B1

Nominalization (Verb to Noun) in Yoruba

Yíyí Ọ̀rọ̀-Ìṣe Padà Sí Ọ̀rọ̀-Orúkọ

Overview

Nominalization -- turning verbs into nouns -- is a productive and essential process in Yoruba. At the B1 level, understanding how verbs become nouns allows you to express abstract concepts, create subjects from actions, and understand a large portion of Yoruba vocabulary that derives from verb roots. Yoruba has several systematic nominalization patterns, the most common being reduplication of the first syllable.

The primary nominalization pattern is CV-reduplication: the first consonant-vowel of the verb is reduplicated with a high tone. "Jẹ" (eat) becomes "jíjẹ" (eating/the act of eating), "kà" (read) becomes "kíkà" (reading), and "ṣe" (do) becomes "ṣíṣe" (doing). Another pattern uses the prefix "à-": "lọ" (go) becomes "àlọ" (departure/going). Compound nouns combine nouns and verbs: "ilé" + "kọ" = "ilékọ̀ọ́" (school, place of learning).

These nominalized forms are used as sentence subjects, objects, and in various grammatical roles. "Jíjẹ oúnjẹ dára ni ilera" (Eating food is good for health) uses the nominalized form "jíjẹ" as the sentence subject. This pattern is extremely common in Yoruba and essential for expressing general truths, opinions, and abstract ideas.

How It Works

CV-reduplication pattern (most common):

Verb Meaning Nominalized Meaning
jẹ eat jíjẹ eating
read kíkà reading
ṣe do ṣíṣe doing
kọ́ learn/build kíkọ́ learning/building
come wíwá coming
lọ go lílọ going
sùn sleep sísùn sleeping

Prefix à- pattern:

Verb Nominalized Meaning
lọ àlọ departure
ṣe àṣe authority/command
bọ̀ àbọ̀ arrival/return

Examples in Context

Yoruba English Note
Jíjẹ oúnjẹ dára ni ilera. Eating food is good for health. Nominalized subject
Kíkà ìwé ṣe pàtàkì. Reading books is important. Nominalized subject
Àlọ rẹ̀ dùn mí. His departure saddens me. à-prefix form
Ṣíṣe iṣẹ́ kò rọrùn. Working is not easy. General truth
Wíwá rẹ mú mi dùn. Your coming made me happy. Nominalized + possessive
Kíkọ́ èdè tuntun nira. Learning a new language is hard. Abstract statement
Lílọ sí ọjà jẹ́ ìgbádùn. Going to the market is enjoyable. Nominalized activity
Ṣíṣe dáadáa ṣe pàtàkì. Doing well is important. Quality + nominalization

Common Mistakes

Not Applying the High Tone on the Reduplicated Syllable

  • Wrong: Jìjẹ (with low tone on reduplicated syllable)
  • Right: Jíjẹ (with high tone on reduplicated syllable)
  • Why: The reduplicated syllable always carries a high tone in nominalization, regardless of the original verb's tone.

Using the Verb Form Where a Noun is Needed

  • Wrong: Kà ìwé ṣe pàtàkì. (Read books is important.)
  • Right: Kíkà ìwé ṣe pàtàkì. (Reading books is important.)
  • Why: When an action serves as the subject or object of a sentence, it must be nominalized.

Overgeneralizing One Pattern

  • Wrong: Applying CV-reduplication to all verbs.
  • Right: Some verbs use the à- prefix or have irregular nominalizations. Learn both patterns.
  • Why: While CV-reduplication is the most common, the à- prefix is important for certain common words.

Practice Tips

  1. Nominalize common verbs: Take your list of basic verbs and create their nominalized forms: jẹ→jíjẹ, kà→kíkà, ṣe→ṣíṣe, mu→mímu.
  2. Create "X is important" sentences: Practice "Kíkà ṣe pàtàkì" (Reading is important), "Ṣíṣe iṣẹ́ ṣe pàtàkì" (Working is important) with various nominalized subjects.
  3. Notice nominalizations in speech: Listen for the characteristic reduplicated high-tone pattern in native Yoruba speech.

Related Concepts

Prerequisite

Basic Sentence Structure (SVO) in YorubaA1

Concepts that build on this

More B1 concepts

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