A1 · Principiante Capítulo 6

The Simple Sentence

3 Reglas totales
1 min

Chapter in 30 Seconds

Master the foundation of Malay by building clear, direct sentences using the SVO structure.

  • Construct simple sentences using Subject-Verb-Object order.
  • Remove the English 'to be' verbs for natural flow.
  • Identify the relationship between subjects and predicates.
Build your first Malay sentences with ease.

Lo que aprenderás

Understanding the Subject-Verb-Object (SVO) structure. Learn how to build basic statements without complex affixes.

Learning Objectives

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

  1. 1
    By the end you will be able to: Create five original sentences describing daily actions.

Consejos y trucos (3)

💡

Keep it simple

Don't overcomplicate your sentences. Stick to SVO.
frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: Basic SVO Structure
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Think Minimalist

If you want to say 'is', just don't. It's that simple.
frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: The Omission of 'To Be'
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Keep it simple

Don't overthink. If you know the subject and the action, you have a sentence.
frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: Subject-Predicate Relationship

Vocabulario clave (6)

Saya I Makan eat Nasi rice Gembira happy Dia he/she Minum drink

Real-World Preview

coffee

Ordering Lunch

Review Summary

  • Subject + Verb + Object
  • Subject + Adjective
  • Subject + Predicate

Errores comunes

Learners often translate 'I am eating' literally. In Malay, 'adalah' is not used here.

Wrong: Saya adalah makan nasi.
Correcto: Saya makan nasi.

Mixing up the SVO order. Always place the Subject first.

Wrong: Makan saya nasi.
Correcto: Saya makan nasi.

Using 'adalah' with adjectives is unnecessary and unnatural.

Wrong: Dia adalah gembira.
Correcto: Dia gembira.

Next Steps

You have done amazing work today. Keep practicing these structures and you will see your confidence grow!

Write 5 sentences about your family members.

Práctica rápida (10)

Choose the correct sentence.

Which is correct?

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: Saya makan.
Subject + Predicate.

frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: Subject-Predicate Relationship

Fill in the blank.

Dia ___ guru.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: bukan
Bukan for nouns.

frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: Subject-Predicate Relationship

Choose the negative form.

Negative of 'Saya makan nasi'?

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: Saya tidak makan nasi.
Tidak before verb.

frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: Basic SVO Structure

Fix the error.

Find and fix the mistake:

Dia adalah tidur.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: Dia tidur.
No 'adalah' with verbs.

frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: Subject-Predicate Relationship

Choose the correct sentence.

Which is correct?

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: Saya makan nasi.
SVO order.

frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: Basic SVO Structure

Fill in the blank.

Dia ___ buku.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: baca
Baca means read.

frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: Basic SVO Structure

Which is negative?

Negate: Saya makan.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: Saya tidak makan.
Tidak for verbs.

frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: Subject-Predicate Relationship

Fill in the blank.

Saya ___ nasi.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: makan
Makan is the verb for eat.

frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: Subject-Predicate Relationship

Choose the correct negative.

Dia ___ bijak.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: tidak
Bijak is an adjective.

frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: The Omission of 'To Be'

Fix the sentence.

Find and fix the mistake:

Saya adalah lapar.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: Saya lapar
No linking verb needed.

frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: The Omission of 'To Be'

Score: /10

Preguntas frecuentes (6)

No, Malay verbs never change.
Yes, for standard sentences.
Malay uses a topic-comment structure where the subject is the topic and the predicate is the comment. No verb is needed to link them.
Use it only for formal definitions or to emphasize a point. For example, 'Ini adalah buku' is formal.
No, Malay verbs are the same for everyone.
You don't! Just say 'Saya'.