Afaan Oromo-Chapter 03 - Pronouns

Introductory Conversation
About this sound Play all
Girma: Maqaan kee eenyu? About this sound play
Jim: Maqaan koo Jim. Ati hoo? About this sound play
Girma: Girmaan jedhama. Eessaa dhufte? About this sound play
Jim: Lammii Ameerikaati. Ati hoo? About this sound play
Girma: Jimman jiraadha. Ani barataa yunivarsiitii dha. Hojiin kee maal? About this sound play
Jim: Jaallee nagaatif hojjedha. Maal gosa barnootaa qu'atta? About this sound play
Girma: Qorichan qo'adha. Fuute jirtaa? About this sound play
Jim: Miti, hin fuune. Ati hoo? About this sound play
Girma: Anis hin fuune. About this sound play
Jim: Deemuun qaba. Baga wal agarre. About this sound play
Girma: Anis baga wal agarre. Nagaatti. About this sound play 

Personal Pronouns
The personal pronouns as subjects and direct objects are listed below along with possessive markers.

Subject PronounsDirect Object PronounsPossessive Pronouns
Iani
mena
my, minekoo
wenuti, nu'i
usnu
our, ourskeenya
youati
yousi
your, yourskee
you (pl.)isin
you (pl.)isini
your, yours (pl.)keessan(i)
he, itinni
him, itisa
his, its(i)saa
sheisheen
herishee
her, hersishee
theyisaan
themisaani
their, theirs(i)saani
Like English, Oromo uses different forms of personal pronouns to indicate their role in the sentence. While “he” and “him” may refer to the same person, English uses “he” for subjects and “him” for objects. Oromo has several forms for all nouns, including pronouns, though for now we will only deal with the subject (nominative) and direct object (accusative) forms.
Examples:
“She likes him” — “Isheen isa jaalatti
“He likes her” — “Inni ishee jaalata
“We buy it” — “Nuti isa binna
“Do you hear me?” — “Ati na dhageessa?” or more commonly “Na dhageessaa?

Possessive Pronouns
Possessive pronouns go after the nouns they modify. The word kan can optionally be used to show possession.
Examples:
My shoes — kophee koo or kophee kan koo
Our country — biyyi keenya or biyyi kan keenya
Its price — gatii (i)saa or gatti kan isaa

“And”, “Also”
To express “too, also”, Oromo uses the suffix -s for sentences and the word hoo for questions.
Examples:
“And you/ what about you?” — “Ati hoo?”
“And yours/ what about yours?” — “Kee hoo?” or “Kan kee hoo?'” “Me, too” — “Anis
“She, as well” — “Isheenis
“And they are: …” — “Isaanis: …”

Polite Forms
Oromo uses plural pronouns (isin and isaan) also as the polite/formal pronouns. Mostly, one uses the polite form when talking to/about older and respected members of the community. In many areas of southern Oromia, ati is rarely used (and considered rude) and only the polite form of “you”, isin, is used.

Interrogative Pronouns
Interrogative pronouns are used in questions, and come before the verb and either before or after the subject. Often, if the verb is “is/are”, this verb is dropped when using an interrogative pronoun. The main interrogative pronouns are:
What — Maal(i)
Why [lit. “for what”] — Maaliif(i)
How — Akkam(i)
When — Yoom
Where — Eessa
From where — Eessaa
Who — Eenyu
Whose — Kan eenyu
How much, many — Meeqa
Which — Kam(i)


Vocabulary
maqaa
name
Maqaan kee eenyu?”
“What is your name?”
___ jedhama
“I am called ____”, “My name is ___”
umurii
age
Umuriin kee meeqa?”
“How old are you”
Eessaa dhufte?”
“Where are you from?”
lammii
citizen
___ lammii Ameerikaati
“___ am/are/is American”
___ lammii Itoophiyaati
“___ am/are/is Ethiopian”
biyyi
country
Biyyi kee eessa?”
“Where is your country?”
lammummaa
nationality
Lammummaan kee maali?”
“What is your nationality?”
Ati eessa jiraata?”
“Where do you live?”
jiraadha
I live
barataa yunivarsiitii
university student
hojii
work, job
Hojiin kee maal?”
“What is your job?”
Jaallee nagaati
Peace Corps
Jaallee nagaatif hojjedha
“I work for the Peace Corps”
Maaliif asi dhufte?”
“Why did you come here?”
Gara Itoophiyaa maaliif dhufte?”
“Why did you come to Ethiopia?”
gosa barnootaa
school subject
qoricha
medicine
Fuute jirta” (m) / “Heerumte jirta?” (f)
“Are you married?”
eeyyee
yes
miti, lakki
no
Fuudheera (m) / heerumeera (f)
“I am married”
B>Hin fuunne (m) / hin heerumne (f)
“I am not married”
Deemuun qaba
“I have to go”
Baga wal agarre
“It was nice to meet you”
Nagaatti
“Take care”

Source: Wikibooks

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