B1 Sentence Structure 6 min read आसान

Te-form Conjunctions: Connecting Clauses Sequentially

Connect sequential actions smoothly by using the te-form for all verbs except the final one.

Grammar Rule in 30 Seconds

Use the Te-form to connect multiple actions or states in a single sentence sequentially.

  • Change verb to Te-form: {食べる|たべる} → {食べて|たべて}.
  • Connect clauses: {朝ご飯を食べて|あさごはんをたべて}、学校へ行きます。
  • The final verb determines the tense of the entire sentence.
Verb(Te-form) + Verb(Final Tense)

Overview

Ever feel like a robot when speaking Japanese? You say one sentence. You stop.
You say another. You stop. It feels choppy, right?
Well, the te-form is your best friend for fixing that. It is the ultimate connector. Think of it as the grammar 'glue' that lets you string actions together into a smooth, flowing story.
Instead of saying 'I woke up. I drank coffee. I went to work,' you can say 'I woke up, drank coffee, and went to work.' It sounds more natural and less like a list of commands.
This form is the backbone of intermediate Japanese. Whether you are ordering a complicated Starbucks drink or explaining a three-step plan to your boss, you need this. It’s like moving from a flip phone to a smartphone—suddenly, everything connects.

How This Grammar Works

The te-form is basically a 'continuative' form. When you end a verb with te (or de), you are telling the listener, 'Wait! I’m not finished yet.
There is more coming!' It acts like a comma or the English word 'and.' The coolest part? You don't have to worry about the tense for every single verb. You just put all the middle verbs in the te-form and save the tense (past, present, or polite) for the very last verb in the chain.
It’s like a relay race where only the last runner crosses the finish line to show the final time.

Formation Pattern

1
To use this, you first need to know how to make the te-form. It depends on the verb group. Yes, even native speakers had to learn this once, so don't sweat it if it takes a few tries!
2
Group 1 (U-verbs): These change based on the last syllable.
3
u, tsu, ru become tte (e.g., kaukatte)
4
mu, bu, nu become nde (e.g., yomuyonde)
5
ku becomes ite (e.g., kakukaite)
6
gu becomes ide (e.g., oyoguoyoide)
7
su becomes shite (e.g., hanasuhanashite)
8
Exception: iku (to go) becomes itte.
9
Group 2 (Ru-verbs): These are easy. Just drop the ru and add te.
10
taberutabete
11
mirumite
12
Group 3 (Irregulars): Just memorize these two.
13
surushite
14
kurukite

When To Use It

You’ll use this in almost every conversation. One major use is Sequential Actions. This is for things that happen in order. For example, if you are giving directions: 'Turn left at the light, go straight, and it’s on the right.' Each of those first two steps will use the te-form.
Another use is Describing a State or Reason. Sometimes the first part explains *why* the second part happened. 'I was tired and went to bed early.' Here, the te-form links the feeling of being tired to the action of sleeping.
You can also use it to describe the Means of doing something. 'I used a credit card and bought the shoes.' It shows the process. In a job interview, you might use it to list your skills or history: 'I graduated from university, worked at a bank, and then moved to Tokyo.' It keeps your narrative clean and professional.

When Not To Use It

Don't treat the te-form like a never-ending buffet. If you string ten verbs together, you'll sound like a breathless toddler. Usually, two or three verbs in one go is the sweet spot.
Also, avoid using it when actions are NOT sequential. If you are just listing random things you do on Sundays (like reading, sleeping, and eating) without a specific order, use the ~tari ~tari form instead. The te-form implies a chronological flow.
If you do things simultaneously, like 'talking while eating,' you need ~nagara. Finally, be careful with contrasting ideas. You can't use te to say 'I like apples but I hate oranges.' For that, you need ga or kedo.
Think of te like a green light; it keeps the traffic moving in one direction.

Common Mistakes

The biggest mistake? Double-tensing. People often say tabemashita te... No! The te-form has no tense. It’s just tabete. Only the final verb gets the mashita or mashu.
Another trap is using the wrong 'and.' In English, 'and' connects nouns and verbs. In Japanese, te is only for verbs and adjectives. You can't use to (the noun 'and') to connect actions. If you say taberu to neru, you aren't saying 'eat and sleep,' you're saying 'Whenever I eat, I sleep.' Oops!
Lastly, check your subjects. Usually, the te-form implies the same person is doing everything. If the subject changes mid-sentence, it can get confusing. If you say 'Tanaka-san ate and I went home,' it's better to use two separate sentences or clearly mark the subjects with ga to avoid looking like you're claiming you both did the eating.

