B2

Complex Sentence Linking in Tagalog

Pagdugtong ng Masalimuot na Pangungusap

Overview

At the B2 level, you are ready to move beyond simple sentences and learn how Tagalog builds complex, multi-clause structures. Complex sentence linking involves combining two or more clauses into a single cohesive sentence using connectors, embedded clauses, and the linker na/-ng.

Tagalog has a flexible word order and a linker system that allows for elegant clause combinations. You can embed conditional clauses with kung, stack relative clauses with na/-ng, chain actions with at or tapos, and combine focus systems across clauses to maintain a coherent information flow throughout a paragraph.

This skill is essential for writing essays, telling detailed stories, and expressing complex ideas in both formal and informal Tagalog. It is also crucial for comprehending the kind of extended discourse found in news articles, academic texts, and literature.

How It Works

Main Linking Strategies

Strategy Connector Example
Reason clause dahil / sapagkat / kasi Umalis siya dahil pagod na siya.
Conditional clause kung Pupunta ako kung hindi uulan.
Relative clause na / -ng Ang taong nakita mo ay kapatid ko.
Temporal clause noong / kapag / habang Habang nagluluto siya, nagbabasa ako.
Purpose clause para / upang Nag-aral siya para pumasa.
Result clause kaya Umuulan kaya hindi kami pumunta.
Reported speech na + sabi / sinabi Sinabi niyang pupunta siya.

Embedding with Na/-Ng

The linker na/-ng is the primary tool for embedding clauses within sentences. It connects a modifying clause to its head noun or to a reporting verb.

After consonants: na After vowels: -ng (attached to the preceding word)

Type Example Analysis
Relative clause Ang babaeng kumakanta ay maganda. babae + -ng + kumakanta (the woman who sings)
Complement clause Sinabi niyang pupunta siya. niya + -ng + pupunta siya (he/she said that...)
Stacked relative Ang librong binili kong nasa mesa libro + -ng + binili ko + -ng + nasa mesa

Combining Multiple Clauses

Complex Tagalog sentences often chain several clauses together:

  1. Main clause + dahil/kasi + reason clause
  2. Condition (kung) + result clause
  3. Main clause + na/-ng + complement clause + kung + embedded condition

Example of a three-clause sentence: Sinabi niyang pupunta siya kung hindi uulan. (He/She said he/she would go if it doesn't rain.)

Examples in Context

Tagalog English Note
Sinabi niyang pupunta siya kung hindi uulan. He/She said he/she would go if it doesn't rain. Reported speech + conditional
Ang babaeng nakilala ko sa piestang dinaluhan namin. The woman I met at the festival we attended. Stacked relative clauses
Dahil gusto kong matuto, nag-enrol ako sa klase. Because I want to learn, I enrolled in the class. Reason clause first
Habang nagluluto si Nanay, naglilinis si Tatay. While Mom cooks, Dad cleans. Simultaneous temporal
Nag-aral siya nang mabuti para pumasa sa eksamen. He/She studied well to pass the exam. Purpose clause
Ang taong nakita kong kumakain sa restawran ay kaibigan ko. The person I saw eating at the restaurant is my friend. Complex relative clause
Kung alam ko lang na darating ka, naghanda sana ako. If I had only known you were coming, I would have prepared. Conditional + counterfactual
Masaya ako dahil pumasa ang kapatid ko. I am happy because my sibling passed. Simple reason clause
Binili ko ang librong inirekomenda mo. I bought the book you recommended. Relative clause with object focus
Kapag may oras ka, puntahan mo ang museo na nasa gitna ng bayan. When you have time, visit the museum that is in the center of town. Temporal + relative

Common Mistakes

Forgetting the linker na/-ng in embedded clauses

  • Wrong: Sinabi niya pupunta siya.
  • Right: Sinabi niyang pupunta siya.
  • Why: The complement clause (pupunta siya) must be connected to the reporting verb (sinabi niya) with the linker -ng.

Creating run-on sentences without proper connectors

  • Wrong: Pumunta siya sa tindahan bumili siya ng tinapay.
  • Right: Pumunta siya sa tindahan at bumili ng tinapay. or Pumunta siya sa tindahan para bumili ng tinapay.
  • Why: Tagalog needs explicit connectors (at, para, tapos, dahil) between independent clauses, just like English.

Stacking too many relative clauses

  • Awkward: Ang lalaking nakilala ko sa bahay na binili ng kaibigan kong nakatira sa Maynila...
  • Better: Break into two sentences or simplify one of the embedded clauses.
  • Why: While Tagalog allows stacked relative clauses, more than two or three becomes difficult to follow. Good writing balances complexity with clarity.

Mismatching focus across linked clauses

  • Awkward: Binili ko ang libro at nagbasa ako.
  • Better: Binili ko ang libro at binasa ko ito.
  • Why: When the object (libro) is the topic in the first clause, maintaining object focus in the second clause (with ito as pronoun) creates smoother discourse flow.

Usage Notes

Written formal Tagalog tends to use longer, more complex sentences with multiple embedded clauses, especially in academic and legal writing. Newspapers and editorials frequently employ the ay-inversion pattern in complex sentences for formal effect:

Ang batas na ito, na ipinatupad noong 2020, ay nagdulot ng malaking pagbabago. (This law, which was implemented in 2020, brought great change.)

In casual spoken Tagalog, speakers tend to use shorter clauses connected by tapos (then), kasi (because), and at (and), rather than deeply embedded structures. The deeply nested relative clauses are more characteristic of writing.

Code-switching with English is also common in complex sentences, especially in Manila Tagalog: Sinabi niyang he will come kung hindi busy siya. Understanding how to build these structures in pure Tagalog gives you the foundation for natural Taglish as well.

Practice Tips

  1. Practice combining two simple sentences into one complex sentence using different connectors: dahil, kung, habang, para. For example, take Umuulan and Hindi kami pumunta and combine them in four different ways.
  2. Read a Tagalog news article and diagram the clause structure of the longest sentences. Identify the main clause and all embedded clauses.
  3. Retell a movie plot in Tagalog using at least three multi-clause sentences with different linking strategies (reason, condition, time, purpose).

Related Concepts

선행 개념

Relative Clauses with Na/-NgB1

다른 B2 개념들

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