Grammar Rule in 30 Seconds
Swahili verbs are built like LEGOs: you stack prefixes and suffixes onto a root to create a complete sentence.
- Subject prefix always comes first: 'Ni-nasoma' (I am reading).
- Tense marker follows the subject: 'Ni-na-soma' (I am reading).
- Verb root is the core: 'Ni-na-som-a' (I am reading).
Basic Verb Conjugation (Present Tense)
| Person | Subject Prefix | Tense | Verb Root | Full Word |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
I
|
Ni
|
na
|
soma
|
Ninasoma
|
|
You
|
U
|
na
|
soma
|
Unasoma
|
|
He/She
|
A
|
na
|
soma
|
Anasoma
|
|
We
|
Tu
|
na
|
soma
|
Tunasoma
|
|
You (pl)
|
M
|
na
|
soma
|
Mnasoma
|
|
They
|
Wa
|
na
|
soma
|
Wanasoma
|
Meanings
Agglutination is the process where words are formed by stringing together morphemes, each representing a specific grammatical category.
Verb Conjugation
Combining subject, tense, and object markers into one word.
“Ninakula (I am eating)”
“Anasoma (He/she is reading)”
Reference Table
| Form | Structure | Example |
|---|---|---|
|
Affirmative
|
Subj+Tense+Root
|
Ninasoma
|
|
Negative
|
Ha+Subj+Root
|
Hasomi
|
|
Question
|
Subj+Tense+Root?
|
Unasoma?
|
|
Past
|
Subj+li+Root
|
Nilisoma
|
|
Future
|
Subj+ta+Root
|
Nitasoma
|
|
Perfect
|
Subj+me+Root
|
Nimesoma
|
격식 수준 스펙트럼
Ninakula chakula. (Dining)
Ninakula. (Dining)
Nakula. (Dining)
Nakula mimi. (Dining)
Verb Building Blocks
Subject
- Ni I
Tense
- na present
Root
- soma read
수준별 예문
Ninasoma.
I am reading.
Unakula.
You are eating.
Anacheza.
He/she is playing.
Tunaimba.
We are singing.
Nilipenda chakula.
I liked the food.
Wataenda kesho.
They will go tomorrow.
Hapendi kahawa.
He/she doesn't like coffee.
Mnasoma nini?
What are you (plural) reading?
Ananipenda sana.
He/she loves me a lot.
Tulikuwa tukisoma.
We were reading.
Hamjafika bado?
Haven't you arrived yet?
Nitakutafuta baadaye.
I will look for you later.
Walikuwa wamekwishaondoka.
They had already left.
Tusingeweza kufika mapema.
We wouldn't have been able to arrive early.
Anapenda kusomewa hadithi.
He likes being read stories to.
Wamejifunza mengi leo.
They have learned a lot today.
Angekuwa anasoma, angefaulu.
If he had been studying, he would have passed.
Wamekuwa wakijaribu kuelewana.
They have been trying to understand each other.
Inasemekana kuwa mvua itanyesha.
It is said that it will rain.
Tumejengewa nyumba mpya.
We have had a new house built for us.
Angalikuwa ameshasoma, asingekuwa na shaka.
Had he already read it, he would have no doubt.
Wamekuwa wakijitahidi sana.
They have been striving very hard.
Inapendeza kuona jinsi wanavyoshirikiana.
It is pleasing to see how they cooperate.
Tumehimizwa kufanya kazi kwa bidii.
We have been encouraged to work hard.
혼동하기 쉬운
Learners mix up -na- (present) and -li- (past).
Mixing up 'A-' (he/she) and 'Wa-' (they).
Putting the object marker in the wrong slot.
자주 하는 실수
Nasoma
Ninasoma
Ni-soma-na
Ninasoma
Ninasome
Ninasoma
Mimi ninasoma
Ninasoma
Ninalasoma
Nilisoma
Anasomae
Anasoma
Tunakulaa
Tunakula
Ananipenda mimi
Ananipenda
Wamekwisha kwenda
Wamekwishaenda
Tutaenda kesho
Tutaenda kesho
Anayesoma anafahamu
Anayesoma anafahamu
Wamejengewa nyumba
Wamejengewa nyumba
Angalikuwa amesoma
Angalikuwa amesoma
문장 패턴
Ni___soma.
___nasoma.
Anani___penda.
___li___soma.
Real World Usage
Unakula?
Nataka ugali.
Ninasoma sana.
Nitaenda wapi?
Anacheza vizuri!
Tunasoma kitabu.
Focus on the root
Watch the vowels
Use flashcards
Listen to music
Smart Tips
Identify the subject prefix first.
Swap the middle marker.
Break the word into pieces.
Check for redundant pronouns.
발음
Stress
Stress is always on the penultimate (second to last) syllable.
Question
Unasoma? ↗
Rising pitch at the end indicates a question.
암기하기
기억법
Remember 'S-T-R-E': Subject, Tense, Root, Ending.
시각적 연상
Imagine a train. The engine is the subject, the middle carriage is the tense, and the last carriage is the verb action.
Rhyme
Subject, Tense, and Root in line, makes the Swahili verb shine.
Story
Juma is a train conductor. He attaches the 'Ni' engine to the 'na' carriage, then hooks on the 'soma' cargo. Together, they roll down the track as 'Ninasoma'.
Word Web
챌린지
Conjugate 5 verbs in the present tense in 5 minutes.
문화 노트
Swahili is the national language; agglutination is used precisely in formal settings.
Sheng (slang) often drops prefixes.
Congolese Swahili uses slightly different prefixes.
Swahili is a Bantu language; agglutination is a defining feature of the entire family.
대화 시작하기
Unasoma nini?
Ulikula nini jana?
Utaenda wapi kesho?
Unapenda kufanya nini?
일기 주제
자주 하는 실수
Test Yourself
___nasoma (I am reading).
Nili___soma (I read).
Find and fix the mistake:
Nasoma (should be I am reading).
Ni + na + soma
Tunasoma (I am reading) -> ?
Match each item on the left with its pair on the right:
Anasoma -> ?
Swahili is agglutinative.
Score: /8
연습 문제
8 exercises___nasoma (I am reading).
Nili___soma (I read).
Find and fix the mistake:
Nasoma (should be I am reading).
Ni + na + soma
Tunasoma (I am reading) -> ?
Ni = ?
Anasoma -> ?
Swahili is agglutinative.
Score: /8
자주 묻는 질문 (8)
Because they pack multiple meanings into one word.
Yes, they are the building blocks.
No, that would be grammatically incorrect.
Forgetting the subject prefix.
English uses separate words, Swahili uses prefixes.
Yes, it is the standard way to speak.
Some verbs have irregular roots.
Use flashcards for prefixes.
Scaffolded Practice
1
2
3
4
Mastery Progress
Needs Practice
Improving
Strong
Mastered
In Other Languages
Verb conjugation
Swahili uses prefixes, Japanese uses suffixes.
Verb agglutination
Turkish is almost entirely suffix-based.
Inflection
Swahili separates these into distinct slots.
Analytic
Swahili is synthetic, English is analytic.
Root-and-pattern
Swahili keeps the root intact.
Isolating
Swahili is highly inflected.
Learning Path
Prerequisites
Related Grammar Rules
Verb Stems and Roots
Vowel Harmony in Extensions
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