Yoruba Top 100 Common Verbs: A Comprehensive Reference

The 100 most common Yoruba verbs grouped by meaning, with tone, pre-verb markers, serial verb constructions, and idioms for learners.

Yoruba Top 100 Common Verbs: A Comprehensive Reference

Yoruba verbs are remarkably economical in form. Most are monosyllabic, consisting of a consonant plus a vowel, and they encode an extraordinary amount of distinction through their three-tone system, their pattern of pre-verb tense and aspect markers, and the systematic use of serial verb constructions in which two or more verbs concatenate to express what English would render as a single verb plus a preposition. The Yoruba verb lọ (go), three letters and one syllable, anchors a vast network of verbal phrases: lọ wọlé ("go enter" = enter), lọ wá ("go come" = go and come back), lọ rí ("go see" = visit). Mastering Yoruba verbs requires not only memorizing root forms but understanding their tonal stability, their behavior under negation and aspect, and their tendency to combine.

This reference catalogues the 100 most frequent Yoruba verbs, organized by semantic field, with notes on tone, common collocations, and typical pre-verb markers. For grammatical depth, see the Yoruba verb tense and aspect markers reference and the Yoruba three tones reference. For pronoun forms used as verb subjects, see the Yoruba pronouns reference.

Existence, Possession, and Identity

Yoruba English Notes
To be (located) "Ó wà níbí" = "He/she is here"
Jẹ́ To be (equational) "Ó jẹ́ olùkọ́" = "He/she is a teacher"
To have / to possess "Mo ní owó" = "I have money"
Kò sí To not exist "Owó kò sí" = "There is no money"
Ṣe To be / to do (auxiliary) Multipurpose; tone matters
To become "Ó dà ńlá" = "It became big"
Yìí To remain (poetic) Stative form

The verb jẹ́ (to be, equational) and (to be, locational) parallel Spanish ser and estar. Jẹ́ identifies what something is; identifies where it is.

"Ohun tí a bá fi pamọ́ lọ́dọ̀ ọmọdé, kò ní pẹ́ tí ò ní wà fún àgbà" — What we hide from a child will not long remain hidden from the elder. The verb in proverbial action.

Motion Verbs

Yoruba English
Lọ To go
To come
Wọ To enter
Jáde To exit
Gòkè To climb / go up
Sọ̀kalẹ̀ To descend
Lọ́ọ̀dò To approach
Sún To shift / move
Pa dà To return
To run / flee
Tẹ̀lé To follow
Lépa To pursue
Yan To stride / walk grandly
Rìn To walk

The verb lọ (to go) appears in countless serial constructions. Lọ rí Délé = "go see Dele," compressing what English needs two verbs and a conjunction for.

Verbs of Speaking and Communication

Yoruba English
Sọ To say / to tell
To say
To call
Béèrè To ask
Dáhùn To answer
To insult
Yìn To praise
Kọ To sing / to write
Kàá To read
Júwe To describe
Sọ̀rọ̀ To converse
Bá... sọ̀rọ̀ To talk to someone

The verb kọ is interesting: with a high tone it means "to write," with a low tone "to refuse / to teach / to sing," and with a mid tone "to crow." This is one of the classic minimal sets used to demonstrate Yoruba tonal contrast. See the Yoruba three tones reference.

Perception Verbs

Yoruba English
To see
Wo To look at
Gbọ́ To hear / to understand
Tẹ́tí To listen
Tọ́ To taste
Súnnún To smell
Fọwọ́kàn To touch
Mọ̀ To know

The verb gbọ́ is doubly important: it means both "to hear" and "to understand." When a Yoruba speaker says Mi ò gbọ́ Yorùbá, it means "I do not hear Yoruba" / "I do not understand Yoruba." The expression covers comprehension generally.

Cognitive Verbs

Yoruba English
Mọ̀ To know
To think
Gbàgbé To forget
Rántí To remember
Mọ́ọ̀nú To know how
Gbàgbọ́ To believe
Fẹ́ To want / to love
Fẹ́ràn To love (a person/thing)
Bẹ̀rù To fear
Banújẹ́ To be sad
Ní ìbànújẹ́ To grieve
Ní ayọ̀ To rejoice

The verb fẹ́ is one of the most common in the language. It means "to want" and "to love" and is the root of countless idioms. Mo fẹ́ ẹ is "I want / love it / her/him."

Verbs of Eating, Drinking, and Cooking

Yoruba English
Jẹ To eat
Mu To drink
To cook
Sun To roast
Dín To fry
To boil
Yan To grill
Pọ́n To grind
To sell
To buy
Pèsè To prepare / provide

The verb jẹ with mid tone means "to eat." With other tones it means "to confess / to suffer / to win" (in different forms). The phrase jẹ orí ("eat the head") metaphorically means "to take the lead / win."

For the broader food and cooking context, see the Yoruba food vocabulary reference.

"Ẹní gbin ni yóò kórè" — He who plants will harvest. The Yoruba verb of action embedded in proverbial rhythm.

