: "to eat" (食べる), "to give" (to someone of lower or more intimate status) (くれる). (Some Group 1 verbs resemble Group 2b verbs, but their stems end in, not .)
 * Group 1 (五段): verbs with a stem ending in a consonant. When this is and the verb ends in, it is not apparent from the terminal form whether the verb is Group 1 or Group 2b, e.g. "to return" (帰る). If the stem ends in , that consonant sound only appears in before the final  of the irrealis form.

The "row" in the above classification means a row in the gojūon table. "Upper 1-row" means the row that is one row above the center row (the -row) i.e. i-row. "Lower 1-row" means the row that is one row below the center row (the -row) i.e. -row. "5-row" means the conjugation runs through all 5 rows of the gojūon table. A conjugation is fully described by identifying both the row and the column in the gojūon table. For example, "to see" (見る) belongs to -column -row conjugation (マ行上一段活用), "to eat" (食べる) belongs to -column -row conjugation (バ行下一段活用), and "to return" (帰る) belongs to -column 5-row conjugation (ラ行五段活用).

One should avoid confusing verbs in -column 5-row conjugation (ラ行五段活用) with verbs in -row conjugation (上一段活用) or -row conjugation (下一段活用). For example, "to cut" (切る) belongs to -column 5-row conjugation (ラ行五段活用), whereas its homophone "to wear" (着る) belongs to -column -row conjugation (カ行上一段活用). Likewise, "to knead" (練る) belongs to -column 5-row conjugation (ラ行五段活用), whereas its homophone "to sleep" (寝る) belongs to -column -row conjugation (ナ行下一段活用).

Historically, Classical Japanese had upper and lower 1-row groups (上・下一段), upper and lower 2-row groups (上・下二段) and a 4-row group (四段). The verbs became most of the  verbs in modern Japanese (only a handful of  verbs and a single  verb existed in classical Japanese). The group was reclassified as the  group during the post-WWII writing reform in 1946, to write Japanese as it is pronounced. Since verbs have migrated across groups in the history of the language, the conjugation of classical verbs cannot be ascertained from knowledge of modern Japanese alone.

Of the irregular classes, there are two: Classical Japanese had two further irregular classes, the -group, which contained "to die" (死ぬ) and "to go"/"to die" (往ぬ), the -group, which included such verbs as ari (あり), the equivalent of modern, as well as quite a number of extremely irregular verbs that cannot be classified.
 * -group: which has only one member, "to do" (する). In Japanese grammars these words are classified as sa-hen (サ変), an abbreviation of sa-gyō henkaku katsuyō (サ行変格活用), sa-row irregular conjugation).
 * -group: which also has one member, "to come" (来る). The Japanese name for this class is ka-gyō henkaku katsuyō (カ行変格活用) or simply ka-hen (カ変).

The following table illustrates the stem forms of the above conjugation groups, with the root indicated with dots. For example, to find the hypothetical form of the group 1 verb kaku (書く), look in the second row to find its root,, then in the hypothetical row to get the ending , giving the stem form. When there are multiple possibilities, they are listed in the order of increasing rarity.


 * 1) The  and  irrealis forms for Group 1 verbs were historically one, but since the post-WWII spelling reforms they have been written differently. In modern Japanese the  form is used only for the volitional mood and the  form is used in all other cases; see also the conjugation table below.
 * 2) The unexpected ending is due to the verb's root being  but  only being pronounced before  in modern Japanese.

The above are only the stem forms of the verbs; to these one must add various verb endings in order to get the fully conjugated verb. The following table lists the most common conjugations. Note that in some cases the form is different depending on the conjugation group of the verb. See Japanese verb conjugations for a full list.


 * 1) This is an entirely different verb; suru (する) has no potential form.
 * 2) These forms change depending on the final syllable of the verb's dictionary form (whether  etc.). For details, see Euphonic changes, below, and the article Japanese verb conjugation.

The polite ending conjugates as a group 1 verb, except that the negative imperfective and perfective forms are  and  respectively, and certain conjugations are in practice rarely if ever used. The passive and potential endings and, and the causative endings  and  all conjugate as group 2b verbs. Multiple verbal endings can therefore agglutinate. For example, a common formation is the causative-passive ending:.

As should be expected, the vast majority of theoretically possible combinations of conjugative endings are not semantically meaningful.

Transitive and intransitive verbs
Japanese has a large variety of related pairs of transitive verbs (that take a direct object) and intransitive verbs (that do not usually take a direct object), such as the transitive someone or something begins an activity (始める), and the intransitive an activity begins (始まる).

