Actor Focus -Um- Verbs in Tagalog
Pandiwang -Um- (Pokus sa Tagaganap)
Overview
The -um- infix is one of the two primary ways Tagalog marks actor-focus verbs, making it a foundational CEFR A1 topic. In actor-focus sentences, the ang-marked topic is the doer (actor) of the action. The -um- infix is inserted after the first consonant of the verb root, creating forms that are among the most common in everyday Tagalog.
Tagalog verbs do not mark tense (past, present, future) the way English does. Instead, they mark aspect — whether an action is completed, ongoing (incompleted), or yet to happen (contemplated). The -um- verb class demonstrates this three-aspect system clearly, making it an excellent entry point for understanding how all Tagalog verbs work.
The -um- class tends to include verbs describing natural, spontaneous, or less deliberate actions, in contrast to the mag- class which often implies more deliberate or sustained activity. However, many verbs simply belong to one class by convention.
How It Works
Forming -um- verbs: The infix goes after the first consonant of the root.
| Aspect | Pattern | Root: kain (eat) | Root: alis (leave) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Completed | -um- infix | kumain | umalis |
| Incompleted | -um- + CV reduplication | kumakain | umaalis |
| Contemplated | CV reduplication only | kakain | aalis |
Steps for each aspect:
- Completed: Insert -um- after the first consonant → k-um-ain = kumain
- Incompleted: Insert -um- + reduplicate the first consonant-vowel of the root → k-um-a-kain = kumakain
- Contemplated: Reduplicate the first CV of the root (no -um-) → ka-kain = kakain
For roots starting with a vowel (like alis), -um- is simply prefixed: umalis, umaalis, aalis.
Sentence structure (actor focus):
Verb + ang-noun (actor/topic) + ng-noun (object)
Kumain ang bata ng mangga. — The child ate a mango.
Examples in Context
| Tagalog | English | Note |
|---|---|---|
| Kumain ako ng mangga. | I ate a mango. | Completed |
| Kumakain siya ngayon. | He/She is eating now. | Incompleted |
| Kakain tayo mamaya. | We will eat later. | Contemplated |
| Umalis na sila. | They already left. | Completed, vowel-initial root |
| Umuulan na. | It's raining now. | Incompleted |
| Pumunta siya sa eskwelahan. | He/She went to school. | Completed |
| Pumupunta ako tuwing Lunes. | I go every Monday. | Incompleted (habitual) |
| Pupunta ka ba bukas? | Will you go tomorrow? | Contemplated |
| Bumasa siya ng libro. | He/She read a book. | Completed |
| Tumawa ang mga bata. | The children laughed. | Completed |
Common Mistakes
Placing -Um- in the Wrong Position
- Wrong: ukamin (trying to say "ate")
- Right: kumain
- Why: The infix goes after the first consonant, not before the root or at a random spot.
Confusing Aspects
- Wrong: Kumain ako bukas. (completed aspect + future time)
- Right: Kakain ako bukas.
- Why: The contemplated form (kakain) must be used for future actions. The completed form (kumain) is for finished actions.
Mixing Up -Um- and Mag- Verbs
- Wrong: Mag-kain ako. (kain belongs to -um- class)
- Right: Kumain ako.
- Why: Each verb root typically belongs to either the -um- or mag- class. Kain uses -um-; you cannot freely switch between the two.
Forgetting Ng for the Object
- Wrong: Kumain ako ang mangga.
- Right: Kumain ako ng mangga.
- Why: In actor-focus, the object takes the ng marker, not ang. The ang marker is for the actor (topic).
Usage Notes
The -um- verb class is extremely common in daily conversation. Verbs like kumain (eat), umalis (leave), pumunta (go), bumasa (read), and tumawa (laugh) are among the first verbs any learner should master.
In casual speech, the contemplated form often serves as a polite command or suggestion: Kumain ka ("Eat" — a gentle command using the contemplated-like base form).
Practice Tips
- Memorize the three-aspect pattern with the verb kain (eat): kumain / kumakain / kakain. Use this as your template for other -um- verbs.
- Practice forming aspects with 5-10 common roots: alis, punta, basa, tawa, sulat, takbo, tulog, upo, lakad, kanta.
- Build full sentences for each aspect with time words to reinforce the connection: Kumain ako kahapon (completed/yesterday), Kumakain ako ngayon (incompleted/now), Kakain ako bukas (contemplated/tomorrow).
Related Concepts
- Prerequisite: Personal Pronouns — you need pronoun case forms to build sentences with -um- verbs
- Next steps: Object Focus -In Verbs — the complementary object-focus system
- Next steps: Aspect System Overview — deeper understanding of the three-aspect system
- Next steps: Commands and Requests — how -um- verb forms are used in imperatives
前提概念
Personal PronounsA1この概念を基にした概念
その他のA1の概念
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