Verb Types
Japanese generally has 2 types of verbs, Transitive (action verbs) and Intransitive (state) verbs. This is hard to understand in English, as we use the same verbs for both situations, so let’s take a look.
Transitive
This category of verbs is the easiest to understand, because they are action verbs as we think of them in English. They are performed by one thing and act on something else. These verbs can be defined as “to action”
These verbs typically use を
Verb Examples
- あける – to open
- なぐる – to punch
- たべる – to eat
Examples
- ドアを開ける – Open the door
- ご飯をたべる – Eat food.
- 映画をみる – Watch a movie
- 日本語を話す – Speak Japanese.
Intransitive
Intransitive verbs are better described as states. They are “performed” and “act upon” the same thing. These verbs will typically read as “is open” , “opens“, or “is opened“
These verbs typically use が
Verb Examples
- あく – Open (state)
- しまる – Closed (state)
- おわる – Finish (state).
- 行く – Go (You go, you don’t go something).
Examples
- ドアがあく – The door opens (by itself)
- 試合がおわる – The match ends (by itself)
- ドアが閉まっている – The door is closed.
- 学校に行く – Go to school. (Go is done to and by the same subject)
General rules
These rules are true most of the time.
- ある ending verbs are intransitive
- える ending verbs are transitive
- す ending verbs are transitive
As mentioned before:
- Transitive verbs use を (act upon something)
- Intransitive verbs use が (state of something)
Comparison
- ドアをあける - To open the door
- ドアがあく – The door opens
- ドアをあけている – Someone is opening the door.
- ドアがあいている – The door is open
Common Verbs Chart
Transitive (actions to others) | Meaning (action) | Intransitive (self actions/states) | Meaning (state) |
---|---|---|---|
あける | To open | あく | to be open |
いれる | To enter | はいる | to be in |
つける | To turn on/put on | つく | to be on |
はじめる | To start | はじまる | Begin/Begins |
なおす | To fix | なおる | To heal/fix itself |
こわす | To break | こわれる | To be broken |
おえる | To finish | おわる | To be finished |
しめる | To close | しまる | To be closed |