Contrast With Similar Patterns

You might have heard of ~te kara. While te just says 'this then that,' ~te kara emphasizes that the first action *must* finish before the second starts. It’s like saying 'After I finish X, then I will do Y.'

There is also soshite, which means 'and.' You use soshite to start a new sentence. The te-form is better because it avoids the 'stop-start' feeling of using soshite every five seconds. Think of te as a bridge and soshite as a new road.

Quick FAQ

Q

Can I use te for more than two verbs?

Absolutely! Just don't go overboard. Three is usually perfect.

Q

Does the last verb determine the politeness?

Yes. If the last verb is tabemashita, the whole sentence is polite. If it’s tabeta, the whole sentence is casual.

Q

Is it okay to use it with adjectives?

Yes! For i-adjectives, change i to kute. For na-adjectives, use de. 'It's cheap and delicious' becomes yasukute oishii.

Q

What if I want to say 'but'?

te won't work. Use ga or kedo for contrasts.

Te-form Conjugation Guide

Verb Type Ending Te-form Example
Group 1
-u/-tsu/-ru
-tte
{買う|かう} -> {買って|かって}
Group 1
-mu/-bu/-nu
-nde
{読む|よむ} -> {読んで|よんで}
Group 1
-ku
-ite
{書く|かく} -> {書いて|かいて}
Group 1
-gu
-ide
{泳ぐ|およぐ} -> {泳いで|およいで}
Group 1
-su
-shite
{話す|はなす} -> {話して|はなして}
Group 2
-ru
-te
{食べる|たべる} -> {食べて|たべて}
Irregular
する
して
{勉強する|べんきょうする} -> {勉強して|べんきょうして}
Irregular
来る
きて
{来る|くる} -> {来て|きて}

Meanings

The Te-form is used to link two or more actions or states, indicating a sequence of events or a list of attributes.

1

Sequential Action

Actions happening in chronological order.

“{家へ帰って|いえへかえって}、{ご飯を食べる|ごはんをたべる}。”

“{手を洗って|てをあらって}、{食事をする|しょくじをする}。”

2

Listing Attributes

Describing multiple qualities of a noun.

“{この店は安くて|このみせはやすくて}、{美味しい|おいしい}。”

“{彼は背が高くて|かれはせがたかくて}、{かっこいい|かっこいい}。”

Reference Table

Reference table for Te-form Conjunctions: Connecting Clauses Sequentially
Form Structure Example
Affirmative
Verb(Te) + Verb
{食べて|たべて}、寝る
Negative
Verb(Nai-kute) + Verb
{食べなくて|たべなくて}、寝る
Past
Verb(Te) + Verb(Past)
{食べて|たべて}、寝た
Polite
Verb(Te) + Verb(Masu)
{食べて|たべて}、寝ます
Adjective(i)
Adj(kute) + Adj
{暑くて|あつくて}、辛い
Adjective(na)
Adj(de) + Adj
{静かで|しずかで}、綺麗

औपचारिकता का स्तर

औपचारिक
{店に行って|みせにいって}、{牛乳を買います|ぎゅうにゅうをかいます}。

{店に行って|みせにいって}、{牛乳を買います|ぎゅうにゅうをかいます}。 (Shopping)

तटस्थ
{店に行って|みせにいって}、{牛乳を買う|ぎゅうにゅうをかう}。

{店に行って|みせにいって}、{牛乳を買う|ぎゅうにゅうをかう}。 (Shopping)

अनौपचारिक
{店に行って|みせにいって}、{牛乳買うよ|ぎゅうにゅうかうよ}。

{店に行って|みせにいって}、{牛乳買うよ|ぎゅうにゅうかうよ}。 (Shopping)

बोलचाल
{店行って|みせいって}、{牛乳買うわ|ぎゅうにゅうかうわ}。

{店行って|みせいって}、{牛乳買うわ|ぎゅうにゅうかうわ}。 (Shopping)

Te-form Flow

Te-form

Sequence

  • Action A First
  • Action B Second

स्तर के अनुसार उदाहरण

1

{食べて|たべて}、寝ます。

I eat and sleep.

