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Forums - About ている

Top > 日本語を勉強しましょう / Let's study Japanese! > Anything About Japanese



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I was just revising ている again and was stuck on one its 3 uses that is :

18500b68e719713c9e874cc8.pngfed46d82c7dadf2cf7369d49.pngd8ef00b473758a7e0c32f619.pngab18f6117a057718d359953a.png

& what does this mean? ;(

4ea89b00013f6eaede36d6ac.png45974f31ace9f5a88ea46c2a.png
1
5 days ago
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So, in Japanese, there are many verbs that describe instantaneous changes of state. The ている form is used for something to show that the change of state has happened and it continues to be in that state.

Examples are く and まる. In English, you may say that a door is half-open, and it takes some time to be fully open, so the change isn't instantaneous. But in Japanese, a door is either closed or open, and the change from being closed to open happened in a single point in time. The past tense いた describes the instant something goes from being closed into the state of being open. After that, the door continues to be open, you use いている to describe that state.

ドアがまっている。 = The door is (currently) closed.
ドアがいた。 = The door went from being closed to being open.
ドアがいている。 = The change of state has happened, and now the door is currently open.

The last two screenshots in your post illustrate the timeline of events regarding the states described by the verb. Events that only happen for a moment is only written once, while events that span over a period of time is written multiple times.

  1. First, a person is currently in the state of sleeping. This state spans over an interval of time, so you use ています and number 1 is written multiple times.
  2. Then, the person went through a moment where he changes from "sleeping" into "awake". This is an instantaneous change, so we say きました, and number 2 is only written once.
  3. Now that the person is awake, he continues to be awake for the rest of his day. This is how you say you're currently awake. So we say きています. The number 3 is written multiple times.
  4. At night, he goes to sleep. Again, this change of state into "sleeping" happens instantaneously, so we say ました.
  5. Finally, he continues to be in the state of "sleeping" for the rest of the night. Therefore we say ています.

I hope this makes it clear. Feel free for anyone to add to the explanation or give a correction. kao_yoroshiku.png

Edit: I recommend reading this Tofugu article: https://www.tofugu.com/japanes...

6
5 days ago
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あおいあい
Level: 6

Teiru is the romanji of it right?

Now only learning hiragana and katana. So, I was trying to read it.

1
5 days ago
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Thank you so muchhh! kao_heart.png So, the ている is also used to describe that the action is still in that form, like you said the door is open, I am married? And getting married is instantaneous because you became single to married in a moment?

1
4 days ago
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Teiru is the romanji of it right?

Now only learning hiragana and katana. So, I was trying to read it.

YES!✅

1
4 days ago
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Thank you so muchhh! kao_heart.png So, the ている is also used to describe that the action is still in that form, like you said the door is open, I am married? And getting married is instantaneous because you became single to married in a moment?

Yep, you got it right!

2
4 days ago
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Again ありがとうございます!kao_heart.png

1
4 days ago
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