Note: Some intransitive verbs (usually verbs of motion) take what looks like a direct object, but is not. For example, to leave (離れる):

Adjectival verbs and nouns
Semantically speaking, words that denote attributes or properties are primarily distributed between two morphological classes (there are also a few other classes):
 * adjectival verbs (形容詞)– these have roots and conjugating stem forms, and are semantically and morphologically similar to stative verbs.
 * adjectival nouns (形容動詞)– these are nouns that combine with the copula.

Unlike adjectives in languages like English, -adjectives in Japanese inflect for aspect and mood, like verbs. Japanese adjectives do not have comparative or superlative inflections; comparatives and superlatives have to be marked periphrastically using adverbs like 'more' and 'most'.

Every adjective in Japanese can be used in an attributive position, and nearly every Japanese adjective can be used in a predicative position. There are a few Japanese adjectives that cannot predicate, known as attributives (連体詞), which are derived from other word classes; examples include "big" (大きな), "small" (小さな), and "strange" (おかしな) which are all stylistic -type variants of normal -type adjectives.

All -adjectives except for good (いい) have regular conjugations, and is irregular only in the fact that it is a changed form of the regular adjective yoi (良い) permissible in the terminal and attributive forms. For all other forms it reverts to.


 * 1) The attributive and terminal forms were formerly .ki (安き) and .shi (安し), respectively; in modern Japanese these are used productively for stylistic reasons only, although many set phrases such as anonymous (名無し) and [general positive interjection] (よし), derive from them.
 * 2) The imperative form is extremely rare in modern Japanese, restricted to set patterns like 'sooner or later' (遅かれ早かれ), where they are treated as adverbial phrases. It is impossible for an imperative form to be in a predicate position.

Common conjugations of adjectives are enumerated below. is not treated separately, because all conjugation forms are identical to those of.


 * 1) Note that these are just forms of the -type adjective nai (ない)
 * 2) Since most adjectives describe non-volitional conditions, the volitional form is interpreted as "it is possible", if sensible. In some rare cases it is semi-volitional: 'OK' (良かろう) in response to a report or request.

Adjectives too are governed by euphonic rules in certain cases, as noted in the section on it below. For the polite negatives of -type adjectives, see also the section below on the copula da (だ).

Copula (だ )
The copula behaves very much like a verb or an adjective in terms of conjugation.

Note that there are no potential, causative, or passive forms of the copula, just as with adjectives.

The following are some examples.

"ジョンは学生だ.

'John is a student.'"

"明日も晴れなら、ピクニックしよう.

'If tomorrow is clear too, let's have a picnic.'"

In continuative conjugations, de wa (では) is often contracted in speech to ja (じゃ); for some kinds of informal speech is preferable to, or is the only possibility.

Historical sound change

 * 1) Usually not reflected in spelling

Modern pronunciation is a result of a long history of phonemic drift that can be traced back to written records of the 13th century, and possibly earlier. However, it was only in 1946 that the Japanese ministry of education modified existing kana usage to conform to the standard dialect (共通語). All earlier texts used the archaic orthography, now referred to as historical kana usage. The adjoining table is a nearly exhaustive list of these spelling changes.

Note that the palatalized morae ゆ and よ ( and ) combine with the initial consonant (if present) yielding a palatalized syllable. The most basic example of this is modern today (今日（きょう）), which historically developed as kefu (けふ) → kyō (きょう), via the efu (えふ) → yō (よう) rule.

A few sound changes are not reflected in the spelling. Firstly, merged with, both being pronounced as a long. Secondly, the particles は and を are still written using historical kana usage, though these are pronounced as and  respectively, rather than  and.

Among Japanese speakers, it is not generally understood that the historical kana spellings were, at one point, reflective of pronunciation. For example, the modern reading yō (よう) (for leaf (葉)) arose from the historical efu (えふ). The latter was pronounced something like by the Japanese at the time it was borrowed (compare Middle Chinese ). However, a modern reader of a classical text would still read this as, the modern pronunciation.

Verb conjugations
Conjugations of some verbs and adjectives differ from the prescribed formation rules because of euphonic changes. Nearly all of these euphonic changes are themselves regular. For verbs the exceptions are all in the ending of the continuative form of group when the following auxiliary starts with a -sound (i.e. -ta (-た), -te (-て), -tari (-たり), etc.).

* denotes impossible/ungrammatical form.

There is one other irregular change: to go (行く), for which there is an exceptional continuative form: iki (行き) + te (て) → itte (行って), iki (行き) + ta (た) → itta (行った), etc.

