B1 Potential Form 5 min read

Potential form: u-verbs (~える)

Turn u-verbs into potential form by changing the 'u' ending to 'e' plus 'ru' to express ability.

The Rule in 30 Seconds

  • Change the final 'u' sound to an 'e' sound.
  • Add 'ru' to create the potential form verb.
  • Use 'ga' instead of 'o' for the object.
  • Potential verbs conjugate exactly like regular ru-verbs.

Quick Reference

Dictionary Form Vowel Change Potential Form English Meaning
iku (去く) ike ikeru can go
nomu (飲む) nome nomeru can drink
hanasu (話す) hanase hanaseru can speak
kau (買う) kae kaeru can buy
matsu (待つ) mate materu can wait
oyogu (泳ぐ) oyog e oyogeru can swim
asobu (遊ぶ) asobe asoberu can play

Key Examples

3 of 8
1

Nihongo ga hanaseru.

I can speak Japanese.

2

Ashita wa ikeru.

I can go tomorrow.

3

Kono mise de chiketto ga kaeru.

You can buy tickets at this shop.

💡

The 'Ga' Rule

Always try to use 'ga' instead of 'o'. It marks the thing you have the ability to do. It sounds much more natural to native ears.

⚠️

The 'Wakaru' Trap

Never use the potential form with 'wakaru'. 'Wakaru' already means you can understand. Adding potential makes it mean 'to be separable'.

The Rule in 30 Seconds

  • Change the final 'u' sound to an 'e' sound.
  • Add 'ru' to create the potential form verb.
  • Use 'ga' instead of 'o' for the object.
  • Potential verbs conjugate exactly like regular ru-verbs.

Overview

Ever felt like you're stuck in a video game? You see a door but can't open it. In Japanese, the potential form is your Unlock button. It tells the world what you can do. It covers skills like playing guitar. It covers situational possibilities too. It even covers permission in some cases. For u-verbs, this change is like a magic trick. You change one vowel and you're capable. It is the difference between I eat and I can eat. Let's dive into how you level up. Your Japanese will sound much more natural now.

How This Grammar Works

Think of this as a capability filter. You take a standard action verb. You apply the potential rule. Now, the verb describes a state of being. It is important to note a big change. Potential verbs actually become ru-verbs. This means they conjugate like taberu or neru. Once you change iku to ikeru, the hard part ends. You can now make it polite easily. Just add masu to get ikemasu. You can make it negative too. It becomes ikenai. It is like upgrading your car. It looks similar but it does much more. Think of it as a grammar power-up.

Formation Pattern

  1. 1Converting u-verbs is surprisingly consistent. Follow these simple steps for success:
  2. 2Look at the dictionary form of your u-verb.
  3. 3Identify the final syllable sound.
  4. 4Change that 'u' sound to an 'e' sound.
  5. 5Add ru to the end of the word.
  6. 6Let's look at some real examples:
  7. 7iku (go) becomes ik + e + ru = ikeru.
  8. 8nomu (drink) becomes nom + e + ru = nomeru.
  9. 9hanasu (speak) becomes hanas + e + ru = hanaseru.
  10. 10matsu (wait) becomes mat + e + ru = materu.
  11. 11oyogu (swim) becomes oyog + e + ru = oyogeru.
  12. 12Yes, even kau (buy) becomes kaeru. Don't confuse it with the verb for return! Context is your best friend here. It is like a secret code for ability.

When To Use It

Use this form for your personal skills. I can speak Japanese is a classic use. Use it for situational possibilities as well. Can we meet tomorrow? fits perfectly here. It is great for physical limits too. I can't eat more sushi uses the negative. Imagine you are at a job interview. You use this to list your strengths. Or imagine you are at a restaurant. You ask if they can make food spicy. It is a very practical everyday tool. You will hear it at karaoke often. Can you sing this high note? It is everywhere in Japan. It makes you sound like a pro.

When Not To Use It

Don't use it for natural occurrences. You don't can fall from a tree. You just fall. Avoid it with verbs that imply ability. wakaru (to understand) is a prime example. Saying wakareru means to be able to separate. That is a totally different vibe! Also, don't use it for knowing people. Stick to shitte iru for that. It is for actions you actively control. If the wind blows, it just blows. It doesn't can blow in this form. Keep it for human actions and possibilities. Think of it like a grammar traffic light. Only go when you have control.

Common Mistakes

The biggest trip-up is the particle o. Usually, verbs take o for the object. But potential verbs prefer the particle ga. Sushi o taberu becomes Sushi ga tabereru. Many native speakers use o casually. Don't sweat it too much in speech. But aim for ga in your exams. Another mistake is over-using koto ga dekiru. It is correct but very formal. It sounds a bit like a robot. In a conversation, nomeru is much smoother. It is like saying I can drink. Koto ga dekiru is like I am capable of drinking. Keep it simple and use the potential form.

Contrast With Similar Patterns

You might know the phrase koto ga dekiru. This is the formal cousin of our rule. Use it for complex or long phrases. Then there is the passive form reru. For u-verbs, they look quite different. So you are mostly safe there. But for ru-verbs, they often look identical. Luckily, we are focusing on u-verbs today. Just remember this simple distinction. Potential equals your ability to do things. Passive equals something happening to you. Don't mix them up at dinner. You might say you were eaten! That would be a very awkward meal.

