A1

Body Parts and Basic Health in Tagalog

Mga Bahagi ng Katawan at Pangunahing Kalusugan

Overview

Knowing how to talk about your body and basic health is one of the most practical things you can learn early on in Tagalog. Whether you need to visit a doctor, describe an ache to a friend, or simply talk about how you feel, this vocabulary comes up constantly in everyday Filipino life.

At the A1 level, you will focus on the most common body parts and a handful of essential health-related adjectives. Tagalog body part vocabulary is straightforward -- most terms are native words with no complex grammar required. You simply combine them with basic sentence patterns you already know, such as the ang marker and adjectives with the ma- prefix.

Filipino culture places a strong emphasis on concern for others' well-being. Asking someone Kumusta ka? (How are you?) or Okay ka lang ba? (Are you okay?) is a daily occurrence. Being able to respond with basic health expressions will help you connect naturally with Tagalog speakers from the very start.

How It Works

Common body parts:

Tagalog English
ulo head
mata eye
ilong nose
bibig mouth
tenga ear
kamay hand
daliri finger
braso arm
paa foot / leg
tuhod knee
tiyan stomach
likod back
balikat shoulder

Basic health adjectives and states:

Tagalog English Pattern
masakit painful / sick ma- + sakit
pagod tired (root word)
gutom hungry (root word)
uhaw thirsty (root word)
mainit hot (feverish) ma- + init
malamig cold (feeling) ma- + lamig
masama ang pakiramdam feeling unwell (phrase)

Basic sentence pattern for pain:

Masakit ang [body part] ko. My [body part] hurts.

This follows the standard Tagalog sentence pattern: adjective + ang marker + noun + possessive pronoun.

Expressing states with pronouns:

Sentence Meaning
Pagod ako. I am tired.
Gutom ka ba? Are you hungry?
Uhaw na uhaw siya. He/She is very thirsty.

The word na placed between repeated adjectives intensifies the meaning: pagod na pagod (very tired), gutom na gutom (very hungry).

Examples in Context

Tagalog English Note
Masakit ang ulo ko. My head hurts. Most common health complaint
Hugasan mo ang kamay mo. Wash your hands. Command using -an verb
Pagod na pagod na ako. I am very tired. Reduplication for emphasis
Gutom ka na ba? Are you hungry yet? na = already
Masakit ang tiyan niya. His/Her stomach hurts. Third person
May lagnat ako. I have a fever. may + noun pattern
Masakit ang likod ko. My back hurts. Common workplace complaint
Uhaw na ako. I'm thirsty now. na = already
Nasaan ang mata mo? Tingnan mo ako. Where are your eyes? Look at me. Playful/parental expression
Masama ang pakiramdam ko. I'm feeling unwell. General sickness
Ipit ang daliri ko! My finger is pinched! Exclamation of pain
Nanginginig ako sa lamig. I'm shivering from the cold. Physical sensation

Common Mistakes

Using "ko" in the wrong position

  • Wrong: Masakit ko ang ulo.
  • Right: Masakit ang ulo ko.
  • Why: The possessive pronoun ko attaches to the body part noun, not the adjective. It comes after the noun it possesses.

Saying "ang pagod" instead of just "pagod"

  • Wrong: Ang pagod ako.
  • Right: Pagod ako.
  • Why: State words like pagod, gutom, and uhaw act as adjectives and go directly before the pronoun. The ang marker is not used here.

Confusing "masakit" with "may sakit"

  • Wrong: May sakit ang ulo ko. (when you mean a headache)
  • Right: Masakit ang ulo ko. (My head hurts.)
  • Why: Masakit means something is painful. May sakit means someone is sick or ill. May sakit ako = I am sick (general illness), while Masakit ang ulo ko = My head hurts (specific pain).

Practice Tips

  1. Point to different body parts throughout the day and say their Tagalog names out loud. When you feel any discomfort, practice describing it: Masakit ang... This builds the habit of thinking in Tagalog for physical sensations.
  2. Practice asking a partner or language buddy Kumusta ang pakiramdam mo? (How are you feeling?) and answering with different states -- Pagod ako, Gutom na ako, Okay lang ako (I'm just okay).
  3. Watch Filipino vlogs or family videos on YouTube and listen for body part words and health expressions. They come up frequently in daily conversation, especially among family members.

Related Concepts

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