A1

Basic Adjectives and Modifiers in Yoruba

Àwọn Ọ̀rọ̀-Àpèjúwe Ìpìlẹ̀

Overview

Adjectives in Yoruba follow the noun they describe, which is the opposite of English word order. At the A1 level, learning basic descriptive words and how to position them correctly allows you to describe people, objects, and situations. Yoruba adjectives are simpler than those in many European languages because there is no gender or number agreement required.

The basic pattern is straightforward: noun + adjective. For example, "ọmọ dáadáa" (good child), "ilé ńlá" (big house), "omi tutù" (cold water). Many Yoruba "adjectives" are actually derived from verbs, which is a distinctive feature of the language. The word "dára" (good/nice) functions both as a verb "to be good" and as a descriptive modifier.

Yoruba has a relatively small set of "true" adjectives compared to English. Many descriptions that English handles with adjectives are expressed in Yoruba through verb constructions or ideophones (expressive sound-symbolic words). This means that as you advance, you will discover increasingly creative ways to describe things. At this stage, focus on the most common descriptive words and the noun-adjective word order.

How It Works

Pattern: Noun + Adjective/Modifier

Adjective Meaning Example
dáadáa / dára good/nice ọmọ dáadáa (good child)
ńlá / tóbi big/large ilé ńlá (big house)
kéré small ọmọ kéré (small child)
tutù cold/cool omi tutù (cold water)
gbígbóná hot oúnjẹ gbígbóná (hot food)
funfun white ẹṣin funfun (white horse)
pupa red aṣọ pupa (red cloth)
dúdú black ọkọ̀ dúdú (black car)
tuntun new ilé tuntun (new house)
àtijọ́ old (thing) aṣọ àtijọ́ (old clothes)

Key rules:

  1. No gender agreement -- the same adjective form is used regardless.
  2. No number agreement -- "ọmọ dáadáa" (good child) and "àwọn ọmọ dáadáa" (good children) use the same adjective form.
  3. Multiple adjectives stack after the noun in order of importance.

Examples in Context

Yoruba English Note
ọmọ dáadáa a good child Basic noun + adjective
ilé ńlá a big house Size descriptor
omi tutù cold water Temperature
ẹṣin funfun a white horse Color
oúnjẹ dídùn delicious food Taste/quality
ọkùnrin ga a tall man Height
obìnrin dára a beautiful woman Quality
aṣọ tuntun new clothes Newness
ọ̀nà gígùn a long road Length
ìwé kéré a small book Size

Common Mistakes

Putting the Adjective Before the Noun

  • Wrong: Ńlá ilé (big house -- English order)
  • Right: Ilé ńlá (house big = big house)
  • Why: Yoruba adjectives follow the noun. This is consistent across the language.

Adding Agreement Markers

  • Wrong: Trying to change the adjective form for plural nouns.
  • Right: Àwọn ilé ńlá (big houses) -- the adjective stays the same.
  • Why: Yoruba adjectives do not agree in number. Plurality is marked on the noun (with àwọn) or understood from context.

Confusing Verbal and Adjectival Uses

  • Wrong: Ó dáadáa. (He/She is good -- using the modifier form as a verb)
  • Right: Ó dára. (He/She is good/fine.)
  • Why: Some descriptive words have different forms when used as verbs (dára) versus as modifiers after a noun (dáadáa).

Practice Tips

  1. Describe objects around you: Practice the noun + adjective pattern with everyday items. Pick an object, say its Yoruba name, then add a descriptor.
  2. Learn adjectives in pairs: Study opposites together -- tóbi/kéré (big/small), tuntun/àtijọ́ (new/old), dára/burúkú (good/bad). This doubles your vocabulary efficiently.
  3. Practice with colors: Colors are a concrete set of adjectives that are easy to practice by describing things you see.

Related Concepts

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