Remaining Noun Classes (5/6, 11/10, 15, 16-18) in Swahili
Ngeli Zilizobaki
Overview
At the CEFR B1 level, completing your knowledge of the noun class system by learning the remaining classes is an important milestone. These classes — Ji-/Ma- (5/6), U- (11/10), Ku- (15), and the locative classes Pa-/Ku-/Mu- (16-18) — cover fruits, augmentatives, abstract concepts, infinitives, and location expressions.
While A1 covered the most frequent classes (1/2, 3/4, 7/8, 9/10), these remaining classes appear constantly in natural Swahili. Class 5/6 (Ji-/Ma-) includes many food items, body parts, and augmentatives. Class 11 (U-) covers thin/long objects and abstract nouns. Class 15 (Ku-) turns verbs into nouns (infinitives). Classes 16-18 are the locative classes essential for expressing location.
Mastering all classes completes the framework needed for full noun class agreement in any context.
How It Works
Class 5/6: Ji-/Ma- (Fruits, Collections, Augmentatives)
| Singular (5) | Plural (6) | English |
|---|---|---|
| tunda | matunda | fruit(s) |
| jicho | macho | eye(s) |
| gari | magari | car(s) |
| jina | majina | name(s) |
| ziwa | maziwa | lake(s) / milk |
| embe | maembe | mango(s) |
Agreement: Subject prefix li-/ya-; Possessive la/ya; Demonstrative hili/haya
Class 11/10: U- (Thin/Long Objects, Abstract)
| Singular (11) | Plural (10) | English |
|---|---|---|
| ukuta | kuta | wall(s) |
| uso | nyuso | face(s) |
| ubao | mbao | plank(s) |
| uzuri | — | beauty (abstract, no plural) |
| uhuru | — | freedom |
| utoto | — | childhood |
Agreement: Subject prefix u-/zi-; Possessive wa/za
Class 15: Ku- (Infinitives/Verbal Nouns)
| Form | Meaning |
|---|---|
| kusoma | reading/to read |
| kufanya | doing/to do |
| kulala | sleeping/to sleep |
Agreement: Subject prefix ku-; Possessive kwa; Example: Kusoma ni kuzuri. (Reading is good.)
Classes 16-18: Locative
| Class | Prefix | Meaning | Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| 16 (pa-) | pa- | specific place | Mahali hapa ni pazuri. (This place is nice.) |
| 17 (ku-) | ku- | general area | Huko ni kuzuri. (There is nice.) |
| 18 (mu-/m-) | m- | inside | Ndani ni muzuri. (Inside is nice.) |
Examples in Context
| Swahili | English | Note |
|---|---|---|
| Tunda hili ni kubwa. | This fruit is big. | Class 5: hili |
| Matunda haya ni mazuri. | These fruits are good. | Class 6: haya, mazuri |
| Ukuta huu ni mrefu. | This wall is tall. | Class 11: huu |
| Kusoma ni kuzuri. | Reading is good. | Class 15: ku- agreement |
| Mahali hapa ni pazuri. | This place is nice. | Class 16 |
| Gari jipya limefika. | A new car has arrived. | Class 5: jipya, li- |
| Majina yao ni mazuri. | Their names are nice. | Class 6: yao, mazuri |
| Ubao umevunjika. | The plank is broken. | Class 11: u- prefix |
| Uzuri wa nchi hii. | The beauty of this country. | Abstract class 11 |
| Ndani mna watu wengi. | Inside there are many people. | Class 18 |
Common Mistakes
Confusing class 5 with class 9 (both can lack visible prefix)
- Wrong: Gari yangu (my car — class 9 possessive)
- Right: Gari langu (my car — class 5 possessive)
- Why: "Gari" is class 5 (li-/ya-), not class 9 (i-/zi-). The possessive "langu" confirms class 5.
Treating class 11 abstract nouns as having plurals
- Wrong: Mauzuri (beauties)
- Right: Uzuri has no plural — it is an uncountable abstract noun
- Why: Many class 11 abstract nouns (uzuri, uhuru, upendo) have no plural form.
Forgetting class 15 agreement
- Wrong: Kusoma ni nzuri. (Reading is nice — class 9 adjective)
- Right: Kusoma ni kuzuri. (Reading is good.)
- Why: Class 15 (ku-) verbal nouns take ku- agreement on adjectives.
Usage Notes
Class 5/6 is called the "augmentative" class because some words shift to this class to indicate large size: "mtu" (person, class 1) → "jitu" (giant, class 5). Conversely, class 7/8 can create diminutives.
The locative classes (16-18) are increasingly simplified in modern Swahili. Many speakers use class 17 (ku-) as a default locative, and the locative suffix -ni often replaces explicit class 16-18 marking.
Practice Tips
- Class 5/6 food vocabulary: Learn fruit and food terms in class 5/6, practicing the ji-/ma- pattern: tunda/matunda, embe/maembe, chungwa/machungwa.
- Abstract noun derivation: Take five adjective roots and create class 11 abstract nouns: -zuri → uzuri, -baya → ubaya, -kubwa → ukubwa.
- Infinitive sentences: Write five sentences using ku- infinitives as subjects: "Kusafiri ni kuzuri, kufanya kazi ni muhimu..."
Related Concepts
- Prerequisite: Noun Class 7/8: Ki-/Vi- (Things/Tools) — completing the class system builds on earlier classes
- Next steps: Advanced Noun Derivation (U-/Ma-/Ki- Abstract) — deep dive into creating abstract and derived nouns
Prerequisite
Noun Class 7/8: Ki-/Vi- (Things/Tools) in SwahiliA1Concepts that build on this
More B1 concepts
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