Volitional Form

Definition:

The Japanese volitional form (意志形 ishi-kei, also called the volitive or hortative form) is the verb conjugation expressing intention, invitation, or suggestion — equivalent to “let’s…” or “shall we…” for invitations, and “I shall/will…” for first-person intention. It has two registers:

  • Plain volitional:よう (-yō) for Group 2 (る-verbs) and irregular verbs; used in subordinate clauses, monologue/internal intention, and literary contexts
  • Polite volitional:ましょう (-mashō) for all verbs in polite register; used for invitations and suggestions in conversation

The volitional form is the base for important grammar patterns including -ようとする (try to/be about to) and -ようとしている (be in the act of trying).


Volitional Form Formation

Group 2 (ichidan / る-verbs): Replace る with よう

  • 食べる (taberu) → 食べよう (tabeyō) — let’s eat / I’ll eat

Group 1 (godan / う-verbs): Change the final u-row vowel to ō:

  • 行く (iku) → 行こ (ikō)
  • 書く (kaku) → 書こ (kakō)
  • 飲む (nomu) → 飲も (nomō)

Irregular:

  • する (suru) → しよう (shiyō)
  • 来る (kuru) → 来よう (koyō)

Polite form (all verb groups): Add ましょう to the masu-stem:

  • 食べます → 食べましょう (tabemashō)

Uses of the Volitional Form

1. Invitation/Suggestion (ましょう)

  • 食べましょう!(Tabemashō!) — Let’s eat!
  • 一緒に行きましょうか? (Issho ni ikimashō ka) — Shall we go together?

2. First-person intention / monologue (plain よう)

  • 明日は勉強しよう。 (Ashita wa benkyō shiyō) — I’ll study tomorrow [internal resolution]

3. -ようとする (try to, be about to)

  • 食べようとした。 (Tabeyō to shita) — tried to eat / was about to eat
  • 行こうとしている。 (Ikō to shite iru) — is trying to go / is about to go

4. -ようとしても… (even if one tries to…)

  • 忘れようとしても忘れられない。 — Even if I try to forget, I can’t

History

The volitional form is historically related to the classical Japanese mu (む) auxiliary expressing conjecture/will, which evolved differently in modern Japanese. The polite ましょう form developed as part of the grammaticalization of the masu-polite system.

Common Misconceptions

  • “ましょう always means let’s…” — It can also express the speaker’s strong offer or intention in certain contexts
  • “Volitional form is only for invitations” — The plain form よう is widely used for self-directed intention and in -ようとする patterns

Criticisms

  • The volitional form is often introduced late in curricula, leaving learners unable to express intention forms early
  • The -ようとする pattern is an important grammar point that often appears without explicit introduction to the volitional form base

Social Media Sentiment

The volitional form is a common intermediate grammar milestone — learners in Japanese study communities often share progress on mastering -ましょう invitations and then discover the broader uses of the plain volitional よう. Last updated: 2026-04

Practical Application

  • Introduce ましょう early for practical conversational use (invitations, suggestions)
  • Teach the plain volitional よう alongside -ようとする as a package
  • SakuboSakubo‘s authentic Japanese content includes natural uses of both ましょう and よう patterns in invitation and intention contexts

Related Terms

See Also

Research

  • Makino, S., & Tsutsui, M. (1986). A Dictionary of Basic Japanese Grammar. Japan Times. — Full treatment of volitional form including -ようとする patterns.
  • Shibatani, M. (1990). The Languages of Japan. Cambridge University Press. — Linguistic description of Japanese verb morphology.
  • Iwasaki, S. (2002). Japanese. John Benjamins. — Typological description of Japanese including modal and volitional constructions.