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Can we say, that だ and です are godan verbs with ru-ending, because they are just simplyfied versions of である and であります?

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According to goo 辞書 dictionary.goo.ne.jp, だ and です are simply 助動詞 or じょどうし。 (helping or auxiliary verb)

I like goo 辞書 for the monolingual definitions.

ある is 動ラ五 meaning 動詞 (どうし)、ラ行 (ぎょう)、五段 (ごだん)。

To me, だ and です are not very verb-like.

It might not be useful to classify them.

I hope this helps!

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  • I understand that [da]/[desu] are auxiliary verbs, but they must come from something. They can not appear just from nowhere. For example, I have feeling, but I can not prove yet, that だろう [darou] and でしょう [deshyou] are just conjunction of [da]/[desu]. Maybe they all come from だる [daru] as ru-godan? In Jisho.org there is no だる [daru], but may be somewhen in the past だる [daru] was using instead of modern [da]/[desu]?
    – Tchibi-kun
    Jun 28, 2019 at 17:48
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    @Tchibi-kun “Come from” and “are” are two very different things…
    – user1478
    Jun 28, 2019 at 19:19
  • This question exists, also
    – user22536
    Jun 28, 2019 at 19:32
  • Till now I've found in Jisho.org, that there is archaic verb たり or だり, which are not used anymore in thier [it is X] purpose. But that makes だ not ru-godan, but ri-godan. I guess it is insane idea, cause there are no ri-godans at all. But that would be funny. [I was a kid] instead of contemporary [子供だった] it would turn to [子供だらった].
    – Tchibi-kun
    Jun 28, 2019 at 19:57
  • @requiredandshown I've read the article you've given. They say interesting idea, that [da] and [na] are the same rooted and both come from [nite-ari] or [te-ari]. Anyway, that makes them definettly not to be ichidans.
    – Tchibi-kun
    Jun 28, 2019 at 20:00

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