Quick FAQ

Q. Does this work for all u-verbs?

A. Yes, every single u-verb follows this.

Q. Can I use it with desu?

A. No, treat it like a normal verb.

Q. Is kaeru (buy) and kaeru (return) the same?

A. They sound the same but have different kanji.

Q. Why do people use ga instead of o?

A. Because the potential form describes a state.

Q. Can I use it for permission?

A. Yes, it works for can I do this.

Q. Is it okay for polite speech?

A. Yes, just change ru to masu.

Reference Table

Dictionary Form Vowel Change Potential Form English Meaning
iku (去く) ike ikeru can go
nomu (飲む) nome nomeru can drink
hanasu (話す) hanase hanaseru can speak
kau (買う) kae kaeru can buy
matsu (待つ) mate materu can wait
oyogu (泳ぐ) oyog e oyogeru can swim
asobu (遊ぶ) asobe asoberu can play
💡

The 'Ga' Rule

Always try to use 'ga' instead of 'o'. It marks the thing you have the ability to do. It sounds much more natural to native ears.

⚠️

The 'Wakaru' Trap

Never use the potential form with 'wakaru'. 'Wakaru' already means you can understand. Adding potential makes it mean 'to be separable'.

🎯

Ru-Verb Conjugation

Once you make a verb potential, it is now a ru-verb. This means the negative is always '~nai' and the polite is always '~masu'.

💬

Modesty Matters

In Japan, people often use the negative potential to be polite. Saying 'I can't do it well' is common even if you are quite good.

أمثلة

8
#1 Basic Ability

Nihongo ga hanaseru.

Focus: hanaseru

I can speak Japanese.

The 'su' in 'hanasu' changes to 'se'.

#2 Situational Possibility

Ashita wa ikeru.

Focus: ikeru

I can go tomorrow.

Used for availability or possibility.

#3 Edge Case (Verb ending in 'u')

Kono mise de chiketto ga kaeru.

Focus: kaeru

You can buy tickets at this shop.

The 'u' in 'kau' becomes 'e'.

#4 Formal Usage

Osake ga nomemasu ka?

Focus: nomemasu

Can you drink alcohol?

Potential form + masu for politeness.

#5 Negative Ability

Kanjii ga kakenai.

Focus: kakenai

I can't write Kanji.

Potential form conjugates like a ru-verb.

#6 Mistake Correction

✗ Sushi o taberu koto ga dekiru → ✓ Sushi ga tabereru.

Focus: tabereru

I can eat sushi.

The potential form is more natural than the long phrase.

#7 Mistake Correction

✗ Hon o yomeru → ✓ Hon ga yomeru.

Focus: ga

I can read the book.

Use 'ga' for the object of potential verbs.

#8 Advanced Usage

Konna ni hayaku wa hashirenai.

Focus: hashirenai

I can't run this fast.

Combines potential form with contrastive 'wa'.

Test Yourself

Change the verb in parentheses to the potential form to complete the sentence.

Watashi wa 5km ___ (hashiru).

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. الإجابة الصحيحة: hashireru

To make 'hashiru' potential, change 'ru' to 're' and add 'ru'.

Choose the correct particle for the potential sentence.

Piano ___ hikemasu.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. الإجابة الصحيحة: ga

Potential verbs usually take the 'ga' particle for the object.

Convert 'matsu' (to wait) to its negative potential form.

Mou kore ijou ___. (cannot wait)

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. الإجابة الصحيحة: matenai

Matsu -> Mate -> Materu -> Matenai.

🎉 Score: /3

Visual Learning Aids

Dictionary vs Potential

Dictionary (Action)
yomu read
kaku write
Potential (Ability)
yomeru can read
kakeru can write

U-Verb Transformation

1

Does it end in 'u'?

YES ↓
NO
Use ru-verb rule instead.
2

Change 'u' to 'e' sound?

YES ↓
NO
Stop here.
3

Add 'ru' at the end?

YES ↓
NO
Stop here.

Common Potential Verbs

💬

Social

  • hanaseru
  • aeru
🏃

Physical

  • hashireru
  • oyogeru

Frequently Asked Questions

22 questions

It is a verb form used to express ability or possibility. It translates to 'can' or 'be able to' in English.

Change the final 'ku' to 'ke' and add 'ru'. It becomes ikeru.

In casual speech, people do it often. However, ga is grammatically correct and preferred in formal writing.

Yes, just conjugate the potential verb to its negative form. For example, nomeru becomes nomenai.

The potential form is more concise and common in speech. Koto ga dekiru is formal and used for complex actions.

No, suru is irregular. Its potential form is dekiru.

That is also irregular. The potential form of kuru is koreru.

Yes, you can ask Koko de tabereru? to mean 'Can I eat here?'

By itself, it is plain form. Add masu to make it polite, like ikemasu.

Treat it like a ru-verb. Ikeru becomes iketa for 'could go'.

Yes, you can say ikeru you ni naritai which means 'I want to become able to go'.

It sounds like 'return', but the kanji 買える vs 帰る makes it clear. Context usually solves it.

Change 'tsu' to 'te' and add 'ru'. So matsu becomes materu.

Change 'su' to 'se' and add 'ru'. So hanasu becomes hanaseru.

Yes, but usually in the polite masu form. You would say Nihongo ga hanasemasu.

Usually no. It is for things that have a possibility of happening or human ability.

It is neutral. Everyone uses it the same way.

Yes, ikete ureshii means 'I am happy that I can go'.

Because it describes the 'potential' for an action to happen. It is about capability.

No, use mieru for things that enter your vision naturally. Mireru is for having the opportunity to watch.

No, use kikoeru for natural hearing. Kikeru is for being able to listen to something like a CD.

Not at all! Once you master the vowel shift, it becomes second nature.

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