Quote:
Originally Posted by Harumaki
it is mostly like this:
verbs with a stem ending with the i (ki, ri, shi, mi, ni,...) will often be verbs that can easily be put in the potential form.
example:
行きますー行けます ー 行くことができます
話しますー話せますー話すことができます
読みますー読めますー読むことができます
tho verbs ending with an e sound will have another conjugation: ~られます
食べますー食べられますー食べることができます
tho some verbs just dont sound right if you put them into the potential form, like なります.
For example in the sentence you used:
if I read books, I will become smart. well, in this sentence you implement that if you read a book, you definitely will become smart, therefore you cant use a potential form in Japanese.
Though your idea was understandable, but it is just one of the many exceptions in Japanese
Hope I helped a bit
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Thank you Harumaki,Sashimister ( I apologize if it looks like I said you're wrong)
and Chryuop.
now, Ichidan verbs are たべます so it becomes られる so 見るー見られる
and just a note, I'm not ungrateful, I'm curious XD