A2 · Grundkenntnisse Kapitel 25

Directing Actions: Object Infixes

3 Gesamtregeln
1 Min.

Chapter in 30 Seconds

Master the art of embedding people into your verbs for more fluid, natural Swahili conversation.

  • Insert -ni- to talk about yourself as an object.
  • Apply -ku- to target the person you are speaking to.
  • Utilize -m- to reference a specific person you are discussing.
Speak directly: embed your objects inside the verb.

Was du lernen wirst

Learn how to include the 'me', 'you', or 'it' inside the verb. Master the placement of object markers.

Learning Objectives

By the end of this chapter, you will be able to:

  1. 1
    By the end you will be able to: Use object infixes to construct sentences where actions are directed at specific people.

Tipps & Tricks (3)

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Positioning

Always count the syllables. Subject-Tense-Object-Root.
frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: The First Person Object Infix -ni-
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Check the count

Always check if you are talking to one person or many. -ku- is for one, -wa- is for many.
frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: The Second Person Object Infix -ku-
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Vowel Rule

Always check if the verb starts with a vowel. If it does, use -mw-.
frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: The Third Person Object Infix -m-

Wichtige Vokabeln (5)

ona to see penda to love/like saidia to help ita to call sikia to hear

Real-World Preview

handshake

Meeting a Friend

Review Summary

  • Subject Prefix + ni + Verb Root
  • Subject Prefix + ku + Verb Root
  • Subject Prefix + m + Verb Root

Häufige Fehler

You don't need to repeat the subject pronoun if the prefix is clear. Keep it simple!

Wrong: Ni-na-m-ona
Richtig: Namuona

The infix -ni- already implies 'me'. Adding 'mimi' is redundant.

Wrong: Ananisaidia mimi
Richtig: Ananisaidia

Similar to the first person, the infix already carries the object. The pronoun is unnecessary.

Wrong: Nakuita wewe
Richtig: Nakuita

Next Steps

You are mastering the internal mechanics of Swahili! Keep practicing these infixes until they feel like second nature.

Write 5 sentences describing people in your life using object infixes.

Schnelle Übung (9)

Choose the correct verb form.

I call him.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: Ninamwita
Use -mw- before vowel roots.

frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: The Third Person Object Infix -m-

Choose the correct sentence.

Which is correct?

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: Nakupenda
No redundant pronouns.

frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: The Second Person Object Infix -ku-

Fill in the blank.

Ananipenda (He loves me) -> Negative: Hani___

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: b
Negative verbs end in -i.

frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: The First Person Object Infix -ni-

Fill in the blank.

Ni___penda (I love you)

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: ku
-ku- is the object marker.

frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: The Second Person Object Infix -ku-

Correct the sentence.

Find and fix the mistake:

Nakupenda ninyi

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: Nawapenda
-wa- is for plural.

frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: The Second Person Object Infix -ku-

Fix the sentence.

Find and fix the mistake:

Ninamkula (apple).

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: Nakila
Don't use -m- for objects.

frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: The Third Person Object Infix -m-

Fill in the correct infix.

Nina___penda (him).

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: m
Use -m- for singular people.

frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: The Third Person Object Infix -m-

Choose the correct sentence.

Which is correct?

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: b
The infix is the correct way.

frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: The First Person Object Infix -ni-

Fix the error.

Find and fix the mistake:

Wananipenda mimi.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: a
Remove redundant mimi.

frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: The First Person Object Infix -ni-

Score: /9

Häufige Fragen (6)

No, it is redundant.
Between the tense marker and the verb root.
It means 'you' (singular) as a direct object.
It goes after the tense marker and before the verb root.
No, only for human beings (Class 1/2).
It's a phonetic bridge before vowel-starting roots.