This article deals with
Japanese
Japanese may refer to:
* Something from or related to Japan, an island country in East Asia
* Japanese language, spoken mainly in Japan
* Japanese people, the ethnic group that identifies with Japan through ancestry or culture
** Japanese diaspor ...
equivalents of English
adjective
In linguistics, an adjective (list of glossing abbreviations, abbreviated ) is a word that generally grammatical modifier, modifies a noun or noun phrase or describes its referent. Its semantic role is to change information given by the noun.
Tra ...
s.
Types of adjective
In Japanese, nouns and verbs can modify nouns, with nouns taking the 〜㮠particles when functioning attributively (in the
genitive case
In grammar, the genitive case (abbreviated ) is the grammatical case that marks a word, usually a noun, as modifying another word, also usually a noun—thus indicating an attributive relationship of one noun to the other noun. A genitive can al ...
), and verbs in the
attributive form (
連体形 ). These are considered separate classes of words, however.
Most of the words that can be considered to be
adjective
In linguistics, an adjective (list of glossing abbreviations, abbreviated ) is a word that generally grammatical modifier, modifies a noun or noun phrase or describes its referent. Its semantic role is to change information given by the noun.
Tra ...
s in Japanese fall into one of two categories – variants of verbs, and nouns:
*adjectival verb (Japanese:
形容詞, ', literally
形容 "description" or "appearance" +
è©ž "word"), or ''i''-adjectives
:These can be considered specialized verbs, in that they inflect for various aspects such as
past tense
The past tense is a grammatical tense whose function is to place an action or situation in the past. Examples of verbs in the past tense include the English verbs ''sang'', ''went'' and ''washed''. Most languages have a past tense, with some hav ...
or
negation
In logic, negation, also called the logical complement, is an operation that takes a proposition P to another proposition "not P", written \neg P, \mathord P or \overline. It is interpreted intuitively as being true when P is false, and false ...
, and they can be used
predicatively to end a sentence, without the need for any other "to be" verb. For example, ' (æš‘ã„) "hot":
::æš‘ã„æ—¥ () ("a hot day")
::今日ã¯æš‘ã„。(.) ("Today is hot.")
*
adjectival noun (
形容動詞, ', literally
形容 "description" or "appearance" +
å‹•è©ž "verb"), or ''na''-adjectives
:These can be considered a form of noun in terms of syntax; these attach to the
copula, which then inflects, but use 〜㪠''-na'' (rather than the
genitive
In grammar, the genitive case (abbreviated ) is the grammatical case that marks a word, usually a noun, as modifying another word, also usually a noun—thus indicating an attributive relationship of one noun to the other noun. A genitive can al ...
〜ã®) when modifying a noun. For example, ' (変) "strange":
::変ãªäºº () ("a strange person")
::å½¼ã¯å¤‰ã 。(.) ("He is strange.")
Both the predicative forms (終æ¢å½¢ ', also called the "conclusive form" or "terminal form") and attributive forms (連体形 ') of adjectival verbs and adjectival nouns can be analyzed as
verb phrase
In linguistics, a verb phrase (VP) is a syntactic unit composed of a verb and its arguments except the subject of an independent clause or coordinate clause. Thus, in the sentence ''A fat man quickly put the money into the box'', the words ''quic ...
s, making the attributive forms of adjectival verbs and adjectival nouns
relative clause
A relative clause is a clause that modifies a noun or noun phraseRodney D. Huddleston, Geoffrey K. Pullum, ''A Student's Introduction to English Grammar'', CUP 2005, p. 183ff. and uses some grammatical device to indicate that one of the arguments ...
s, rather than adjectives. According to this analysis, Japanese has no syntactic adjectives.
Japanese adjectives that do not fall into either of these categories are usually grouped into a grab-bag category:
*attributives (
連体詞, ', literally
連 "connects, goes with" +
体 "body", short for
体言 "uninflecting word" such as a noun +
è©ž "word")
:These may only occur before nouns, and not in a predicative position. They are various in derivation and word class, and are generally analyzed as variants of more basic classes, where this specific form (possibly a
fossil
A fossil (from Classical Latin , ) is any preserved remains, impression, or trace of any once-living thing from a past geological age. Examples include bones, shells, exoskeletons, stone imprints of animals or microbes, objects preserved ...
