Grammar Rule in 30 Seconds
In Indonesian, the verb root is the base form used for commands and simple present actions without any prefixes or suffixes.
- Use the root for commands: 'Makan!' (Eat!)
- Use the root for simple present: 'Saya makan nasi' (I eat rice).
- The root never changes for person or number: 'Saya makan', 'Mereka makan'.
Verb Root Consistency
| Subject | Verb Root | Object | Translation |
|---|---|---|---|
|
Saya
|
makan
|
nasi
|
I eat rice
|
|
Kamu
|
makan
|
nasi
|
You eat rice
|
|
Dia
|
makan
|
nasi
|
He/she eats rice
|
|
Kami
|
makan
|
nasi
|
We eat rice
|
|
Kalian
|
makan
|
nasi
|
You all eat rice
|
|
Mereka
|
makan
|
nasi
|
They eat rice
|
Meanings
The verb root is the core, uninflected form of an action word in Indonesian. It represents the action in its simplest state before any affixes are added.
Imperative
Giving a direct command or request.
“Duduk!”
“Baca buku itu!”
Simple Present
Describing habitual actions or current states.
“Saya tidur siang.”
“Dia lari pagi.”
Future Intent
Often used with 'akan' or 'mau' to indicate future.
“Saya mau makan.”
“Dia akan pergi.”
Reference Table
| Form | Structure | Example |
|---|---|---|
|
Affirmative
|
Sub + Root + Obj
|
Saya baca buku
|
|
Negative
|
Sub + tidak + Root
|
Saya tidak baca
|
|
Question
|
Apakah + Sub + Root?
|
Apakah kamu baca?
|
|
Imperative
|
Root + !
|
Baca!
|
|
Future
|
Sub + akan + Root
|
Saya akan baca
|
|
Desire
|
Sub + mau + Root
|
Saya mau baca
|
طیف رسمیت
Makan (General)
Makan (General)
Makan (General)
Makan (General)
The Verb Root Universe
Action
- makan eat
State
- tidur sleep
Movement
- pergi go
مثالها بر اساس سطح
Saya makan nasi.
I eat rice.
Kamu tidur di sini.
You sleep here.
Dia baca buku.
He/she reads a book.
Mereka main bola.
They play ball.
Tolong tulis nama kamu.
Please write your name.
Saya mau beli tiket.
I want to buy a ticket.
Apakah kamu dengar saya?
Do you hear me?
Dia tidak mau pergi.
He/she does not want to go.
Kita perlu cari solusi.
We need to find a solution.
Jangan lupa kunci pintu.
Don't forget to lock the door.
Dia minta tolong kepada saya.
He asked me for help.
Saya akan coba lagi nanti.
I will try again later.
Pemerintah harus ambil tindakan tegas.
The government must take firm action.
Dia beri saran yang bagus.
He gave good advice.
Kita harus jaga kebersihan.
We must maintain cleanliness.
Dia buka rahasia itu.
He revealed that secret.
Keputusan ini akan ubah masa depan kita.
This decision will change our future.
Dia tunjuk arah yang benar.
He pointed in the right direction.
Kita harus ikat janji ini.
We must seal this promise.
Dia rasa ada yang aneh.
He felt something was strange.
Penulis itu tuang emosinya ke dalam puisi.
The author poured his emotions into the poem.
Dia tempuh jalan yang sulit.
He took a difficult path.
Kita harus pupuk rasa persaudaraan.
We must nurture a sense of brotherhood.
Dia rangkai kata dengan indah.
He arranged words beautifully.
بهراحتی اشتباه گرفته میشود
Learners think they must use prefixes.
Some words are both.
Some roots look like adjectives.
اشتباهات رایج
Saya eats nasi
Saya makan nasi
Dia tiduring
Dia tidur
Saya makaned
Saya makan
Mereka makans
Mereka makan
Saya tidak makaned
Saya tidak makan
Apakah kamu makans?
Apakah kamu makan?
Dia tidak tidurs
Dia tidak tidur
Saya sedang makan-ing
Saya sedang makan
Dia sudah makans
Dia sudah makan
Mereka akan makans
Mereka akan makan
Dia telah makankan
Dia telah makan
الگوهای جملهسازی
Saya ___ ___.
Apakah kamu ___ ___?
Saya tidak ___ ___.
Saya mau ___ ___.
Real World Usage
Saya mau makan nasi.
Datang ke sini!
Saya mau beli tiket.
Saya bisa kerja.
Lagi baca buku.
Saya pesan nasi.
Keep it simple
Avoid English habits
Learn the root
Be polite
Smart Tips
Use 'sudah' before the root.
Use 'akan' before the root.
Use 'tolong' before the root.
Use 'tidak' before the root.
تلفظ
Clear vowels
Indonesian vowels are always crisp.
Statement
Saya makan. ↘
Falling intonation for facts.
Question
Kamu makan? ↗
Rising intonation for yes/no questions.
حفظ کنید
روش یادسپاری
Think of the root as a 'seed'—it never changes, it just grows into different words when you add prefixes.
تداعی تصویری
Imagine a tree where the trunk is the verb root (e.g., 'makan'). No matter what bird (subject) lands on it, the trunk stays the same.
Rhyme
No change in the root, it stays the same, for every subject in the game.
Story
Budi is a simple man. He likes simple things. He says 'makan' for himself, 'makan' for his dog, and 'makan' for his friends. He never adds extra letters because he likes to keep life simple.
شبکه واژگان
چالش
Write 5 sentences using 5 different verb roots today.
نکات فرهنگی
Javanese has complex levels of politeness, but the base Indonesian root is used in standard communication.
Betawi often shortens words, but roots remain recognizable.
In formal settings, roots are often prefixed.
Indonesian roots are largely Austronesian in origin.
شروعکنندههای مکالمه
Apa yang kamu makan?
Kamu mau pergi ke mana?
Apakah kamu suka baca buku?
Apa yang kamu cari?
موضوعات نگارش
اشتباهات رایج
Test Yourself
Saya ___ nasi.
Which is correct?
Find and fix the mistake:
Saya makans.
Arrange the words in the correct order:
All words placed
Click words above to build the sentence
I sleep.
Answer starts with: Say...
Negative of 'Saya makan'?
Dia ___ buku.
Find and fix the mistake:
Mereka perginya.
Score: /8
تمرینهای عملی
8 exercisesSaya ___ nasi.
Which is correct?
Find and fix the mistake:
Saya makans.
nasi / makan / Saya
I sleep.
Negative of 'Saya makan'?
Dia ___ buku.
Find and fix the mistake:
Mereka perginya.
Score: /8
سوالات متداول (8)
No, Indonesian verbs are invariant.
It is the base form of the verb.
Use 'sudah' + root: 'Saya sudah makan'.
No, it is the same.
Yes, it is very common.
Prefixes add meaning, but the root is the core.
It is used in all registers.
It is incorrect.
Scaffolded Practice
1
2
3
4
Mastery Progress
Needs Practice
Improving
Strong
Mastered
In Other Languages
Conjugated verbs
No conjugation in Indonesian.
Conjugated verbs
No person-based endings.
Conjugated verbs
No agreement.
Masu-form
No politeness conjugation.
Root-based
Indonesian roots are invariant.
Uninflected
Both are very simple.