Complete Japanese Verb Conjugation Guide (Doushi)

In Japanese, verbs (doushi 動詞) change form—conjugation—by tense, politeness, and meaning. The system looks dense at first, but the patterns are logical and repeatable.
This guide covers how verbs are grouped and how to change them into the forms you will use most.
3 Main Verb Groups
Before you conjugate, you must know which group a verb belongs to. Japanese verbs fall into three large groups.
Group 1: Godan Verbs (五段動詞 - Godan Doushi)
Godan verbs in dictionary form end in a mora with the vowel u: u, tsu, ru, nu, bu, mu, ku, gu, su.
Godan examples:
| Verb | Reading | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| 買う | Kau | To buy |
| 待つ | Matsu | To wait |
| 作る | Tsukuru | To make |
| 死ぬ | Shinu | To die |
| 遊ぶ | Asobu | To play |
| 飲む | Nomu | To drink |
| 書く | Kaku | To write |
| 泳ぐ | Oyogu | To swim |
| 話す | Hanasu | To speak |
Group 2: Ichidan Verbs (一段動詞 - Ichidan Doushi)
Ichidan verbs always end in ru (る), and the sound before ru is i or e.
Ichidan examples:
| Verb | Reading | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| 見る | Miru | To see / watch |
| 起きる | Okiru | To wake up |
| 食べる | Taberu | To eat |
| 寝る | Neru | To sleep |
Some verbs look like Group 2 (-iru/-eru) but are actually Group 1 (Godan). Examples: 帰る (Kaeru / to return home), 入る (Hairu / to enter), 切る (Kiru / to cut), and 走る (Hashiru / to run). Memorize these exceptions.
Group 3: Irregular Verbs (不規則動詞 - Fukisoku Doushi)
Group 3 is small: only two core members, “to do” and “to come.” Their conjugations are irregular, so learn them whole.
- 来る (Kuru) = to come
- する (Suru) = to do
Suru often attaches to nouns to form compound verbs. Example:
- 勉強 (Benkyou - study) + する = 勉強する (to study)
Once the three groups are clear, move to the forms you will use every day.
1. Masu Form (〜ます)
The polite (formal) form. Use it with superiors, people you have just met, or general polite contexts.
Rules:
- Group 1 (Godan): Change the final ~u sound to ~i, then add ます (masu).
- 書く (kaku) → 書きます (kakimasu)
- 飲む (nomu) → 飲みます (nomimasu)
- Group 2 (Ichidan): Drop る (ru), add ます (masu).
- 食べる (taberu) → 食べます (tabemasu)
- 見る (miru) → 見ます (mimasu)
- Group 3 (Irregular): Memorize.
- 来る (kuru) → 来ます (kimasu)
- する (suru) → します (shimasu)
私は毎晩本を読みます。 Watashi wa maiban hon o yomimasu. I read a book every night.
2. Nai Form (〜ない)
The casual negative form: “do not / will not…”.
Rules:
- Group 1 (Godan): Change final ~u to ~a, then add ない (nai).
- 書く (kaku) → 書かない (kakanai)
- 読む (yomu) → 読まない (yomanai)
- (Exception: plain u endings like 買う / kau become wa, not a: 買わない / kawanai).
- Group 2 (Ichidan): Drop る (ru), add ない (nai).
- 食べる (taberu) → 食べない (tabenai)
- Group 3 (Irregular): Memorize.
- 来る (kuru) → 来ない (konai)
- する (suru) → しない (shinai)
今日は学校へ行かない。 Kyou wa gakkou e ikanai. Today I will not go to school.
3. Te Form (〜て)
The Te-form is highly versatile: requests, chaining actions, and ongoing activities.
Rules:
- Group 1 (Godan): Depends on the ending.
- u, tsu, ru → って (tte). Example: 買う (kau) → 買って (katte)
- mu, bu, nu → んで (nde). Example: 飲む (nomu) → 飲んで (nonde)
- ku → いて (ite). Example: 書く (kaku) → 書いて (kaite). (Exception: 行く/iku → 行って / itte)
- gu → いで (ide). Example: 泳ぐ (oyogu) → 泳いで (oyoide)
- su → して (shite). Example: 話す (hanasu) → 話して (hanashite)
- Group 2 (Ichidan): Drop る (ru), add て (te).
- 食べる (taberu) → 食べて (tabete)
- Group 3 (Irregular): Memorize.
- 来る (kuru) → 来て (kite)
- する (suru) → して (shite)
ちょっと待ってください。 Chotto matte kudasai. Please wait a moment.
Summary Table (Cheat Sheet)
A quick reference—core backbone for everyday conjugation.
| Dictionary Form | Group | Masu (Polite) | Nai (Casual Negative) | Te (Linking) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 飲む (nomu) | Godan | 飲みます (nomimasu) | 飲まない (nomanai) | 飲んで (nonde) |
| 買う (kau) | Godan | 買います (kaimasu) | 買わない (kawanai) | 買って (katte) |
| 書く (kaku) | Godan | 書きます (kakimasu) | 書かない (kakanai) | 書いて (kaite) |
| 話す (hanasu) | Godan | 話します (hanashimasu) | 話さない (hanasanai) | 話して (hanashite) |
| 食べる (taberu) | Ichidan | 食べます (tabemasu) | 食べない (tabenai) | 食べて (tabete) |
| 見る (miru) | Ichidan | 見ます (mimasu) | 見ない (minai) | 見て (mite) |
| 来る (kuru) | Irregular | 来ます (kimasu) | 来ない (konai) | 来て (kite) |
| する (suru) | Irregular | します (shimasu) | しない (shinai) | して (shite) |
Conclusion
Verb conjugation sits under most Japanese grammar patterns (JLPT N5 through N1). Keep the three groups in mind, watch for Godan verbs that look like -iru/-eru, and practice until the shifts feel automatic.
If your verb vocabulary is still thin, start with the essential list 100 Everyday Japanese Verbs.
Next Steps
Return to the Japanese grammar hub for core particles, JLPT paths, and daily practice strategy.