) can only be used in restricted settings. For example, ' (大ããª) "big" (variant of 大ãã„):
::大ããªäº‹ () ("a big thing")
A couple of small sub-categories can be distinguished in these categories, reflecting former grammatical distinctions or constructions which no longer exist:
*''-shii'' adjectives (form of ''-i'' adjectives, see below)
*''-yaka'' ''na'' adjectives (see below)
*''-raka'' ''na'' adjectives (see below)
*
''taru'' adjectives (ト・タル形容動詞, '','' literally "to, taru
adjectival noun")
:These are a variant of the common ''na''-nominals (
adjectival noun; see article for naming) that developed in Late Old Japanese and have mostly died out, surviving in a few cases as
fossils
A fossil (from Classical Latin , ) is any preserved remains, impression, or trace of any once-living thing from a past geological age. Examples include bones, shells, exoskeletons, stone imprints of animals or microbes, objects preserved in ...
; they are usually classed as a form of 形容動詞 (adjectival noun), as the Japanese name indicates.
*
''naru'' adjectives
:These are words that were traditionally earlier forms of ''na''-nominals, but that followed a path similar to ''taru'' adjectives, surviving in a few cases as fossils. These are generally classed as rentaishi.
Syntax
''i''-adjectives
Adjectival verbs (形容詞 ') end with ã„ ''i'' (but never ãˆã„ ''ei'') in base form. They may
predicate
Predicate or predication may refer to:
* Predicate (grammar), in linguistics
* Predication (philosophy)
* several closely related uses in mathematics and formal logic:
**Predicate (mathematical logic)
**Propositional function
**Finitary relation, o ...
sentences and inflect for past, negative, etc. As they head
verb phrase
In linguistics, a verb phrase (VP) is a syntactic unit composed of a verb and its arguments except the subject of an independent clause or coordinate clause. Thus, in the sentence ''A fat man quickly put the money into the box'', the words ''quic ...
s, they can be considered a type of
verbal (verb-like part of speech) and inflect in an identical manner as the negative form of verbs. Their inflections are different and not so numerous as full verbs.
Adjectival verbs are considered verbs because they inflect with the same bases as verbs and their respective usages: irrealis (未然形 '), continuative (連用形 '), terminal (終æ¢å½¢ '), attributive (連体形 '), hypothetical (仮定形 '), and imperative (命令形 ').
Among the six bases of verbs for adjectival verbs, there exist two sets of inflection paradigms: a "plain" or "true" conjugation, and what is known as a ''kari''-conjugation (カリ活用 '), which is the result of the contraction between the "plain" ' form 〜ã ' and the verb ã‚ã‚Š (有り, 在り) ', meaning "to exist", "to have", or "to be". Due to this, the ''kari''-conjugation paradigm resembles that of the ''r''-irregular conjugation paradigm (ãƒ©è¡Œå¤‰æ ¼æ´»ç”¨ ') of ã‚ã‚Š ', however the ' (historically the 已然形 ') is 〜ã‘ã‚Œ ' instead of 〜ã‹ã‚Œ ' (used historically, and also the ''meireikei'' base).
The stem of ''i''-adjectives can combine (prepend on the left), similar to the stem form (連用形 ') of verbs, though this is less common than for verbs. Conversely, nouns or verb stems can sometimes prepend ''i''-adjectives, or two ''i''-adjectives can combine, forming
compound modifier
A compound modifier (also called a compound adjective, phrasal adjective, or adjectival phrase) is a compound of two or more attributive words: that is, two or more words that collectively modify a noun. Compound modifiers are grammatically equival ...
s; these are much less common than
Japanese compound verbs
In linguistics, a compound verb or complex predicate is a multi-word compound that functions as a single verb. One component of the compound is a ''light verb'' or ''vector'', which carries any inflections, indicating tense, mood, or aspect, bu ...
. Common examples include (noun + ''i''-adjective) and (''i''-adjective stem + ''i''-adjective), while (''i''-adjective stem + verb stem) shows an adjective stem joining to form a noun.
''shii''-adjectives
A number of ''i''-adjectives end in (sometimes written ''-sii''). These are overwhelmingly words for feelings, like or . These were originally a separate class of adjectives, dating at least to Old Japanese (see
Old Japanese adjectives), where the two classes are known as and , corresponding to ''-i'' and ''-shii''. However, they merged over the course of Late Middle Japanese (see
Late Middle Japanese adjectives), and now ''shii''-adjectives are simply a form of ''i''-adjectives. The distinction, although no longer meaningful in pronunciation, is still reflected by the writing system, where -ã—- is still written out in hiragana, as in .
