First, distinguish Japanese verbs (five paragraphs)
Japanese verbs are composed of stems and suffixes, which remain unchanged and the suffixes change, so they are distinguished according to suffixes.
Five verbs end in くぐぶむぬつるぅす.
For example, reading, swimming, flying, drinking, dying, waiting, buying and speaking.
A verb ends in る, but look at the kana syllable in front of it.
If it is the last verb in paragraph I, it is the next verb in paragraph E.
For example, the verb in the previous paragraph begins with きるーきる12540iru.
The next verb is Shi べるーべる 12540eru.
Of course, there are exceptions and special memories, such as entering the five-paragraph verb るはぃる (かぇる).
Secondly, the seven forms of verb change are non-occurrence form, conjunction form, termination form, conjunction form, imperative form and deductive form.
{This should be the permutation and combination overlap mentioned above. }
The flexible use of five-paragraph verbs is as follows, mainly the change of suffixes.
Using the basic morpheme stem to terminate the joint hypothesis command reasoning before it occurs
Make a reservation くかきくくけけこ
Wait, wait, wait, wait.
. . . . . . . [It is found that the flexible changes of five-segment verbs are carried out in sequence according to the row order of their five-syllable graphs]
A verb changes as follows
Using the basic morpheme stem to terminate the joint hypothesis command reasoning before it occurs
きるぉききるきるきれきろきよき
Eat べるたべべるべれべろ/べよべ.
Once again, briefly explain the application of flexibility change.
Adding "なぃ" before something happens becomes a {formal} negation. Depending on the meaning of the sentence, sometimes it is negative, sometimes it is not.
For example, if you can't remember the key, you can't forget it. Forgot a paragraph. Don't forget the key to the room.
Let's talk about it after the official event. Ok, how about going to a concert after work?
Together with ます, it becomes the honorific language of the Japanese.
It starts at 7 o'clock on Sunday. ぉきるーぉきます Sen gets up at 7 o'clock every day.
わたしはコンビにでぉをぃますかぅー?
Terminate the direct sentence into a simplified Japanese sentence.
North Korea news. Read the newspaper every morning.
パンかぉかゆをべ. Eat bread or porridge.
The conjoined modifier noun これはでででででででね. This is the information for tomorrow's meeting.
Connected graph+data noun
Support+ば if. . Rain, rain and travel. I won't go if it rains.
An order was given to cancel the power supply. Stop it! Turn off the lights! (What the superior said to the subordinate)
Add "ぅぅぅよぅぅぅぅぅぅぅぅぅぅぅぅぅぅぅぅ" . bar
No school. Let's go to school together.
もぅ 1 1 だからよぅ. Let's go to bed. It is now 1 1 point. Go to sleep.
Finally, the question about the past tense of verbs (simplified)
Five-segment verbs are mainly changed into verb た (simplified past tense) according to the suffix-sound.
Book くーかぃた
Swimming. Swimming.
Okay, okay, okay.
Fly, fly, fly.
I don't know what to do.
Go to hell. Go to hell.
Wait, wait, wait.
るー?っ
Buy it. Buy it.
Tell me about it. Tell me about it.
Pronunciation+た ends at つる.
ィくぐ +た /だ
Dialing changes ending in ぶぬむ +だ
く line is a special case.
The ending of す is し+た.
A verb becomes "る" when the suffix is removed.
Eat, eat, eat.
Goodbye.
If you eat privately, you eat privately. I have eaten Japanese beef hotpot.
Did you see you yesterday? ぅぅんなかった: Did you watch TV yesterday? No I don't.