Daily Routine in Basque
Eguneroko Errutina
This article is part of the Basque grammar tree on Settemila Lingue.
Overview
Describing your daily routine is a classic A1 task that pulls together many skills: time expressions, common verbs, and the habitual aspect. In Basque, routine actions use the habitual verb form with the -ten/-tzen suffix, combined with the present tense auxiliary. This conveys actions you do regularly.
Key routine verbs include: jaiki (get up), gosaldu (have breakfast), lan egin (work), bazkaldu (have lunch), afaldu (have dinner), lo egin (sleep), dutxatu (shower), and jantzten (get dressed). Combined with time expressions like goizean (in the morning) and clock times, you can describe a full day.
This topic is excellent practice because it naturally requires the habitual aspect, time adverbs, and the locative case — all core A1 grammar points working together.
How It Works
Routine verbs:
| Basque | English | Type |
|---|---|---|
| jaiki | get up | intransitive (izan) |
| dutxatu | shower | intransitive (izan) |
| jantzi | get dressed | transitive (ukan) |
| gosaldu | have breakfast | transitive (ukan) |
| lan egin | work | transitive (ukan) |
| bazkaldu | have lunch | transitive (ukan) |
| afaldu | have dinner | transitive (ukan) |
| lo egin | sleep | transitive (ukan) |
| joan | go | intransitive (izan) |
| etorri | come/return | intransitive (izan) |
Time of day expressions:
| Basque | English |
|---|---|
| goizean | in the morning |
| eguerdian | at noon |
| arratsaldean | in the afternoon |
| gauean | at night |
| zazpietan | at seven |
Habitual pattern: verb root + -ten/-tzen + present auxiliary
Examples in Context
| Basque | English | Note |
|---|---|---|
| Zazpietan jaikitzen naiz. | I get up at seven. | Time + habitual |
| Goizean gosaltzen dut. | I have breakfast in the morning. | Time of day |
| Zortzietan lanera joaten naiz. | I go to work at eight. | Movement + time |
| Gauean hamabietan lo egiten dut. | I go to sleep at midnight. | Night routine |
| Dutxatu ondoren janzten naiz. | After showering, I get dressed. | Sequence |
| Eguerdian bazkaldu egiten dut. | I have lunch at noon. | Midday |
| Arratsaldean kirola egiten dut. | I do sport in the afternoon. | Activity |
| Bederatzietan etxera iristen naiz. | I arrive home at nine. | Return home |
| Telebista ikusten dut afaldu ondoren. | I watch TV after dinner. | Evening routine |
| Igandean ez dut lanik egiten. | On Sunday I don't work. | Weekend exception |
Common Mistakes
Using perfective aspect for routines
- Wrong: Zazpietan jaiki naiz. (for habitual)
- Right: Zazpietan jaikitzen naiz.
- Why: The perfective (jaiki naiz) means "I have gotten up" (one completed event). For routines, use the habitual: jaikitzen naiz (I get up regularly).
Forgetting the -etan suffix for clock times
- Wrong: Zazpi jaikitzen naiz.
- Right: Zazpietan jaikitzen naiz.
- Why: To say "at" a specific time, the hour needs the inessive suffix -etan: zazpietan (at seven), zortzietan (at eight).
Mixing up intransitive and transitive routine verbs
- Wrong: Nik jaikitzen dut. (using transitive auxiliary)
- Right: Ni jaikitzen naiz. (using intransitive auxiliary)
- Why: Jaiki (get up) is intransitive — you get yourself up. It uses izan (naiz). Gosaldu (have breakfast) is transitive — you eat something — it uses ukan (dut).
Practice Tips
- Write out your complete daily routine in Basque, from waking up to going to bed. Use time expressions and the habitual aspect for every action.
- Practice asking and answering: Zer ordutan jaikitzen zara? (What time do you get up?) — Zazpietan jaikitzen naiz. Do this for every routine activity.
Related Concepts
Prerequisite
Time and Dates in BasqueA1More A1 concepts
This concept in other languages
Compare across all languages
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