Adjectives that end in ''-jii'' (〜ã˜ã„) are also considered ''-shii'' adjectives, such as , and historically , which was initially a ''-shii'' adjective, and the classical negative volitional auxiliary .
''na''-adjectives
Adjectival nouns (形容動詞 ''keiyÅ-dÅshi'') always occur with a form of the copula, traditionally considered part of the adjectival noun itself. The only syntactical difference between nouns and adjectival nouns is in the attributive form, where nouns take ''no'' and adjectives take ''na''. This has led many linguists to consider them a type of
nominal
Nominal may refer to:
Linguistics and grammar
* Nominal (linguistics), one of the parts of speech
* Nominal, the adjectival form of "noun", as in "nominal agreement" (= "noun agreement")
* Nominal sentence, a sentence without a finite verb
* Nou ...
(noun-like part of speech). Through use of inflected forms of the copula, these words can also predicate sentences and inflect for past, negative, etc.
Notably, ''na'' adjectives are distinct from regular nouns, in that they cannot be used as the topic, subject, or object. To function in these roles, the ''na'' adjectives must include the nominalizing suffix , broadly similar to the English suffix ''-ness'' that is used to create nouns from adjectives.
''-yaka'' ''na'' adjectives
There are a number of ''na'' adjectives ending in 〜や㋠''-yaka,'' particularly for subjective words (compare ''-i'' adjectives ending in ''-shii''). This is believed to be a combination of two suffixes 〜や ''-ya'' and 〜㋠''-ka,'' where ''-ya'' meant "softness" and ''-ka'' meant "apparent, visible" (similar to modern 〜ãㆠ''-sÅ,'' which is also followed by 〜ãª), hence the combination ''-ya-ka'' meant "appears somewhat ..., looks slightly ...". This was believed to have been used in the Nara era, and have become particularly popular in the Heian period, but is no longer productive.
[3.11. Why are there so many adjectives ending in yaka?](_blank)
/ref> In some cases the original word is now only used (or almost always used) in the ''-yaka'' form, such as 鮮や㋠''aza-yaka'' "vivid, brilliant", ç©ã‚„ã‹ ''oda-yaka'' "calm, gentle", and 爽や㋠''sawa-yaka'' "fresh, clear", while in other cases the word is used in isolation, such as é›… ''miyabi'' "elegant, graceful", which is used alongside é›…ã‚„ã‹ ''miyabi-yaka'' "elegant, graceful", and in other cases a related word also exists, such as 賑や㋠''nigi-yaka'' "bustling, busy" and the verb 賑ã‚ㆠ''nigi-wau'' "be bustling, be busy". The most basic of these is 賑や㋠''nigi-yaka'' "bustling, busy", but many of these are everyday words. Due to the ''-yaka'' being originally a suffix, it is written as okurigana
are kana suffixes following kanji stems in Japanese written words. They serve two purposes: to inflect adjectives and verbs, and to force a particular kanji to have a specific meaning and be read a certain way. For example, the plain verb fo ...
, even though the compound word may now be a fixed unit.
''-raka'' ''na'' adjectives
Similarly, there are also a few ''na'' adjectives ending in 〜ら㋠''-raka,'' of similar origin. These are generally less subjective, but declined in popularity relative to the ''-yaka'' construction in the Heian period Notable examples include 明ら㋠''aki-raka'' "clear, obvious" and 柔らã‹ï¼è»Ÿã‚‰ã‹ ''yawa-raka'' "soft, gentle". As with ''-yaka'' words, the 〜ら㋠is written out as okurigana.
''taru''-adjectives
A variant of ''na'' adjectives exist, which take 〜ãŸã‚‹ ''-taru'' when functioning attributively (as an adjective, modifying a noun), and 〜㨠''-to'' when functioning adverbially (when modifying a verb), instead of the 〜㪠''-na'' and 〜㫠''-ni'' which are mostly used with ''na'' adjectives. ''taru'' adjectives do not predicate a sentence (they cannot end a sentence, as verbs and ''i''-adjectives can) or take the copula (as ''na''-adjectives and nouns can), but must modify a noun or verb. Note that sometimes ''na'' adjectives take a 〜ã¨, and Japanese sound symbolisms generally take a (sometimes optional) 〜ã¨, though these are different word classes.
