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Languages Study | Languages of the East | Japanese III

ÀÓÄÈÎ 434 | GRAMMAR II - 18.01 : Transitive Pairs

 

Grammar II - 18.1 - Transitive Pairs

158 | a108 | a158

Some verbs describe situations in which humans act on something (transitive verbs),
other verbs describe changes that happen to things or people (intransitive verbs).
While most verbs are loners and do not have a counterpart of the opposite transitivity, some important verbs come in pairs.

Transitive verbs:
あける - akeru = open something
しめる - shimeru = close something
いれる - ireru = put something in

Intransitive verbs:
あく - aku = something opens
しまる - shimaru = something closes
はいる - hairu = something goes inside
    Transitive     Intransitive
開ける あける open something 開く あく something opens
閉める しめる close something 閉まる しまる something closes
入れる いれる put something in 入る はいる something goes inside
出す だす take something out 出る でる something goes out
つける つける turn something on つく つく something goes on
消す けす turn something off; extinguish something 消える きえる something goes off
壊す こわす break something 壊れる こわれる something breaks
汚す よごす make something dirty 汚れる よごれる something becomes dirty
落とす おとす drop something 落ちる おちる something drops
沸かす わかす boil water 沸く わく water boils
Transitive verbs call for both the subject (agent) and the object (the thing that is worked on). Intransitive verbs call only for the subject (the thing or the person that goes through the change).
たけしさんが 電気を つけました。 Takeshi turned the lights on. 電気が つきました。 The light went on.

takeshi-san-ga denki-o tsukemashita.

  denki-ga tsukimashita  
       
たけしさんが お湯を沸かしました。 Takeshi boiled the water. お湯が沸きました。 The water boiled.

takeshi-san-ga o-yu-o wakashimashita.

  o-yu-ga wakimashita.  
  Transitive verbs describe activities, while intransitive verbs describe changes.
They behave differently when they are followed by the helping verb -te iru.
Let us first recall that activity verbs (hanasu, for example) + -te iru refer to actions in progress,
while change verbs (kekkon suru, for example) + te iru refer to the states resulting from the change.
スーさんは今、
電話でお母さんと話しています。
(activity, action in progress)
Sue is talking on the phone with her mother right now.

suu-san-wa ima,
denwa-de okaasan-to hanashite imasu.

 
山下先生は結婚しています。 (change, result state)
Professor Yamashita is married.
yamashita sensei wa kekkon shite imasu.  
Similarly, when followed by -te iru, transitive verbs refer to actions in progress,
while intransitive verbs refer to states that hold after the change takes place.
ロバートさんは窓を開けています。 Robert is opening the windows. ドアを開いています。 Doors are open / There's an open door.

robaato-san-wa mado-o akete imasu.

  doa-o aite imasu.  
ともこさんは電気を消しています。 Tomoko is turning the tight off. テレビは消えています。 The TV set is off.
tomoko-san-wa denki-o keshite imasu.   terebi-wa kiete imasu.  
ゴジラが町を壊しています。 There goes Godzilla, destroying the city. このコンピューターは壊れています。 This computer is broken.
gojira-ga machi-o kowashite imasu.   kono konpyuutaa-wa kowarete imasu.