B1 · Intermediário Capítulo 35

The Person Who: Relatives

2 Regras totais
1 min

Chapter in 30 Seconds

Unlock the ability to describe people and objects using dynamic relative clauses.

  • Identify the -o- relative infix in verbs.
  • Match relative markers to different Swahili noun classes.
  • Construct sentences defining people by their actions.
Connect your thoughts with the power of -o-.

O que você vai aprender

Introduction to the relative marker -o-. Learn how to create clauses like 'the person who is eating'.

Learning Objectives

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

  1. 1
    By the end you will be able to: correctly use the -o- relative infix to describe a person performing an action.

Dicas e truques (2)

💡

Focus on Noun Classes

Mastering noun classes is the key to getting the relative infix right every time.
frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: The Relative Infix -o-
💡

Focus on the Class

Always identify the noun class first. It dictates the entire agreement.
frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: Relative Agreement with Noun Classes

Vocabulário-chave (5)

mtu person kula to eat soma to read rafiki friend fanya to do

Real-World Preview

users

Meeting a friend

Review Summary

  • Subject Prefix + -a- + -o- + Verb Root

Erros comuns

You cannot use the simple present without the relative marker. You must include the -o- infix.

Wrong: Mtu anayekula
Correto: Mtu anayekula (Wait, this is correct. Wrong example: Mtu akula)

Ensure the prefix matches the noun class (M-WA uses 'a-' prefix).

Wrong: Mtu anayesoma
Correto: Mtu anayesoma

You must match the noun class of the subject (Kitabu is KI-VI class).

Wrong: Kitabu anayesoma
Correto: Kitabu kinachosoma

Next Steps

You have done amazing work today! Keep observing how these markers appear in everyday Swahili speech.

Describe 5 items in your room using relative clauses.

Prática rápida (6)

Correct the sentence.

Find and fix the mistake:

Kitabu anayesoma ni kizuri.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: Kitabu anachosoma
Class 7 requires -cho-.

frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: The Relative Infix -o-

Fill in the correct relative infix.

Mtoto ___kula anataka maziwa.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: anayekula
The infix -ye- matches the M/WA class.

frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: Relative Agreement with Noun Classes

Select the correct form.

Watu ___ (wanaokula) wamefurahi.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: wanaokula
Class 2 plural agreement.

frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: The Relative Infix -o-

Choose the correct sentence.

Which is correct?

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: Kitabu ninachokisoma
Correct agreement for KI/VI class.

frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: Relative Agreement with Noun Classes

Fix the error.

Find and fix the mistake:

Mtu anayokula ni rafiki yangu.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: Mtu anayekula
Incorrect infix -yo- used for M/WA class.

frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: Relative Agreement with Noun Classes

Fill in the correct relative infix.

Mtu ___ (anayekuja) anafurahi.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: anayekuja
Correct relative infix for Class 1.

frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: The Relative Infix -o-

Score: /6

Perguntas comuns (4)

It's a marker inserted into verbs to create relative clauses.
It depends on the noun class of the subject.
The infix is more natural and concise, while 'amba-' is more analytical and formal.
Yes, the -o- is the mandatory relative link in the infix construction.