上一段活用
Japanese
editKanji in this term | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
上 | 一 | 段 | 活 | 用 |
かみ Grade: 1 |
いち Grade: 1 |
だん Grade: 6 |
かつ Grade: 2 |
よう Grade: 2 |
kun'yomi | goon | kan'on |
Etymology
editCompound of 上 (kami, “upper”) + 一段活用 (ichidan katsuyō, “monograde conjugation”).
Literally, 上一段 (kami ichidan, “upper monograde”) refers to how the inflected endings are located in the gojūon table. 上 (kami, “upper”) means the vowel i, which is written above the vowel e, the other inflection-related vowel. 一段 (ichidan, “one grade”) means only one vowel is involved, since each 段 (dan, “row”) of the table contains one vowel. Thus this can be understood as “one-voweled conjugation in i”.
Pronunciation
edit- (Tokyo) かみいちだんかつよー [kàmí íchídáń káꜜtsùyòò] (Nakadaka – [7])[1]
- IPA(key): [ka̠mʲi it͡ɕida̠ŋ ka̠t͡sɨjo̞ː]
Noun
edit上一段活用 • (kami ichidan katsuyō) ←かみいちだんくわつよう (kami itidan kwatuyou)?
- (grammar) a verbal conjugation class in which the verb stem ends in -i and consists of four alternating bases: -i, -iru, -ire, and -iyo/-iro
Modern | 未然形 Irrealis |
連用形 Adverbial |
終止形 Conclusive |
連体形 Attributive |
仮定形 Conditional |
命令形 Imperative |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
着る (ki-, “to wear”) | 着 (ki) | 着 (ki) | 着る (kiru) | 着る (kiru) | 着れ (kire) | 着よ (kiyo) 着ろ (kiro) |
閉じる (toji-, “to close”) | 閉じ (toji) | 閉じ (toji) | 閉じる (tojiru) | 閉じる (tojiru) | 閉じれ (tojire) | 閉じよ (tojiyo) 閉じろ (tojiro) |
似る (ni-, “to resemble”) | 似 (ni) | 似 (ni) | 似る (niru) | 似る (niru) | 似れ (nire) | 似よ (niyo) 似ろ (niro) |
伸びる (nobi-, “to extend”) | 伸び (nobi) | 伸び (nobi) | 伸びる (nobiru) | 伸びる (nobiru) | 伸びれ (nobire) | 伸びよ (nobiyo) 伸びろ (nobiro) |
見る (mi-, “to see”) | 見 (mi) | 見 (mi) | 見る (miru) | 見る (miru) | 見れ (mire) | 見よ (miyo) 見ろ (miro) |
降りる (ori-, “to descend”) | 降り (ori) | 降り (ori) | 降りる (oriru) | 降りる (oriru) | 降りれ (orire) | 降りよ (oriyo) 降りろ (oriro) |
Archaic | 未然形 Irrealis |
連用形 Adverbial |
終止形 Conclusive |
連体形 Attributive |
已然形 Realis |
命令形 Imperative |
着る (ki-, “to wear”) | 着 (ki1 → ki) | 着 (ki1 → ki) | 着る (ki1ru → kiru) | 着る (ki1ru → kiru) | 着れ (ki1re → kire) | 着よ (ki1yo2 → kiyo) |
似る (ni-, “to resemble”) | 似 (ni) | 似 (ni) | 似る (niru) | 似る (niru) | 似れ (nire) | 似よ (niyo2 → niyo) |
見る (mi-, “to see”) | 見 (mi1 → mi) | 見 (mi1 → mi) | 見る (mi1ru → miru) | 見る (mi1ru → miru) | 見れ (mi1re → mire) | 見よ (mi1yo2 → miyo) |
The subscripts in the table above indicate differences in vowel class that were already being lost in Old Japanese. It remains unclear what those different vowel classes may have meant. See the Syllables section in the Wikipedia article on Old Japanese for more details.
Related terms
editSee also
editReferences
edit- Japanese terms spelled with 上 read as かみ
- Japanese terms spelled with 一 read as いち
- Japanese terms spelled with 段 read as だん
- Japanese terms spelled with 活 read as かつ
- Japanese terms spelled with 用 read as よう
- Japanese compound terms
- Japanese terms with IPA pronunciation
- Japanese lemmas
- Japanese nouns
- Japanese terms historically spelled with わ
- Japanese terms with multiple readings
- Japanese terms spelled with first grade kanji
- Japanese terms spelled with sixth grade kanji
- Japanese terms spelled with second grade kanji
- Japanese terms with 5 kanji
- ja:Grammar