JLPT N5 Chapter 12 of 19

The て-Form and Polite Requests

The て-form is the Swiss Army knife of Japanese verbs: one conjugation that lets you make polite requests, chain actions together, and unlock dozens of later patterns. In this chapter you'll learn the sound-change rules once — and then use them forever.

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One form, endless uses

Until now every verb you've met has ended its sentence: べます、きます、ます。 The て-form is the opposite — it's the shape a verb takes when the sentence isn't finished yet. It can't stand alone; instead it plugs the verb into something else: a request ("please wait"), the next action in a sequence ("I get up, drink coffee and leave"), and — from N4 onwards — dozens more patterns.

At N5 you need exactly two uses: ~てください for polite requests, and linking actions in order. The only real work is making the form, because group 1 verbs change their sound when て attaches. Japanese verbs fall into three groups — group 1 (most verbs), group 2 (the る-verbs that conjugate by simply dropping る), and the two irregulars する and る — and each group builds its て-form differently. We'll take them one at a time.

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Group 1 verbs: the five sound changes

って・んで・いて・いで・して

Group 1 verbs change their final syllable before て. There are only five patterns, and verbs with the same ending always behave the same way — learn this table once and you can convert every group 1 verb in the language. Start from the dictionary form (the form you find in word lists) and swap the last syllable:

Dictionary form ends inて-form ends inExample
う・つ・るってつ → って
む・ぶ・ぬんでむ → んで
いてく → いて
いでおよぐ → およいで
してはなす → はなして

One single exception in the whole language: く (to go) becomes って, not いいて — it behaves like a つ-verb here. (And ぬ covers exactly one verb: ぬ, "to die" — you'll rarely need it at N5.) Generations of learners chant the endings out loud — って・んで・いて・いで・して — and it genuinely sticks.

すわる → すわって

suwaru → suwatte

to sit → sitting

う・つ・る all become って. You'll hear 座ってください constantly in classrooms.

む → んで

yomu → yonde

to read → reading

む・ぶ・ぬ become んで — note the voiced で.

く → いて

kaku → kaite

to write → writing

く becomes いて; its voiced twin ぐ becomes いで.

く → って

iku → itte

to go → going

The exception! 行く takes って, not いて.

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Group 2 verbs and the two irregulars

る → て / して・

Group 2 verbs are the easy ones: drop る, add て. No sound changes, ever. (Reminder: group 2 verbs end in る with an i or e sound before it — る、べる、ける. If the sound before る is a, u or o, it's group 1 and takes って.)

The two irregular verbs keep their reputation: する (to do) becomes して, and る (to come) becomes て — same kanji, new reading.

る →

miru → mite

to see → seeing

ける → けて

akeru → akete

to open → opening

Chop る, add て. Done.

する → して

suru → shite

to do → doing

る →

kuru → kite

to come → coming

Watch the reading: く in 来る changes to き in 来て.

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~てください — making polite requests

~てください

Add ください to a て-form and you have a polite request: って → ってください ("please wait"). You'll hear this everywhere — teachers, station announcements, shop staff, recorded messages. It's polite, but it is still literally an instruction; the culture note below shows how to soften things further when you're the one asking the favour.

ちょっとってください。

chotto matte kudasai.

Please wait a moment.

Probably the single most useful request in Japanese.

これをてください。

kore o mite kudasai.

Please look at this.

ここに名前なまえいてください。

koko ni namae o kaite kudasai.

Please write your name here.

すみません、ゆっくりはなしてください。

sumimasen, yukkuri hanashite kudasai.

Excuse me, please speak slowly.

Opening with すみません makes any request gentler.

JLPT N5Guide extra · not in the game

Do this, then that — linking actions

~て、~て、…ます

String て-forms together to narrate a sequence: "do A, do B, then C". The actions come in chronological order, and only the final verb carries the tense and politeness — everything before it stays in the bare て-form. This is how Japanese describes routines, directions and stories without saying "and then" over and over.

あさきて、コーヒーをんで、かけます。

asa okite, kōhī o nonde, dekakemasu.

I get up in the morning, drink coffee, and go out.

図書館としょかんって、ほんみます。

toshokan e itte, hon o yomimasu.

I go to the library and read books.

ばんはんべて、テレビをて、ます。

bangohan o tabete, terebi o mite, nemasu.

I eat dinner, watch TV, and go to bed.

Swap the final verb to 寝ました and the whole chain becomes past tense.

JLPT N4Guide extra · not in the game

A preview: ~ています

~ています

You don't need this for N5, but you'll hear it constantly: て-form + います means an action is in progress or an ongoing state — close to English "-ing". File it under recognition for now; it gets the full treatment at N4.

いまあめっています。

ima, ame ga futte imasu.

It is raining right now.

田中たなかさんはほんんでいます。

tanaka-san wa hon o yonde imasu.

Mr/Ms Tanaka is reading a book.

From the game

Chapter vocabulary

Twelve verbs from the game — each note gives you the て-form, ready to drop into てください.

matsuwaitte-form: まって
miruwatchte-form: みて (group 2)
kikulistente-form: きいて
ikugote-form: いって (the exception!)
kakuwritete-form: かいて
yomureadte-form: よんで
nomudrinkte-form: のんで
akeruopente-form: あけて (group 2)
shimeruclosete-form: しめて (group 2)
suwarusitte-form: すわって
tatsustandte-form: たって
hanasutalkte-form: はなして

Tap ► to hear the native audio from the game, or tap a word to open its dictionary entry.

Three ways to ask for a coffee

~てください is polite, but it is still an instruction — perfect from a teacher to a class, slightly bossy when you're the one asking the favour. Real-life Japanese has a ladder of softness:

When in doubt, おねがいします never offends. And opening any request to a stranger with すみません ("excuse me") does half the politeness work for you.

Test yourself

Eight questions: convert verbs to the て-form and pick the correct requests.

8 quick questions on this chapter.

Common questions

Quick answers about this chapter's grammar.

How do I tell group 1 and group 2 apart when both end in る?

Look at the sound before る. An i or e sound usually means group 2 — る、べる、ける → みて、たべて、あけて. An a, u or o sound means group 1 — すわる → すわって. A handful of i/e verbs are secretly group 1, though: かえる (to return) → かえって and はいる (to enter) → はいって are the most common at N5, so check a dictionary when in doubt.

Is ~てください rude?

No — it's polite Japanese, and it's exactly right when giving instructions or asking staff for help. But it is still an instruction, so for personal favours Japanese speakers soften it: open with すみませんが ('excuse me, but…'), or skip the verb entirely and use noun + おねがいします. You'll never go wrong starting a request with すみません.

Does the て-form itself have a tense?

No — the て-form is tense-neutral. In a chain of actions, the final verb sets the tense for everything: きて、コーヒーをんで、かけました is entirely past, even though the first two verbs look unchanged. That's why only the last verb in a sequence carries ます or ました.

How can I memorise the て-form sound changes?

Chant them. Generations of learners recite the endings rhythmically — う・つ・る→って, む・ぶ・ぬ→んで, く→いて, ぐ→いで, す→して — often to a simple tune, until the pattern is automatic. There are only five rules plus one exception (く→いって), and the verbs you use most, like まって and みて, cement themselves within days once you start using てください in real sentences.

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