JLPT N5 Grammar: 〜ている (te‑iru) — Progressive & Resultant State

JLPT N5 Grammar: 〜ている (te‑iru)

The progressive & resultant state form — “is doing” / “has been done”

JLPTジェイエルピーティー N5エヌゴ 文法ぶんぽう 〜ている 解説かいせつ (進行形しんこうけい結果けっか状態じょうたい)

⏱️ Study time: 6–8 minutes

〜ている (te‑iru) is the main way to express ongoing actions and resulting states in Japanese. It is formed by attaching いる to the te‑form of a verb. In polite speech it becomes 〜ています. This single form covers both “I am doing” (progressive) and “it is done / has been done” (resultant state), depending on the verb type.

🚀 JLPT N5 Warm-up Quiz

Q: How do you say “I am studying Japanese” in polite Japanese?

Answer: B (勉強しています). The te‑form of する + います → しています expresses an ongoing action. A is simple present (I study / I will study), C is past (I studied).

Quick Summary

Grammar Point
〜ている
Meaning
Ongoing action or resultant state
Pattern
Te‑form + いる (casual) / います (polite)
Example
いまほんんでいます。いまほんをよんでいます。Ima hon o yonde imasu.
I am reading a book now.

📝 Core Pattern with 〜ている

Affirmative polite: Te‑form + います
Affirmative casual: Te‑form + いる
Negative polite: Te‑form + いません
Past polite: Te‑form + いました
⚠️ In spoken Japanese, ている is often contracted to てる (e.g., 食べてる). This is casual, not tested at N5, but very common in daily life.
🧠 Need the te‑form first? See て形 (te‑form) →

💡 Toggle furigana, hiragana, or romaji for easier reading.

What is 〜ている?

〜ている attaches to the te‑form of a verb and adds the meaning of an ongoing action or a state that continues. In polite speech it's 〜ています. It is one of the most frequently used forms in everyday Japanese.

  • With action verbs: expresses an action in progress (progressive).
  • With change‑of‑state verbs: expresses a state that results from a change (resultant state).
  • Conjugates: ています (polite), ていない / ていません (negative), ていた / ていました (past).

⚡ How to Form 〜ている

VerbTe‑form+ いますMeaning
く (kaku)いていていますis writing
べる (taberu)べてべていますis eating
する (suru)してしていますis doing
る (kuru)て (kite)ています (kite imasu)is coming
⚠️ Fake ichidan warning: Verbs like かえる, はいる, る are Group 1, so their te‑forms are 帰って, 入って, 切って. Their ている forms are かえっています, はいっています, っています — not かえています etc.

⚡ Progressive Actions (Ongoing Events)

With action verbs (verbs that describe activities), 〜ている expresses an action that is happening right now — equivalent to the English present continuous.

いまあめっています。
It is raining now.
はは台所だいどころ料理りょうりをしています。
My mother is cooking in the kitchen.

⚡ Resultant States (Change‑of‑State Verbs)

With change‑of‑state verbs (verbs that describe a transition from one state to another), 〜ている expresses the state that continues after the change has happened. This is very different from English.

VerbMeaning〜ているActual Meaning
結婚けっこんするto get married結婚けっこんしているto be married (resultant state)
to come to knowっているto know (to be in the state of knowing)
to dieんでいるto be dead
to openいているto be open (the door is open)

💡 Key insight: っている means "I know" — it's the most important resultant state verb at N5. You never say 知る to mean "I know"; the past event "came to know" led to the state "know", so you always use 知っている.

⚡ Habitual Actions & Professional Status

〜ている can also describe a person's regular activity, especially their job or daily routine.

毎日まいにちジョギングをしています。
I jog every day. (habitual)
わたし学校がっこう英語えいごおしえています。
I teach English at a school. (profession / ongoing role)

⚡ Negative & Past Forms of 〜ている

FormPatternExample
Negative (polite)Te‑form + いませんなにべていません。
I am not eating anything.
Past (polite)Te‑form + いました昨日きのう午後ごご図書館としょかん勉強べんきょうしていました。
Yesterday afternoon I was studying at the library.
Negative past (polite)Te‑form + いませんでしたそのとき、まだていませんでした。
At that time I wasn't sleeping yet.

Common Mistakes (and Fixes)

る to mean "I know"
っている — the resultant state of having come to know
結婚けっこんする to mean "I am married"
結婚けっこんしている — the state after the wedding
く to mean "it is open" (current state)
いている (the door is open) / く (the door will open)
かえています (incorrect te‑form)
かえっています — 帰る is Group 1 (fake ichidan)

JLPT N5 Practice Questions

Score: 0 / 3

1. How do you say “I am reading a book” politely?

2. っている means:

3. What is the polite negative of 食べています (I am eating)?

🎯 JLPT N5 tip: The distinction between action verbs (progressive ている) and change‑of‑state verbs (resultant ている) is a favourite JLPT trick. If you see 結婚している or 知っている, know that it describes a current state, not an ongoing action.

Test yourself with a free mock exam →

About the Instructor

Taught by Anup Sensei at Gogaku Language & Training Center in Pokhara. With real Japan experience and a focus on exam essentials, he helps students pass the JLPT with confidence.

Related Grammar

Frequently Asked Questions

What's the difference between 〜ている and 〜てある?

〜ている describes a state that resulted from an action (often focusing on the subject or the process). 〜てある describes a state resulting from an intentional action performed by someone (e.g., まどけてある — the window has been left open). 〜てある is not heavily tested at N5.

Can I use 〜ている for future actions?

No. 〜ている is for present ongoing or resulting states. For future, use the dictionary form or ます form.

Is 知っている polite?

Yes — 知っています is the polite form. The casual form is 知っている. In very polite settings you might hear 存じています (zonjite imasu), but that's beyond N5.

Continue Learning

Next: てください — polite requests with the te‑form.

Learn てください →

→ Explore the JLPT N5 Grammar Hub

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