There are very few of these words, and they usually are considered somewhat stiff or archaic; this word class is generally not covered in textbooks for foreign language learners of Japanese. One of the most common is å ‚ã€… ''dÅdÅ'' "magnificent, stately". These are referred to in Japanese as ト・タル形容動詞 (''to, taru keiyÅdÅshi'') or タルト型活用 (''taruto-kata katsuyÅ'' – “taru, to form conjugationâ€).
See 形容動詞#「タルトã€åž‹æ´»ç”¨ for discussion in Japanese. Historically, these developed in Late Old Japanese as a variant of ''na'' adjectives,[answer by Boaz Yaniv, 2011 Jun 13](_blank)
t
What exactly is a “taru adjectiveâ€
a
Japanese Language & Usage
StackExchange
a
on linguaphiles forum but the form mostly died out; the remaining ''taru'' adjectives are
fossils
A fossil (from Classical Latin , ) is any preserved remains, impression, or trace of any once-living thing from a past geological age. Examples include bones, shells, exoskeletons, stone imprints of animals or microbes, objects preserved in ...
, and conjugationally defective, having formerly held the pattern of the r-irregular class, like its component ã‚ã‚Š.
''naru''-adjectives
There are also a few ' adjectives such as å˜ãªã‚‹ ' "mere, simple" or è–ãªã‚‹ ''seinaru'' "holy", which developed similarly to ''taru''-adjectives.
As with ''taru'' adjectives, these cannot predicate or take the copula, but must modify a noun (though generally not a verb – many of these only modify nouns via ãªã‚‹, not verbs via ×ã«), and often occur in set phrases, such as . In Late Old Japanese, ''tari'' adjectives developed as a variant of ''nari'' adjectives. Most ''nari'' adjectives became ''na'' adjectives in Modern Japanese, while ''tari'' adjectives either died out or survived as ''taru'' adjective fossils, but a few ''nari'' adjectives followed a similar path to the ''tari'' adjectives and became ''naru'' adjective fossils. They are generally classed into rentaishi.
Attributives
Attributives (') are few in number, and unlike the other words, are strictly limited to modifying nouns. ' never predicate sentences. They derive from other word classes, and so are not always given the same treatment syntactically. For example, ''ano'' (ã‚ã®, "that") can be analysed as a noun or pronoun ''a'' plus the genitive ending ''no''; ''aru'' (ã‚ã‚‹ or 或る, "a certain"), ' (ã•ã‚‹, "a certain"), and ' (ã„ã‚ゆる, "so-called") can be analysed as verbs (''iwayuru'' being an obsolete passive form of the verb ''iu'' (言ã†) "to speak"); and ''Åkina'' (大ããª, "big") can be analysed as the one remaining form of the obsolete adjectival noun '. Attributive ' (åŒã˜, "the same") is sometimes considered to be a ', but it is usually analysed as simply an irregular adjectival verb (note that it has an adverbial form '). The final form ', which occurs with the copula, is usually considered to be a noun, albeit one derived from the adjectival verb.
It can be seen that attributives are analysed variously as nouns, verbs, or adjectival nouns.
Archaic forms
Various archaic forms from
Middle Japanese remain as fossils, primarily uses of or forms that in Modern Japanese would usually be . Everyday examples notably include and – in modern grammar and , respectively. Similarly, uses archaic forms of and .
Inflection
''i''-adjective
Adjectival verbs (''i''-adjectives) have a basic inflection created by dropping the ''-i'' from the end and replacing it with the appropriate ending. Adjectival verbs are made more polite by the use of ã§ã™ ''desu''. ã§ã™ ''desu'' is added directly after the inflected plain form and has no
syntactic
In linguistics, syntax () is the study of how words and morphemes combine to form larger units such as phrases and sentences. Central concerns of syntax include word order, grammatical relations, hierarchical sentence structure (constituency), ...
function; its only purpose is to make the utterance more polite (see
Honorific speech in Japanese
The Japanese language has a system of honorific speech, referred to as , parts of speech that show respect. Their use is mandatory in many social situations. Honorifics in Japanese may be used to emphasize social distance or disparity in rank, ...
).
ã„ã„ ''ii'' "good" is a special case because it comes from the adjective 良ㄠ''yoi''. In present tense it is read as ã„ã„ ''ii'' but since it derives from よㄠ''yoi'' all of its inflections supplete its forms instead. For example, 良ã„ã§ã™ã ''ii desu ne'' "
tis good" becomes 良ã‹ã£ãŸã§ã™ã ''yokatta desu ne'' "
twas good". ã‹ã£ã“ã„ã„ ''kakkoii'' "cool" also fits the same category because it is a mash-up of æ ¼å¥½ ''kakkÅ'' and ã„ã„ ''ii''.
