Conjugation of the Chinyanja Verb "kuona"

kuona
to see
Stem
-ona
Type
Transitive
Infinitive Prefix
ku-

Present Habitual (-ma-)

Used for regular actions, habits, and general truths. Formed with the habitual marker -ma- between the subject prefix and the verb stem.

Pronoun Conjugation
ine (I) ndimaona
iwe (you sg.) umaona
iye (he/she) amaona
ife (we) timaona
inu (you pl.) mumaona
iwo (they) amaona

Present Progressive (-ku-)

Used for actions happening right now. Formed with the progressive marker -ku- between the subject prefix and the verb stem.

Pronoun Conjugation
ine (I) ndikuona
iwe (you sg.) ukuona
iye (he/she) akuona
ife (we) tikuona
inu (you pl.) mukuona
iwo (they) akuona

Past Tense (-na-)

Used for completed actions in the past. Formed with the past marker -na- between the subject prefix and the verb stem.

Pronoun Conjugation
ine (I) ndinaona
iwe (you sg.) unaona
iye (he/she) anaona
ife (we) tinaona
inu (you pl.) munaona
iwo (they) anaona

Future Tense (-dza-/-za-)

Used for actions that will happen. Formed with the future marker -dza- (or contracted -za-) between the subject prefix and the verb stem.

Pronoun Conjugation
ine (I) ndizaona
iwe (you sg.) uzaona
iye (he/she) azaona
ife (we) tizaona
inu (you pl.) muzaona
iwo (they) azaona

Perfect Tense (-a-)

Used for completed actions with present relevance ("have done"). The subject prefix merges with the marker -a-, creating contracted forms (ndi+a → nda-, u+a → wa-, ti+a → ta-).

Pronoun Conjugation
ine (I) ndaona
iwe (you sg.) waona
iye (he/she) aona
ife (we) taona
inu (you pl.) mwaona
iwo (they) aona

Negative (si-)

Negation is formed by adding the prefix si- before the subject prefix (si+ndi → sindi-, si+u → su-, si+a → sa-, si+ti → siti-, si+mu → simu-).

Pronoun Conjugation
ine (I) sindimaona
iwe (you sg.) sumaona
iye (he/she) samaona
ife (we) sitimaona
inu (you pl.) simumaona
iwo (they) samaona

Imperative (Lamulo)

Direct commands. The plural/polite form adds -ni to the singular form.

Form Command
Singular (iwe) ona!
Plural / Polite (inu) onani!

Verb Extensions (Zowonjezera)

Bantu verb extensions modify the verb stem to create related meanings — applicative (-ir-), causative (-its-/-ets-), reciprocal (-an-), passive (-idw-/-edw-), and stative (-ek-).

Extended Form Meaning
kuonera to see for / on behalf of (applicative)
kuonedwa to be seen (passive)
kuonana to see each other / to meet (reciprocal)

Example Sentences (Zitsanzo)

Ndikuona nyumba.

I see the house.

Tizaonana mawa.

We will see each other tomorrow.

Ndaona kale.

I have already seen.