たがる

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Japanese

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Etymology

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From (ta-), the stem of the desiderative suffix たい (tai, classical たし), and the suffix がる (-garu).

Pronunciation

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  • In Tokyo speech, the accent of the verb construction falls on the ga mora in the suffix, regardless of the accent type of the suffixed verb.[1] Example: くりたが [tsùkúrítáɡáꜜrù] (Nakadaka)

Suffix

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たがる (-tagarugodan (stem たがり (-tagari), past たがった (-tagatta))

  1. seem to want to

Usage notes

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Attaches to the 連用形 (ren'yōkei, continuative or stem form) of verbs. See たい (-tai) and がる (-garu).

Outside of questions, the suffix たい (-tai) is used exclusively to talk about the speaker's own wants. When describing the wants of someone else, the suffix たがる (-tagaru) is used instead.

This word is morphologically an inflectional suffix. It is classified as 助動詞 (jodōshi, auxiliary verb) in traditional Japanese grammar.

Conjugation

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References

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