ã„ ''i'' adjectives like 安ㄠ''i'' ("cheap") have the ã„ ''i'' changed to ã‘れ㰠' to change them to conditional form, e.g. 安ã‘れ㰠'; 安ããªã‘れ㰠'.
Adjectival verbs do actually have a full verb inflection paradigm created through contraction with the former
copular verb ã‚ã‚Š (''ari''), consisting of six verb bases, that obeys the grammar surrounding verbs in Japanese. The usage of the full inflection is more limited in Modern Japanese and the majority of adjective usage in Japanese will be within the bounds of the basic inflection above. Auxiliary verbs are attached to some of the verb bases in order to convey information; only the terminal, attributive, and imperative bases are used on their own without auxiliary support.
The two irrealis stems, 〜ã‹ã‚ ' and 〜ã‹ã‚‰ ', are used for different purposes. The 〜ã‹ã‚ ' stem is used to create the volitional inflection by appending the volitional auxiliary 〜ㆠ', e.g. æš‘ã‹ã‚ㆠ', while the 〜ã‹ã‚‰ ' stem is used for the formal negation auxiliary 〜㚠' and all other purposes which require the irrealis stem, e.g. æš‘ã‹ã‚‰ãš '.
The volitional form is generally used to convey supposition or presumption; there are also set phrases which utilize this form, a notable example being the volitional form of 良ㄠ''yoi'', 良ã‹ã‚ㆠ''yokarÅ'', a formal or archaic expression for "very well" or "it would be best to..." and the volitional form of ç„¡ã„ ''nai'', ç„¡ã‹ã‚ㆠ''nakarÅ'', a formal or archaic expression for "probably not so".
The imperative form is rarely used outside of set expressions; a common usage is once again with 良ㄠ''yoi'', and its imperative form 良ã‹ã‚Œ ''yokare'', in idiomatic set expressions like 良ã‹ã‚Œã¨æ€ã† ''yokare to omou'' (to wish for the best, to have good intentions) or 良ã‹ã‚Œæ‚ªã—ã‹ã‚Œ ''yokare-ashikare'' (good or bad, for better or for worse, be it good or bad), also making use of the imperative form of 悪ã—ã„ ''ashii'' (formerly the regular word for "bad", since replaced by 悪ㄠ''warui''). The imperative form of ç„¡ã„ ''nai'', ç„¡ã‹ã‚Œ ''nakare'', is also used in archaic speech to indicate prohibition or a command not to do something or to indicate that one must not do something (also spelled å‹¿ã‚Œ, 毋れ, 莫れ).
''na''-adjective
Adjectival nouns (''na''-adjectives) have a basic inflection created by dropping the ''-na'' and replacing it with the appropriate form of the verb ''da'', the copula. As with adjectival verbs, adjectival nouns are also made more polite by the use of ã§ã™ '. ã§ã™ ' is used in its role as the polite form of the copula, therefore replacing ''da'' (the plain form of the copula) in the plain form of these adjectives.
㪠''na'' adjectives have ãªã‚‰ ''nara'' added to them to change to conditional form, and just like all other ãªã„ ''nai'' form inflections, behave like an ã„ ''i'' adjective when in negative form, e.g. ç°¡å˜ã˜ã‚ƒãªã‘れ㰠''k''.
Because ''na''-adjectives are simply suffixed with the copula ''da'', they, too, like ''i''-adjectives, have a full verb inflection paradigm with six bases that obeys the grammar surrounding Japanese verbs.
Similarly to ''i''-adjectives, out of the multiple irrealis stems, the 〜ã ã‚ ''daro'' irrealis stem is only used with the volitional auxiliary suffix 〜ㆠ''u'', to form the volitional form suffixed with volitional copula 〜ã ã‚ㆠ''darÅ'', used primarily to present a supposition or presumption. The 〜ã§ã¯ ''dewa'' irrealis stem is not considered a true irrealis stem because it is simply the continuative stem plus the case particle 㯠''wa'', but is nevertheless suffixied with standard negation auxiliary 〜ãªã„ ''nai'' to form the negative form (see the basic inflection above). The 〜ãªã‚‰ ''nara'' irrealis stem is used with the formal negation auxiliary 〜㚠''zu'' and all other uses of the irrealis stem.
