✨ Basic Meaning
🎯 Primary Function
📋 Grammar Structure
🎭 Usage Contexts
Used regularly in both formal and professional contexts when reporting a third party’s disposition or request, often in the polite ます form.
Extremely common in daily conversation when discussing friends, family, or people not present.
Appears in narratives, reports, and essays to attribute emotions or desires to subjects (characters, people, animals).
Highly frequent, especially in the progressive form (~がっている) to describe an ongoing state.
💡 Common Applications
📌 Important Points
⚠️ Common Mistakes
🏛️ Cultural Context
🔍 Subtle Differences
📝 Conjugation Notes
Once the suffix がる is attached, the resulting word becomes a regular Ichidan verb (る-verb). Therefore, it conjugates into the various verb forms: がる (dictionary), がらない (negative), がった (past), がって (te-form), がります (polite).
🔊 Pronunciation Tips
The ‘ga’ sound in がる is usually pronounced with a soft, nasalized ‘g’ sound in Tokyo/Kanto dialect, similar to the ‘ng’ in ‘singing’, but for learners, a hard ‘g’ is perfectly acceptable. Stress falls on the syllable preceding がる (e.g., ko-WAgatte).
🧠 Memory Tips
Think of がる (garu) as ‘gazing’ at someone and reporting what you see. It transforms an internal state (adjective) into an observable action (verb).
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