📚 Swahili Verbs 101: The “Lego Block” Method to Building Sentences

Learning through Ingredients

In Swahili, verbs are built like Lego blocks. To make a simple sentence, you simply snap three parts together: the Person(Subject), the Time (Tense), and the Action (Verb Root).


1. The Subject Prefixes (Who is doing it?)

  • Ni- : I
  • U- : You (1 person)
  • A- : He / She
  • Tu- : We
  • M- : You (plural)
  • Wa- : They

2. The Tense Markers (When is it happening?)

MarkerTenseMeaning
-na-PresentHappening right now
-li-PastHappened in the past
-ta-FutureWill happen later
-me-Present PerfectHas already happened / Status is complete
hu-HabitualUsually / A habit

3. Sentence Construction Examples

Using the Ni- (I) prefix and the root -tembea (walk):

  • Ninatembea.
    • Ni (I) + na (now) + tembea (walk)
    • English: I am walking.
  • Nilitembea.
    • Ni (I) + li (past) + tembea (walk)
    • English: I walked.
  • Nitatembea.
    • Ni (I) + ta (future) + tembea (walk)
    • English: I will walk.
  • Nimetembea.
    • Ni (I) + me (perfect) + tembea (walk)
    • English: I have walked.
  • Mimi hutembea.
    • Mimi (I) + hu (habitual) + tembea (walk)
    • English: I usually walk.

🎯 The “Ingredient Swap” Challenge

Using the verb root -kimbia (to run), can you build these sentences?

  1. I am running: [Ni] + [na] + [kimbia] = __________
  2. We will run: [Tu] + [ta] + [kimbia] = __________
  3. They have run: [Wa] + [me] + [kimbia] = __________
  4. He usually runs: [Yeye] + [Hu] + [kimbia] = __________

Ready to stop translating and start speaking?

Learning a language shouldn’t feel like a math problem. If you liked the “ingredient” approach in this lesson, you’ll love how we’ve built letslearnswahili. I designed the app to give you the tools to build your own sentences from day one—no more “uncles drinking coffee,” just real-life Swahili.

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