Guide to Japanese

Expressing a lack of change

Up until now, we’ve mostly been talking about things that have happened or changed in the course of events. We will now learn some simple grammar to express a lack of change.

Using まま to express a lack of change

Vocabulary

この
this (abbr. of これの)
宜しい(よろ・しい) i-adj
good (formal)
半分(はん・ぶん)
half
食べる(た・べる) ru-verb
to eat
捨てる(す・てる) ru-verb
to throw away
駄目(だめ)
no good
いる ru-verb
to exist (animate)
今日(きょう)
today
悲しい(かな・しい) i-adj
sad
その
that (abbr. of それの)
格好(かっ・こう)
appearance
クラブ(ku ra bu)
club; nightclub
入る(はい・る) u-verb
to enter

まま, not to be confused with the childish expression for “mother” (ママ), is a grammatical phrase to express a lack of change in something. Grammatically, it is used just like a regular noun. You’ll most likely hear this grammar at a convenience store when you buy a very small item. Since store clerks use super polite expressions and at lightning fast speeds, learning this one expression will help you out a bit in advance. (Of course, upon showing a lack of comprehension, the person usually repeats the exact same phrase… at the exact same speed.)

Examples

  • このままで宜しいですか?
    Is it ok just like this?

In other words, the clerk wants to know if you’ll take it just like that or whether you want it in a small bag. 宜しい, in case I haven’t gone over it yet, is simply a very polite version of いい. Notice that まま grammatically works just like a regular noun which means, as usual, that you can modify it with verb phrases or adjectives.

  • 半分しか食べてないままで捨てちゃダメ!
    You can’t throw it out leaving it in that half-eaten condition!

Ok, the translation is very loose, but the idea is that it’s in an unchanged state of being half-eaten and you can’t just throw that out.

Here’s a good example I found googling around.

Tip

The いさせる is the causative form of いる meaning “let/make me exist”.

  • 今日だけは悲しいままでいさせてほしい。
    For only today, I want you to let me stay in this sad condition.

Finally, just in case, here’s an example of direct noun modification.

  • その格好のままでクラブに入れないよ。
    You can’t get in the club in that getup (without changing it).

Using っぱなし to leave something the way it is

Vocabulary

放す(はな・す) u-verb
to release; to set loose
くれる ru-verb
to give
ほったらかす u-verb
to neglect
テレビ(te re bi)
TV, television
開ける(あ・ける) ru-verb
to open
書く(か・く) u-verb
to write
つける ru-verb
to attach; to turn on
する exception
to do
眠れる(ねむ・れる) ru-verb
to fall asleep
(ひと)
person
結構(けっ・こう)
fairly, reasonably
いる ru-verb
to exist (animate)
(まど)
window
()
mosquito
いっぱい
full
入る(はい・る) u-verb
to enter
しまう u-verb
to do something by accident; to finish completely

The verb 放す meaning “to set loose”, can be used in various ways in regards to leaving something the way it is. For instance, a variation 放っとく is used when you want to say “Leave me alone”. For instance, you might use the command form of a request (くれる) and say, ほっといてくれ!(Leave me alone!). Yet another variant ほったらかす means “to neglect”.

The grammar I would like to discuss here is the っぱなし suffix variant. You can attach this suffix to the stem of any verb to describe the act of doing something and leaving it that way without changing it. You can treat the combination like a regular noun.

Here’s a link with more examples of this grammar. As you can see by the examples, this suffix carries a nuance that the thing left alone is due to oversight or neglect. Here are the (simple) conjugation rules for this grammar.

Using っぱなし to complete an action and leave it that way

Take the stem of the verb and attach っぱなし.

Examples:

  1. 開け → 開けっぱなし
  2. → 書 → 書きっぱなし

Examples

  1. テレビをつけっぱなしにしなければ眠れない人は、結構いる。
    There exists a fair number of people who cannot sleep unless they turn on the TV and leave it that way.

  2. 窓が開けっ放しだったので、蚊がいっぱい入ってしまった。
    The window was left wide open so a lot of mosquitoes got in.