There are dialectical differences, which are also regular and generally occur in similar situations. For example, in Kansai dialect the +  conjugations are instead changed to  (u-onbin), as in omōta (思うた) instead of omotta (思った), as perfective of think (思う). In this example, this can combine with the preceding vowel via historical sound changes, as in shimōta (しもうた) ( → ) instead of standard shimatta (しまった).

Polite forms of adjectives
The continuative form of proper adjectives, when followed by polite forms such as be (ござる/御座る) or know, think (存じる), undergoes a transformation; this may be followed by historical sound changes, yielding a one-step or two-step sound change. Note that these verbs are almost invariably conjugated to polite -masu (〜ます) form, as gozaimasu (ございます) and zonjimasu (存じます) (note the irregular conjugation of, discussed below), and that these verbs are preceded by the continuative form – -ku (〜く) – of adjectives, rather than the terminal form – -i (〜い) – which is used before the more everyday be (です).

The rule is -ku (〜く) → -u (〜う) (dropping the ), possibly also combining with the previous syllable according to the spelling reform chart, which may also undergo palatalization in the case of yu, yo (ゆ、よ).

Historically there were two classes of proper Old Japanese adjectives, -ku (〜く) and -shiku (〜しく) (" adjective" means "not preceded by "). This distinction collapsed during the evolution of Late Middle Japanese adjectives, and both are now considered -i (〜い) adjectives. The sound change for adjectives follows the same rule as for other  adjectives, notably that the preceding vowel also changes and the preceding mora undergoes palatalization, yielding -shiku (〜しく) → -shū (〜しゅう), though historically this was considered a separate but parallel rule.

Respectful verbs
Respectful verbs such as 'to get' (くださる), 'to do' (なさる), 'to be' (ござる), 'to be/come/go' (いらっしゃる), 'to say' (おっしゃる), etc. behave like group 1 verbs, except in the continuative and imperative forms.

Colloquial contractions
In speech, common combinations of conjugation and auxiliary verbs are contracted in a fairly regular manner.

There are occasional others, such as →  as in don't understand (分からない) → wakannai (分かんない) and boring (つまらない) → tsumannai (つまんない) – these are considered quite casual and are more common among the younger generation.

Contractions differ by dialect, but behave similarly to the standard ones given above. For example, in the Kansai dialect, -te shimau (〜てしまう) → -temau (〜てまう).

Adverbs
Adverbs in Japanese are not as tightly integrated into the morphology as in many other languages; adverbs are not an independent class of words, but the role of an adverb is played by other words. For example, every adjective in the continuative form can be used as an adverb; thus, 'weak' [adj] (弱い) → 'weakly' [adv] (弱く). The primary distinguishing characteristic of adverbs is that they cannot occur in a predicate position, just as it is in English. The following classification of adverbs is not intended to be authoritative or exhaustive.


 * Verbal adverbs: verbs in the continuative form with the particle . E.g. 'to see' (見る) → 'for the purpose of seeing' (見に), used for instance as: 'go to see (something)' (見に行く).
 * Adjectival adverbs: adjectives in the continuative form, as mentioned above. Example: 'weak' [adj] (弱い) → 'weakly' [adv] (弱く)
 * Nominal adverbs: grammatical nouns that function as adverbs. Example: 'most highly' (一番).
 * Sound symbolism: words that mimic sounds or concepts. Examples: 'sparklingly' (きらきら), 'suddenly' (ぽっくり), 'smoothly' (sliding) (するする), etc.

Often, especially for sound symbolism, the particle 'as if' (と) is used. See the article on Japanese sound symbolism.

Conjunctions and interjections
Although called "conjunctions", conjunctions in Japanese are – as their English translations show – actually a kind of adverb:

Examples of conjunctions: 'and then' (そして), 'and then/again' (また), etc.

Interjections in Japanese differ little in use and translation from interjections in English:

Examples of interjections: yes/OK/uh (はい), wow! (へえ), no/no way (いいえ), hey! (おい), etc.

Particles
Particles in Japanese are postpositional, as they immediately follow the modified component. Both the pronunciation and spelling differs for the particles wa (は), e (へ) and o (を), and are romanized according to pronunciation rather than spelling. Only a few prominent particles are listed here.

