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I can't fathom why the verb kiru is in the masu form without the masu attached in this sentence:

おじいさん が 山{やま} へ 木{き} を きり に いけば

What is the purpose?

coinmaster
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    Closely related: https://japanese.stackexchange.com/q/56428/7810, https://japanese.stackexchange.com/q/54211/7810, https://japanese.stackexchange.com/q/12628/7810 – broccoli facemask Dec 18 '19 at 02:21
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    Does this answer your question? [Usage of に after verbs](https://japanese.stackexchange.com/questions/54211/usage-of-%e3%81%ab-after-verbs) – macraf Dec 18 '19 at 18:20

1 Answers1

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You may make sense of this grammar pattern if you know the masu-stem of a verb can act as a noun. As you probably know, に is a particle that usually takes a noun representing a destination, a goal, a resulting status, etc. It roughly corresponds to the English prepositions to, for or into.

So you can use ~に行く with simple nouns and suru-verbs:

  • 買い物に行く to go for shopping
  • 面接に来る to come to take a job interview

Likewise, when you use ~に行く with a verb representing a purpose, a form that has a noun-like quality is expected, and this is where the masu-stem comes into play:

  • 映画を見に行く
  • 遊びに出かける

That being said, I think this masu-stem + motion verb construction should be learned by rote. So-called "masu-stem" has various usages, and it may not be always possible to explain it logically. After all, "masu-stem" (or 連用形) was named after its most important function, but its usage is not limited to what the name suggests. See this for details.

naruto
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