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Oromo (from English)

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Memori-karti — 35 vordi

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A1.1Beginner · Foundations

1. About Oromo

Oromo (Afaan Oromoo) is an Eastern Cushitic language of the Afroasiatic family, spoken by roughly 37 million people, chiefly in Ethiopia and northern Kenya. It is the most widely spoken language in Ethiopia and the fourth-most spoken in Africa. Since 1991 it has been written in a Latin alphabet called Qubee, so an English reader can start sounding out words immediately.1

Two sound features carry meaning and need attention from day one: vowel length (a doubled vowel is genuinely longer — hara 'lake' vs haaraa 'new') and gemination (a doubled consonant is held longer — badaa 'bad' vs baddaa 'highland'). The grammar is Subject–Object–Verb, so the verb comes at the end of the sentence.12

A1.2Beginner · Building Basics

Key features to know from day one

  • Word order is Subject–Object–Verb: the verb comes last. Because nouns are case-marked, order is somewhat flexible, but the verb stays at the end.2
  • Doubled vowels = long vowels, and the length changes meaning (hara 'lake' → haaraa 'new'). Always read a double vowel as one long sound.1
  • Doubled consonants = gemination, also meaning-changing (badaa 'bad' → baddaa 'highland'). Hold the doubled consonant.1
  • Qubee uses digraphs: ch, dh (an implosive d), ny, ph, sh, ts, zh — each is a single sound.1
  • Nouns have gender (masculine / feminine), which affects agreement — a contrast English lacks.2
A1.3Beginner · Sounds & Spelling

2. The Qubee alphabet

Qubee uses the Latin letters plus a set of digraphs. The table shows the digraphs and the all-important length contrasts.1

Letter / featureSound / meaningExample
ch'ch' as in churchcaccabsa? — ch in loans
dhan implosive 'd'dhugaa (truth)
ny'ny' as in canyonnyaata (food)
sh'sh' as in shipshan (five)
aa ee ii oo uulong vowels (held longer)haaraa (new) vs hara (lake)
bb, dd, ll …geminated (held) consonantsbaddaa (highland) vs badaa (bad)

Because length and gemination are contrastive, treat double letters as part of spelling — they are not optional. (In this guide's exercises the doublings are required where they carry meaning.)

A2.1Elementary · First Words

3. Greetings & numbers

Oromo greetings revolve around wishing peace (nagaa) and asking how someone has passed the day or night.3

OromoMeaning
Akkam?Hi / How are you?
Akkam bulte?Good morning (How did you pass the night?)
NagaaPeace / health (greeting & reply)
GaariiWell / good (a reply to 'how are you')
GalatoomiThank you
EeyyeeYes
LakkiNo
MaalooPlease
NagaattiGoodbye (lit. 'in peace')
Galata WaaqaaThanks be to God (often added)

Numbers 1–10

ValueOromoValueOromo
1tokko6jaha
2lama7torba
3sadii8saddeet
4afur9sagal
5shan10kudhan
A1

Practice: greetings & numbers

Practice: Core Oromo greetings and the first five numbers, written in Qubee (Latin). Type the word as spelled — double vowels/consonants matter.. Type the missing word — accents are optional.

  1. 1.Hi / How are you?:

    Hint: the all-purpose greeting-question; note the double k

  2. 2.Peace / health (greeting and reply):

    Hint: the core word in Oromo greetings; ends in a long vowel

  3. 3.Well / good (a reply to 'how are you'):

    Hint: the positive reply; long aa and long ii

  4. 4.Thank you:

    Hint: the everyday word for gratitude

  5. 5.Good morning (Akkam ?, 'how did you pass the night?'): ___

    Hint: completes 'Akkam ___?' — the verb about passing the night

  6. 6.the number 'one':

    Hint: the first counting number (double k)

  7. 7.the number 'two':

    Hint: the number after tokko

  8. 8.the number 'three':

    Hint: the number after lama (long ii)

  9. 9.the number 'four':

    Hint: the number after sadii

  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 Oromia Language & Cultural Academy. All prompts original to LinguaCommons. CEFR A1. Confidence: High.. Sentences are original to LinguaCommons.

A2.2Elementary · Core Grammar

4. Length, gemination & pronouns

Why double letters matter

The single most important early skill is hearing and writing length. A doubled vowel and a doubled consonant each change a word's meaning: hara ('lake') vs haaraa ('new'); badaa ('bad') vs baddaa ('highland'). Mishearing length means saying a different word.1

Subject pronouns

The basic subject pronouns are ani ('I'), ati ('you' singular), inni ('he'), isheen ('she'), nuti ('we'), isin ('you' plural) and isaan ('they'). With SOV order, the subject comes first and the verb last.2

OromoMeaning
aniI
atiyou (singular)
innihe
isheenshe
nutiwe
isinyou (plural)
isaanthey
A2

Practice: numbers 6–10, length contrasts & pronouns

Practice: Numbers 6–10, the meaning-changing length/gemination contrasts, the subject pronouns, and the SOV word order. Double vowels/consonants are required where they carry meaning.. Type the missing word — accents are optional.

  1. 1.the number 'six':

    Hint: comes after shan (5)

  2. 2.the number 'seven':

    Hint: comes after jaha (6)

  3. 3.the number 'eight':

    Hint: comes after torba (7); note the double d and double e

  4. 4.the number 'nine':

    Hint: comes after saddeet (8)

  5. 5.the number 'ten':

    Hint: the round number after sagal (9); has the implosive dh

  6. 6.long-vowel word for 'new' (contrast hara 'lake'):

    Hint: the word for 'new'; doubled vowels make it long, unlike 'lake'

  7. 7.geminated word for 'highland' (contrast badaa 'bad'):

    Hint: the word for 'highland'; the doubled d distinguishes it from 'bad'

  8. 8.subject pronoun 'I':

    Hint: the first-person singular pronoun

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

    Hint: the second-person singular pronoun

  10. 10.Oromo's basic word order, abbreviated (Subject-Object-Verb):

    Hint: the three-letter abbreviation with the verb LAST

10 questions

Grammar reference: Numerals per Omniglot; length/gemination minimal pairs and grammar per 'Oromo language' and Griefenow-Mewis (2001). 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 case system (nominative, accusative/absolutive, genitive, dative…), verb conjugation and tense, gender agreement, and questions. Content here is being expanded in a later run and is not yet complete.

B1.2Intermediate · Vocabulary Strategy

🚧 In development. High-frequency vocabulary and derivation patterns will be added here, drawn from standard Oromo grammars and dictionaries.

B2.1Upper Intermediate · Register & Region

🚧 In development. This section will treat the main dialect groups (e.g. Borana–Arsi–Guji, Mecha, Tulama, Wollo, Harar) and standard written Oromo. Not yet complete.

C1.1Advanced · Culture & Nuance

🚧 In development. Planned: proverbs, the gadaa cultural system's vocabulary, and idiom. Not yet complete.

C2.1Mastery · Toward Fluency

🚧 In development. Planned: mastering length/gemination in fast speech and a media plan (OBN, Oromo news, music). Not yet complete.

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