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Igbo (from English)

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Memori-karti — 35 vordi

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A1.1Beginner · Foundations

1. About Igbo

Igbo (Asụsụ Igbo) is a Volta–Niger language of the Niger–Congo family, spoken by around 30 million people in southeastern Nigeria and across a large diaspora. It is written in the Latin alphabet using the standard Önwu orthography, and — like English — its basic word order is Subject–Verb–Object, which gives English speakers a familiar starting frame.1

Two features need attention from the start. First, Igbo is a tone language: the same letters at a high or low pitch can mean different things, so listening for pitch matters. Second, three vowels are written with a dot underneath — ị, ụ, ọ — and there is a letter ṅ for the 'ng' sound; these are full letters, not decoration.1

A1.2Beginner · Building Basics

Key features to know from day one

  • Word order is Subject–Verb–Object, like English: Ọ na-eri ji = 'He/she is eating yam.'2
  • Igbo has tone. Three phonemic tones — high, mid and low — distinguish words and grammar; in teaching texts high is marked á and low à, but everyday writing often leaves tone unmarked.1
  • The dotted vowels are distinct letters: ị (as in 'bit'), ụ (as in 'put'), ọ (as in 'caught') — different from plain i, u, o.1
  • Vowel harmony. Igbo vowels fall into two groups, and the vowels in a word usually come from the same group — affecting which form of a prefix you hear.1
  • Useful digraphs: ch, gb, gh, gw, kp, kw, nw, ny, sh — gb and kp are single sounds made with both lips, unlike anything in English.1
A1.3Beginner · Sounds & Spelling

2. The alphabet & tones

The Önwu alphabet has 36 letters (single letters and digraphs). The table shows the ones most likely to surprise an English reader.1

LetterSoundExample
'i' as in 'bit' (a tenser i)ihị (to love)
'u' as in 'put'ụzọ (road/way)
'o' as in 'caught'ọcha (white/clean)
'ng' as in 'sing'ṅụ (to drink)
gb / kpsingle sounds made with both lipsgba (to run) / akpa (bag)
nw / ny'nw' (as in 'twang') / 'ny' (as in 'canyon')nwa (child) / anya (eye)
á / àhigh tone / low tonemarked in teaching texts

In this guide's exercises you can type the dotted vowels (ị, ụ, ọ) or their plain ASCII forms (i, u, o), and tone marks are optional — but learning to hear tone is the real goal.

A2.1Elementary · First Words

3. Greetings & numbers

These greetings and numbers follow standard Igbo usage.3

IgboMeaning
NdeewoHello / greetings (respectful)
Kedụ?How are you? / Hello
Ọ dị mmaIt's fine / I'm well
DaalụThank you
BikoPlease
EeYes
MbaNo
NdoSorry / sympathy
Ka ọ dịSee you / goodbye
Ọ̀ bụ̀ eziokwuIt's true

Numbers 1–10

ValueIgboValueIgbo
1otu6isii
2abụọ7asaa
3atọ8asatọ
4anọ9itoolu
5ise10iri
A1

Practice: greetings & numbers

Practice: Core Igbo greetings and the first five numbers. You may type the dotted vowels (ị, ụ, ọ) or plain ASCII (i, u, o); tone marks are optional.. Type the missing word — accents are optional.

  1. 1.Hello / greetings (respectful):

    Hint: the respectful all-purpose greeting, 'I wish you well'

  2. 2.How are you? (also used as 'hello'):

    Hint: the everyday question-greeting; reply is 'ọ dị mma'

  3. 3.Thank you:

    Hint: the everyday word for gratitude

  4. 4.Yes:

    Hint: the short affirmative

  5. 5.No:

    Hint: the basic negative

  6. 6.the number 'one':

    Hint: the first counting number

  7. 7.the number 'two':

    Hint: the number after otu (has two dotted vowels)

  8. 8.the number 'three':

    Hint: the number after abụọ

  9. 9.the number 'four':

    Hint: the number after atọ

  10. 10.the number 'five':

    Hint: the number of fingers on one hand

10 questions

Grammar reference: Greetings and numerals per standard usage, cross-checked against Omniglot and the Harvard ELIAS Igbo course; cf. Emenanjọ, A Grammar of Contemporary Igbo (2015). All prompts original to LinguaCommons. CEFR A1. Confidence: High.. Sentences are original to LinguaCommons.

A2.2Elementary · Core Grammar

4. Pronouns, the copula & word order

Subject pronouns

The basic subject pronouns are m ('I'), ị ('you' singular), ọ ('he/she/it'), anyị ('we'), unu ('you' plural) and ha ('they'). They sit before the verb, matching the SVO frame.2

IgboMeaning
m / mụI / me
ị / gịyou (singular)
ọ / yahe / she / it
anyịwe / us
unuyou (plural)
hathey / them

Saying 'is': the copula bụ

To state identity ('X is Y'), Igbo uses bụ: Ọ bụ nwoke = 'He is a man'; M bụ onye Igbo = 'I am an Igbo person'. (Location and condition use a different verb, dị — as in Ọ dị mma, 'it is good'.)2

A2

Practice: numbers 6–10, pronouns & the copula

Practice: Numbers 6–10, the subject pronouns, the identity copula bụ, and two courtesy words. Dotted vowels or plain ASCII both accepted; tone marks optional.. Type the missing word — accents are optional.

  1. 1.the number 'six':

    Hint: comes after ise (5)

  2. 2.the number 'seven':

    Hint: comes after isii (6)

  3. 3.the number 'eight':

    Hint: comes after asaa (7)

  4. 4.the number 'ten':

    Hint: the round number after the nines

  5. 5.subject pronoun 'I':

    Hint: the first-person singular subject pronoun (a single letter)

  6. 6.subject pronoun 'you' (singular):

    Hint: the second-person singular subject pronoun (a dotted vowel)

  7. 7.subject pronoun 'they':

    Hint: the third-person plural pronoun

  8. 8.the copula 'is' (identity): Ọ nwoke (He is a man) → ___

    Hint: the verb linking a noun to what it IS (not location)

  9. 9.please:

    Hint: the courtesy word for making a request

  10. 10.sorry / sympathy ('ndo'):

    Hint: said to comfort someone who has a mishap

10 questions

Grammar reference: Pronouns and the copula per Emenanjọ, A Grammar of Contemporary Igbo (2015) and Green & Igwe (1963); numerals per Omniglot. All sentences original to LinguaCommons. CEFR A2. Confidence: High.. Sentences are original to LinguaCommons.

B1.1Intermediate · Building Sentences

5. Beyond the basics

🚧 In development. This section will cover the verb system (the na- progressive, tense/aspect), negation, and how tone marks grammatical distinctions, plus question formation. Content here is being expanded in a later run and is not yet complete.

B1.2Intermediate · Vocabulary Strategy

🚧 In development. A strategy for Igbo word-building (verb roots and the rich system of extensions/suffixes) and high-frequency vocabulary will be added here.

B2.1Upper Intermediate · Register & Region

🚧 In development. This section will treat Standard (Igbo izugbe) vs the major dialects, proverbs (ilu) and respectful registers. Not yet complete.

C1.1Advanced · Culture & Nuance

🚧 In development. Planned: the central role of proverbs and idiom in Igbo rhetoric, naming, and cultural concepts. Not yet complete.

C2.1Mastery · Toward Fluency

🚧 In development. Planned: mastering tone in connected speech and a media plan (Igbo news, film/Nollywood, music). Not yet complete.

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