2

{行って|いって}、来ます。

I'm going and coming back.

1

{本を読んで|ほんをよんで}、寝ました。

I read a book and went to sleep.

2

{駅へ行って|えきへいって}、電車に乗る。

I go to the station and take the train.

1

{資料をコピーして|しりょうをこぴーして}、会議室へ持っていきます。

I will copy the documents and take them to the meeting room.

2

{この町は静かで|このまちはしずかで}、住みやすいです。

This town is quiet and easy to live in.

1

{原因を調査して|げんいんをちょうさして}、対策を考えます。

I will investigate the cause and consider countermeasures.

2

{雨が降って|あめがふって}、試合が中止になった。

It rained and the match was cancelled.

1

{準備を整えて|じゅんびをととのえて}、万全の体制で臨む。

I will prepare thoroughly and approach it with a perfect system.

2

{議論を重ねて|ぎろんをかさねて}、合意に至った。

We repeated discussions and reached a consensus.

1

{事態を重く受け止めて|じたいをおもくうけとめて}、早急に対応を検討する。

Taking the situation seriously, we will urgently consider a response.

2

{幾多の困難を乗り越えて|いくたのこんなんをのりこえて}、成功を収めた。

Overcoming many difficulties, they achieved success.

आसानी से भ्रमित होने वाले

Te-form Conjunctions: Connecting Clauses Sequentially बनाम Tari-tari

Both link verbs.

सामान्य गलतियाँ

Tabeta-te

Tabete

Don't use past tense in the middle.

Iku-te

Itte

Incorrect conjugation for Group 1.

Taberu-te

Tabete

Don't keep the dictionary form.

Kirei-kute

Kirei-de

Na-adjectives use 'de', not 'kute'.

Chain of 5 verbs

Break into two sentences

Too many clauses sound unnatural.

वाक्य संरचनाएँ

___を___して、___します。

Real World Usage

Texting constant

{今から行って|いまからいって}、{会うね|あうね}。

💡

Group 2 is your friend

Group 2 verbs are the easiest to conjugate.

Smart Tips

Only tense the last verb.

Tabeta-te, neta. Tabete, neta.

उच्चारण

t-te

Small tsu

The 'tte' sound requires a sharp pause.

Flat

Verb(Te) -> Verb

Neutral continuation

याद करें

स्मृति सहायक

Think of 'Te' as a 'Tether' connecting two verbs together.

दृश्य संबंध

Imagine a train car (Verb 1) with a hook (Te) connecting to the next train car (Verb 2).

Rhyme

When you want to link a verb, drop the end and add a 'te'!

Story

Ken wakes up. He brushes his teeth. He eats breakfast. In Japanese: {起きて|おきて}、{歯を磨いて|はをみがいて}、{朝ご飯を食べる|あさごはんをたべる}。

Word Web

{食べて|たべて}{行って|いって}{見て|みて}{して|して}{飲んで|のんで}{書いて|かいて}

चैलेंज

Write 3 sentences about your morning routine using Te-form.

सांस्कृतिक नोट्स

Using Te-form correctly is crucial for polite requests.

Derived from the ancient 'te' particle used to connect clauses.

बातचीत की शुरुआत

What did you do today?

डायरी विषय

Describe your morning routine.

सामान्य गलतियाँ

Incorrect

सही


Incorrect

सही


Incorrect

सही


Incorrect

सही

Test Yourself

Select the correct Te-form. बहुविकल्पी

Eat = ?

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: Tabete
Group 2 rule.

Score: /1

अभ्यास प्रश्न

1 exercises
Select the correct Te-form. बहुविकल्पी

Eat = ?

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: Tabete
Group 2 rule.

Score: /1

अक्सर पूछे जाने वाले सवाल (1)

No, only for sequences or lists.

Scaffolded Practice

1

1

2

2

3

3

4

4

Mastery Progress

Needs Practice

Improving

Strong

Mastered

In Other Languages

Spanish moderate

Gerundio/Infinitivo

Japanese Te-form is a verb conjugation, not a separate word.

French partial

Participe présent

Te-form is strictly sequential.

German low

Konjunktionen

Morphological integration.

Arabic low

Wa (و)

Prefix vs Suffix.

Learning Path

Prerequisites

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