Topic, theme, and subject: は and が
The complex distinction between the so-called topic, wa (は), and subject, ga (が), particles has been the theme of many doctoral dissertations and scholarly disputes. The clause zō-wa hana-ga nagai (象は鼻が長い) is well known for appearing to contain two subjects. It does not simply mean "the elephant's nose is long", as that can be translated as zō-no hana-wa nagai (象の鼻は長い). Rather, a more literal translation would be "(speaking of) the elephant, its nose is long"; furthermore, as Japanese does not distinguish between singular and plural the way English does, it could also mean "as for elephants, their noses are long".

Two major scholarly surveys of Japanese linguistics in English, clarify the distinction. To simplify matters, the referents of and  in this section are called the topic and subject respectively, with the understanding that if either is absent, the grammatical topic and subject may coincide.

As an abstract and rough approximation, the difference between and  is a matter of focus:  gives focus to the action of the sentence, i.e., to the verb or adjective, whereas  gives focus to the subject of the action. However, when first being introduced to the topic and subject markers and, most are told that the difference between the two is simpler. The topic marker,, is used to declare or to make a statement. The subject marker,, is used for new information, or asking for new information.

Thematic
The use of to introduce a new theme of discourse is directly linked to the notion of grammatical theme. Opinions differ on the structure of discourse theme, though it seems fairly uncontroversial to imagine a first-in-first-out hierarchy of themes that is threaded through the discourse. However, the usage of this understanding of themes can be limiting when speaking of their scope and depth, and the introduction of later themes may cause earlier themes to expire. In these sorts of sentences, the steadfast translation into English uses constructs like "speaking of X" or "on the topic of X", though such translations tend to be bulky as they fail to use the thematic mechanisms of English. For lack of a comprehensive strategy, many teachers of Japanese emphasize the "speaking of X" pattern without sufficient warning.

A common linguistic joke shows the insufficiency of rote translation with the sentence boku wa unagi da (僕はウナギだ), which per the pattern would translate as "I am an eel." (or "(As of) me is eel"). Yet, in a restaurant this sentence can reasonably be used to say "My order is eel" (or "I would like to order an eel"), with no intended humour. This is because the sentence should be literally read, "As for me, it is an eel," with "it" referring to the speaker's order. The topic of the sentence is clearly not its subject.

Contrastive
Related to the role of in introducing themes is its use in contrasting the current topic and its aspects from other possible topics and their aspects. The suggestive pattern is "X, but…" or "as for X, …".

Because of its contrastive nature, the topic cannot be undefined.

In this use, is required.

In practice, the distinction between thematic and contrastive is not that useful. There can be at most one thematic in a sentence, and it has to be the first  if one exists, and the remaining s are contrastive. The following sentence illustrates the difference;

The first interpretation is the thematic, treating "the people I know" as the theme of the predicate "none came". That is, if the speaker knows A, B, ..., Z, then none of the people who came were A, B, ..., Z. The second interpretation is the contrastive. If the likely attendees were A, B, ..., Z, and of them the speaker knows P, Q and R, then the sentence says that P, Q and R did not come. The sentence says nothing about A', B', ..., Z', all of whom the speaker knows, but none of whom were likely to come. In practice, the first interpretation is the likely one.

Exhaustive
Unlike, the subject particle nominates its referent as the sole satisfier of the predicate. This distinction is famously illustrated by the following pair of sentences:

The distinction between each example sentence may be made easier to understand if thought of in terms of the question each statement could answer. The first example sentence could answer the question:

Whereas the second example sentence could answer the question:

Similarly, in a restaurant, if asked by the waitstaff who has ordered the eels, the customer who ordered it could say:

Objective
For certain verbs, is typically used instead of  to mark what would be the direct object in English:

There are various common expressions that use verbs in English, often transitive verbs, where the action happens to a specific object: "to be able to do something", "to want something", "to like something", "to dislike something". These same ideas are expressed in Japanese using adjectives and intransitive verbs that describe a subject, instead of actions that happen to an object: "to be possible" (出来る), "to be desired/desirable" (ほしい), "to be liked" (好きだ), "to be disliked" (嫌いだ). The equivalent of the English subject is instead the topic in Japanese and thus marked by, reflecting the topic-prominent nature of Japanese grammar.

Since these constructions in English describe an object, whereas the Japanese equivalents describe a subject marked with ga (が), some sources call this usage of ga (が) the "objective ga". Strictly speaking, this label may be misleading, as there is no object in the Japanese constructions.

As an example, the Japanese verb wakaru (分かる) is often glossed as transitive English verb "to understand". However, wakaru is an intransitive verb that describes a subject, so a more literal gloss would be "to be understandable".

Objects, locatives, instrumentals: を, で , に , へ
The direct object of transitive verbs is indicated by the object particle o (を).

