Japanese Potential Form Practice
Learn how Japanese verbs express can do or be able to do with forms like taberareru and ikeru.
About the author
Luke McLaughlin created Constructing Language after living in Japan and later learning Mandarin Chinese from scratch. The lessons, games, and guides are built from that first-hand learner experience and checked against native-speaker course work with Hiro for Japanese and Xiang for Mandarin Chinese.
- Lived in Japan and studied Japanese through immersion and structured self-study.
- Learned Mandarin Chinese from scratch as an adult learner.
- Created the Construction Method: audio-first sentence building, grammar graphics, and active recall.
- Built Japanese course material with Hiro and Mandarin course material with Xiang, both native-speaker collaborators.
What potential form means
The potential form expresses ability. Ru-verbs often add rareru, while many u-verbs shift to the e-row plus ru. The particle ga often appears with the thing someone can do or understand.
- Taberu becomes taberareru.
- Iku becomes ikeru.
- Use ga naturally with ability: nihongo ga wakarimasu.
Common beginner mistake
The common mistake is translating the English sentence shape directly. Pause first, identify the grammar role, then build the target-language pattern from its own structure.
How to practise
Make five short sentences, swap one word at a time, say each sentence aloud, and then use the linked game to test the same pattern under light pressure.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Japanese potential form important for beginners?
Yes. This pattern appears early and helps learners build accurate sentences instead of memorising phrasebook fragments.
Should I memorise rules or practise sentences?
Use the rule as a guide, then practise short sentences until the pattern becomes easy to produce.