Object Focus -In Verbs in Tagalog
Pandiwang -In (Pokus sa Layon)
Overview
The -in affix marks object-focus verbs, where the ang-marked topic is the thing being acted upon rather than the person doing the action. This is a crucial A2 topic because it opens up the Tagalog focus system — one of the most distinctive features of the language. While actor-focus verbs (-um- and mag-) highlight who does the action, -in verbs highlight what receives the action.
Understanding object focus is essential because native speakers constantly switch between actor and object focus depending on what they want to emphasize. Saying Kumain ako ng mangga (actor focus: I ate a mango) versus Kinain ko ang mangga (object focus: I ate the mango) conveys different information structures — the second emphasizes the specific mango.
The -in affix works as either a suffix or an infix, depending on the aspect. This pattern takes some practice but becomes natural with exposure. The three aspects (completed, incompleted, contemplated) each have their own formation rules.
How It Works
Aspect formation for -in verbs:
| Aspect | Pattern | Root: kain (eat) | Root: basa (read) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Completed | -in- infix (after first consonant) | kinain | binasa |
| Incompleted | -in- infix + CV reduplication | kinakain | binabasa |
| Contemplated | root + -in suffix | kakainin | babasahin |
Steps for each aspect:
- Completed: Insert -in- after the first consonant → k-in-ain = kinain
- Incompleted: Insert -in- + reduplicate first CV → k-in-a-kain = kinakain
- Contemplated: Reduplicate first CV + add -in at the end → ka-kain-in = kakainin
For vowel-initial roots (like alis): -in- is prefixed: inalis (completed), inaalis (incompleted), aalisin (contemplated).
Sentence structure (object focus):
Verb + ng-pronoun (actor) + ang-noun (topic/object)
Kinain niya ang mangga. — He/She ate the mango. (The mango is the topic.)
Examples in Context
| Tagalog | English | Note |
|---|---|---|
| Kinain niya ang mangga. | He/She ate the mango. | Completed |
| Binasa ko ang libro. | I read the book. | Completed |
| Kakainin mo ba iyan? | Will you eat that? | Contemplated |
| Ginawa nila ang takdang-aralin. | They did the homework. | Completed (gawa root) |
| Kinakain ko ang almusal. | I am eating breakfast. | Incompleted |
| Binibili niya ang gulay. | He/She is buying the vegetables. | Incompleted |
| Basahin mo ito. | Read this. | Contemplated/command |
| Inalis niya ang sapatos. | He/She removed the shoes. | Completed, vowel root |
| Kinuha ko ang bag. | I took the bag. | Completed (kuha root) |
| Inumin mo ang tubig. | Drink the water. | Contemplated/command |
Common Mistakes
Confusing Actor and Object Focus Pronouns
- Wrong: Kinain ako ang mangga. (using ang-pronoun for actor)
- Right: Kinain ko ang mangga. (I ate the mango.)
- Why: In object focus, the actor takes the ng-form pronoun (ko, not ako). The ang-marked noun is the object/topic.
Wrong Aspect Form
- Wrong: Kainin niya ang mangga kahapon. (contemplated for past)
- Right: Kinain niya ang mangga kahapon. (He/She ate the mango yesterday.)
- Why: Completed actions require the -in- infix form, not the -in suffix.
Forgetting the Topic Is the Object
- Wrong: Translating "I ate the mango" and thinking ako is the topic
- Right: In Kinain ko ang mangga, the topic (ang mangga) is the mango, not you
- Why: Object focus means the object is the sentence topic marked by ang. The actor is demoted to a ng-phrase.
Reduplication Errors in Contemplated
- Wrong: kain-in (forgetting reduplication)
- Right: kakainin
- Why: The contemplated aspect requires CV reduplication of the root plus the -in suffix.
Practice Tips
Actor vs. object focus pairs: For each sentence, write both versions: Kumain ako ng mangga. (actor focus) → Kinain ko ang mangga. (object focus). Notice how the pronouns and markers shift.
Command practice: Object focus contemplated forms are commonly used as commands: Basahin mo! (Read it!), Kainin mo! (Eat it!), Gawin mo! (Do it!). Practice these direct commands.
Listen for -in-: In conversations and media, listen for the -in- infix pattern. Once you recognize it, you will start to hear object focus everywhere.
Related Concepts
- Actor Focus -Um- Verbs — prerequisite actor-focus pattern
- Benefactive/Instrumental Focus I- Verbs — extends focus to beneficiaries
- Locative/Directional Focus -An Verbs — extends focus to locations
- Complex Verb Affixation (Pag-, Pang-, Paki-) — builds on -in with additional affixes
前提概念
Actor Focus -Um- VerbsA1この概念を基にした概念
その他のA2の概念
Object Focus -In Verbs in Tagalogや、さらに多くのフィリピノ語文法を練習したいですか?スペースドリピティションで学ぶための無料アカウントを作成しましょう。
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