2

I've been looking for an exhaustive list of them, but I can't seem to find one in English. So far I've got these:

  • いる/居る
  • 得る
  • 出る
  • 似る
  • 煮る
  • 寝る
  • 着る
  • 干る
  • 鋳る
  • 射る
  • 癒る
  • 経る/歴る
  • みる's variants, 見る/観る/視る/診る/看る

Are there any more out there?

user48723
  • 127
  • 8
  • 1
    Your list concords with https://www.akenotsuki.com/kyookotoba/shiryoo/bunrui/dooshi21.html, although it has one more — 率る. – jogloran Jan 01 '22 at 22:52
  • 1
    FYI: http://quattro.phys.sci.kobe-u.ac.jp/nishi/verb.html and https://detail.chiebukuro.yahoo.co.jp/qa/question_detail/q1449541019 – sundowner Jan 01 '22 at 22:53
  • Alright, found out about 沃る and 率る, thanks. How do we close the thread now? – user48723 Jan 02 '22 at 03:39
  • 2
    If you'd like, you can answer your own question with the complete list, then you can turn it into a Community answer. I didn't create a separate answer because your list is essentially already complete. – jogloran Jan 02 '22 at 04:44
  • Sorry, I don't have any verbs to contribute, but I do have a question. Why would someone want a list of two-mora ichidan verbs? Are they significant in some way, apart from just being a bit rare? – charlemagne Jan 02 '22 at 23:49
  • 1
    @charlemagne It's because all ichidan verbs that have three or more morae have to be written with -iru or -eru in their okurigana. This does not apply to two-mora ones, as the i/e is in the kanji. So any verb outside of these ones whose okurigana ends in just -ru is a godan one regardless of whether it phonetically ends in -iru/-eru. That's why I was looking for an exhaustive list. – user48723 Jan 03 '22 at 02:41

1 Answers1

2

Adding to this list, there are also 沃る and 率る. That would seem to be all of them.

Here are some Japanese pages listing two-mora verbs, shared by jogloran and sundowner: https://www.akenotsuki.com/kyookotoba/shiryoo/bunrui/dooshi21.html

http://quattro.phys.sci.kobe-u.ac.jp/nishi/verb.html

https://detail.chiebukuro.yahoo.co.jp/qa/question_detail/q1449541019

user48723
  • 127
  • 8