This particle can also mean "through" or "along" or "out of" when used with motion verbs:

The general instrumental particle is de (で), which can be translated as "using" or "by":

This particle also has other uses: "at" (temporary location):

"In":

"With" or "in (the span of)":

The general locative particle is ni (に).

In this function it is interchangeable with e (へ). However, has additional uses: "at (prolonged)":

"On":

"In (some year)", "at (some point in time)":

====Quantity and extents: と, も , か , や , から , まで ==== To conjoin nouns, と to is used.

The additive particle mo (も) can be used to conjoin larger nominals and clauses.

For an incomplete list of conjuncts, ya (や) is used.

When only one of the conjuncts is necessary, the disjunctive particle ka (か) is used.

Quantities are listed between 'from' (から) and 'to' (まで).

This pair can also be used to indicate time or space.
 * 朝9時(午前9時)から11時まで授業があるんだ.
 * You see, I have classes between 9 a.m. and 11 a.m.
 * You see, I have classes between 9 a.m. and 11 a.m.

Because indicates starting point or origin, it has a related use as "because", analogously to English "since" (in the sense of both "from" and "because"):

The particle and a related particle  are used to indicate lowest extents: prices, business hours, etc.

is also used in the sense of "than".

Coordinating: と, に , よ
The particle to (と) is used to set off quotations.

It is also used to indicate a manner of similarity, "as if", "like" or "the way".

In a related conditional use, it functions like "after/when", or "upon".

Finally it is used with verbs like to meet (with) (会う) or to speak (with) (話す).

This last use is also a function of the particle ni (に), but indicates reciprocation which  does not.
 * ジョンはメアリーと恋愛している. (usually say ジョンはメアリーと付き合っている. )
 * John and Mary are in love.
 * John and Mary are in love.


 * ジョンはメアリーに恋愛している. (usually say ジョンはメアリーに恋している. )
 * John loves Mary (but Mary might not love John back).
 * John loves Mary (but Mary might not love John back).

Finally, the particle yo (よ) is used in a hortative or vocative sense.

Final: か, ね , よ and related
The sentence-final particle ka (か) turns a declarative sentence into a question.

Other sentence-final particles add emotional or emphatic impact to the sentence. The particle ne (ね) softens a declarative sentence, similar to English "you know?", "eh?", "I tell you!", "isn't it?", "aren't you?", etc.

A final yo (よ) is used in order to soften insistence, warning or command, which would sound very strong without any final particles.

There are many such emphatic particles; some examples: ze (ぜ) and zo (ぞ) usually used by males; na (な) a less formal form of ; wa (わ) used like by females (and males in the Kansai region), etc. They are essentially limited to speech or transcribed dialogue.

Compound particles
Compound particles are formed with at least one particle together with other words, including other particles. The commonly seen forms are:
 * particle + verb (term. or cont. or form)
 * particle + noun + particle
 * noun + particle

Other structures are rarer, though possible. A few examples:

Auxiliary verbs
All auxiliary verbs attach to a verbal or adjectival stem form and conjugate as verbs. In modern Japanese there are two distinct classes of auxiliary verbs:
 * Pure auxiliaries (助動詞) : are usually just called verb endings or conjugated forms. These auxiliaries do not function as independent verbs.
 * Helper auxiliaries (補助動詞) : are normal verbs that lose their independent meaning when used as auxiliaries.

In classical Japanese, which was more heavily agglutinating than modern Japanese, the category of auxiliary verb included every verbal ending after the stem form, and most of these endings were themselves inflected. In modern Japanese, however, some of them have stopped being productive. The prime example is the classical auxiliary -tari (たり), whose modern forms -ta (た) and -te (て) are no longer viewed as inflections of the same suffix, and can take no further affixes.


 * 1) masu (ます) has stem forms: irrealis  and, continuative , terminal , attributive , hypothetical , imperative.
 * 2) rareru (られる) in potential usage is sometimes shortened to reru (れる) (group 2); thus 'to be able to eat' (食べれる) instead of taberareru (食べられる). However, it is considered non-standard.
 * 3) saseru (させる) is sometimes shortened to sasu (さす) (group 1), but this usage is somewhat literary.

Much of the agglutinative flavour of Japanese stems from helper auxiliaries, however. The following table contains a small selection of many such auxiliary verbs.


 * Note: eru/uru (得る) is the only modern verb of shimo nidan type (and it is different from the shimo nidan type of classical Japanese), with conjugations: irrealis え, continuative え, terminal える or うる, attributive うる, hypothetical うれ, imperative えろ or えよ.