The 〜ãªã‚‹ attributive form exists as a fossil from the archaic ナリ活用 (''nari katsuyÅ''), or ''nari''-conjugation, the precursor to the modern ''na-''adjective. Generally only the 〜㪠''na'' form is used for attribution, but the 〜ãªã‚‹ form may be used to add a sense of stress, intensity, profundity, formality, or an imitation of archaic speech, such as 人類ã®å‰å¤§ãªã‚‹éºç”£ ''jinrui no idai-naru isan'', "the great legacy of humanity", as compared to 人類ã®å‰å¤§ãªéºç”£ ''jinrui no idai-na isan''. It may also be seen in set phrases, like in 親愛ãªã‚‹ ''shin'ai-naru'', used to open and address a letter to someone, much like English ''dear''.
The 〜ãªã‚‹ attributive form is also used in ''naru''-adjectives, like å˜ãªã‚‹ ''tan-naru'' or è–ãªã‚‹ ''sei-naru''. In almost all cases, these are used exclusively as pre-noun attributives and cannot be used in any of the other standard forms of na-adjectives. In Modern Japanese, they only serve to modify nouns and cannot be used terminally nor even adverbially, as a contrast with the similar ''taru''-adjectives. It is generally considered ungrammatical or unnatural to use other forms with ''naru''-adjectives, even if technically syntactically correct.
''taru''-adjective
''taru''-adjectives have much more limited usage in Modern Japanese and generally can only be used attributively with 〜ãŸã‚‹ ''taru'' or adverbially with 〜㨠''to''. Generally, to express past or negative forms, additional other words or syntax are added to the sentence rather than using the full verb paradigm. However, nevertheless, ''taru''-adjectives do have a full verb paradigm with six bases that obeys the grammar surrounding verbs in Japanese, which may be used in archaic or highly formal speech.
The terminal form 〜ãŸã‚Š ''tari'' is almost never used. Generic words like 物 ''mono'', 事 ''koto'', 人 ''hito'', and æ–¹ ''kata'' are used as fill-ins with the attributive form instead.
Adverb forms
Both adjectival verbs and adjectival nouns can form
adverb An adverb is a word or an expression that generally modifies a verb, adjective, another adverb, determiner, clause, preposition, or sentence. Adverbs typically express manner, place, time, frequency, degree, level of certainty, etc., answering ...
s. In the case of adjectival verbs, ã„ ''i'' changes to ã ''ku'':
:''atsuku naru'' "become hot"
and in the case of adjectival nouns, 㪠''na'' changes to 㫠''ni'':
:''hen ni naru'' "become strange"
There are also some words like ãŸãã•ã‚“ ''takusan'' and 全然 ''zenzen'' that are adverbs in their root form:
:全然分ã‹ã‚Šã¾ã›ã‚“ ''zenzen wakarimasen'' "
absolutely not understand."
In a few cases, a 〜㫠form of a word is common while a 〜㪠form is rare or non-existent, as in – is common, but is generally not used.
Terminology
The Japanese word ''keiyÅshi'' is used to denote an
English
English usually refers to:
* English language
* English people
English may also refer to:
Peoples, culture, and language
* ''English'', an adjective for something of, from, or related to England
** English national ide ...
adjective.
Because the widespread study of Japanese is still relatively new in the Western world, there are no generally accepted English translations for the above parts of speech, with varying texts adopting different sets, and others extant not listed above.
See also
*
Japanese verb conjugation
Japanese verbs, like the verbs of many other languages, can be phonetically modified to change their purpose, nuance or meaning – a process known as conjugation. In Japanese, the beginning of a word (the ''stem'') is preserved during conjugation, ...
*
Japanese godan and ichidan verbs
The Japanese language has two main types of verbs which are referred to as and .
Verb groups
Categories are important when conjugating Japanese verbs, since conjugation patterns vary according to the verb's category. For example, and belong to ...
*
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 parti ...
Notes
References
External links
Why does Japanese have two kinds of adjectives? (-i adjectives and -na adjectives) Boaz Yaniv, 2011 Jun 13
Japanese Language & Usage Stack Exchange
{{DEFAULTSORT:Japanese Adjectives
Adjectives
In linguistics, an adjective (abbreviated ) is a word that generally modifies a noun or noun phrase or describes its referent. Its semantic role is to change information given by the noun.
Traditionally, adjectives were considered one of the mai ...
Adjectives by language