A2

Aspect System Overview in Tagalog

Sistema ng Aspekto

Overview

One of the most important things to understand about Tagalog verbs is that they mark aspect rather than tense. While English verbs distinguish past, present, and future, Tagalog verbs distinguish whether an action is completed (perfective), incompleted (imperfective/progressive), or contemplated (prospective). This A2 topic provides a unified view of the aspect system that underlies all Tagalog verb classes.

Context and time words — not the verb itself — tell you when something happened. The incompleted form kumakain ako could mean "I am eating" (right now), "I eat" (habitually), or "I was eating" (when something interrupted). The surrounding context makes the meaning clear.

This system applies consistently across all verb types: -um-, mag-, -in, i-, -an, maka-, and more. Once you understand how aspect works in one verb class, you can apply the same logic to all of them. The three aspects are formed through a combination of infixes, prefixes, and CV reduplication (repeating the first consonant-vowel of the root).

How It Works

The three aspects:

Aspect Meaning Time Reference Marker
Completed (Naganap) Action is finished Past (usually) Infix/prefix change
Incompleted (Hindi pa tapos) Action is ongoing Present or past progressive + CV reduplication
Contemplated (Balak) Action has not yet started Future or infinitive CV reduplication only

How aspect works across verb classes:

Verb Class Completed Incompleted Contemplated
-um- (kain) kumain kumakain kakain
mag- (luto) nagluto nagluluto magluluto
-in (basa) binasa binabasa babasahin
i- (bigay) ibinigay ibinibigay ibibigay
-an (punta) pinuntahan pinupuntahan pupuntahan

CV reduplication explained:

The first consonant and vowel of the root are repeated:

  • kainka-kain (contemplated)
  • lutolu-luto (reduplication in mag- forms)
  • basaba-basa (reduplication)

Time words provide temporal context:

Time Word With Completed With Incompleted With Contemplated
kahapon (yesterday) Kumain ako kahapon.
ngayon (now) Kumakain ako ngayon.
bukas (tomorrow) Kakain ako bukas.
kanina (earlier) Kumain siya kanina. Kumakain siya kanina. (was eating)

Examples in Context

Tagalog English Note
Kumain ako. I ate / I have eaten. Completed
Kumakain ako. I am eating / I eat. Incompleted
Kakain ako. I will eat / I'm going to eat. Contemplated
Kumakain ako kahapon nang dumating siya. I was eating yesterday when he/she arrived. Incompleted = past progressive
Nagluto na siya. He/She already cooked. Completed + na
Nagluluto pa siya. He/She is still cooking. Incompleted + pa
Magluluto siya mamaya. He/She will cook later. Contemplated + time word
Binasa ko na ang libro. I already read the book. Object focus, completed
Binabasa ko pa ang libro. I'm still reading the book. Object focus, incompleted
Babasahin ko bukas. I'll read it tomorrow. Object focus, contemplated

Common Mistakes

Thinking Completed = Past Tense

  • Wrong: Assuming kumain always means "ate" (past)
  • Right: Kumain means the action is completed, regardless of when. Kumain ka muna bago umalis. (Eat first before leaving — future completed action)
  • Why: Aspect is about completion, not time. Completed actions can be referenced in any time frame.

Using Incompleted for Future Actions

  • Wrong: Kumakain ako bukas. (incompleted for future)
  • Right: Kakain ako bukas. (contemplated for future)
  • Why: Unstarted actions use the contemplated form. Incompleted means the action is in progress.

Forgetting Reduplication

  • Wrong: Kaain ako (contemplated without proper reduplication)
  • Right: Kakain ako.
  • Why: Reduplication of the first CV syllable is what marks the contemplated (and partly the incompleted) aspect.

Practice Tips

  1. Three-aspect drills: For any new verb, immediately learn all three forms. Write them in a table: completed / incompleted / contemplated. Do this for 5 new verbs per study session.

  2. Timeline sentences: Place yourself at different points in time and describe the same action: Kumain na ako. (completed), Kumakain ako. (ongoing), Kakain pa ako. (upcoming).

  3. Context-reading practice: Read short Tagalog texts and identify the aspect of each verb. Ask yourself: is this completed, ongoing, or planned? What time word gives you the clue?

Related Concepts

선행 개념

Actor Focus -Um- VerbsA1

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