Action Verbs (Daily Life)

Yoruba English
Ṣe To do / to make
Ṣiṣẹ́ To work
Ṣòwò To trade
Pa To kill
To hit / beat
Ya To tear / draw
Kọ́ To build
Wẹ̀ To bathe / wash
Fọ̀ To wash (clothes)
Ka To count
Sin To bury / accompany
Sùn To sleep
To wake up
Dúró To stand / wait
Jókòó To sit
Bẹ́rẹ̀ To start
Parí To finish

Verbs of Giving, Taking, Making

Yoruba English
Fún To give
Gbà To take / receive
To take / hold
Gbà... fún To accept... for
To divide / draw
Pin To share / divide
Rán To send
Gbé To carry
Gbé... lé To put on
Pèsè To provide
To steal

The serial construction Gbé... lé (literally "carry... place upon") is essential for "to put on / place upon." Yoruba builds many transitive operations from these two-verb sequences.

Verbs of Becoming and Change

Yoruba English
To become
Yí padà To change
Dáàgbà To grow up / age
Ku To die
To give birth
To be ready / cooked / ripe
To swell
Tobi To become big
Kéré To become small

Verbs with Pre-verb Markers

Yoruba expresses tense and aspect mainly through pre-verb markers placed before the verb. The verb itself does not change form.

Marker Function Example
Ń Progressive / habitual Mò ń jẹ = "I am eating"
Ti Perfect Mo ti jẹ = "I have eaten"
Máa Future Mo máa jẹ = "I will eat"
Á Future (alternative) Mà á jẹ = "I will eat"
Yóò Future (formal) Yóò jẹ = "He/she will eat"
Tí... ti Past perfect Mo tí ti jẹ = "I had already eaten"
Máa ń Habitual Mo máa ń jẹ = "I usually eat"

For the complete tense and aspect grammar, see the Yoruba verb tense and aspect markers reference.

Negation of Verbs

Yoruba negates verbs with (or ò in casual speech) placed before the verb.

Affirmative Negative
Mo lọ Mi ò lọ ("I did not go")
Mo ń lọ Mi ò lọ / Mi ò ń lọ ("I am not going")
Mo ti lọ Mi ò ì tí ì lọ ("I have not gone")
Mo máa lọ Mi ò ní í lọ ("I will not go")

Note that the first-person singular pronoun shifts from mo to mi in negation: Mo lọ (I went) becomes Mi ò lọ (I did not go).

Imperatives (Commands)

The simplest imperative is the bare verb: Lọ! = "Go!", Wá! = "Come!", Jókòó! = "Sit down!"

Polite imperatives use ẹ jọ̀ọ́ (please) and the plural respectful pronoun :

English Yoruba
Please come Ẹ jọ̀ọ́, ẹ wá
Please sit Ẹ jọ̀ọ́, ẹ jókòó
Don't go Má lọ
Don't worry Má jẹ́ kí o ṣàníyàn

The negative imperative is the prefix-like marker for "do not."

Serial Verb Constructions

One of the most distinctive features of Yoruba is the serial verb construction (SVC), where two or more verbs share a subject and form a single semantic unit.

Yoruba Literal Meaning
Mu omi mu Drink water drink Drink water down
Lọ wá rà Go come buy Go and buy [it]
Mú wá Take come Bring
Mú lọ Take go Take away
Sá lọ Run go Run away
Gbé wá Carry come Bring

The pattern mú wá (take + come) for "bring" and mú lọ (take + go) for "take away" replace what English handles with directional prefixes.

"A kì í gbé ọmọ ká fi tọ̀rọ̀ owó" — One does not carry a child to beg for money. Yoruba serial verb (gbé... fi) in proverb.

Common Verb Idioms

Idiom Literal Meaning
Pa ọwọ́ pọ̀ Strike hand together Clap
Pa àwàdà Strike a joke Make a joke
Pa irọ́ Strike a lie Lie
Sọ asọ Throw cloth Wear cloth (formally)
Ṣe ìbéèrè Make a question Ask
Gbé orí sọ̀kalẹ̀ Bring head down Be humble
Pa ìfẹ́ run Destroy love End a relationship

The verb pa ("to kill") frequently functions in idioms for performative actions, similar to English "make."

Common Mistakes Learners Make

Trying to conjugate verbs: Yoruba verbs do not conjugate. The same verb form serves all persons and numbers; tense and aspect come from pre-verb markers.

Ignoring tones on verbs: Many verbs differ only by tone. Kọ́ (to teach), kọ̀ (to refuse), kọ (to write) are all spelled the same without tone marks.

Using English word order in serial constructions: "Bring it" is mú wá (take + come), not "carry it here" reordered.

Forgetting the negation pronoun shift: First-person mo becomes mi in negation; second-person o becomes o but with the negative kò/ò.

Treating "to be" as one word: Yoruba has at least three "to be" verbs (wà, jẹ́, ṣe) covering location, identity, and copular functions respectively.

Quick Reference: Top 30 Most Frequent Verbs

Rank Yoruba English
1 To be (located)
2 Jẹ́ To be (equational)
3 To have
4 Lọ To go
5 To come
6 Jẹ To eat
7 Mu To drink
8 To see
9 Gbọ́ To hear
10 Sọ To say
11 Mọ̀ To know
12 Fẹ́ To want / love
13 Ṣe To do
14 Ṣiṣẹ́ To work
15 To possess
16 Pa To kill
17 To take
18 Fún To give
19 Gbà To receive
20 To give birth
21 To die
22 Sùn To sleep
23 To wake up
24 Wẹ̀ To bathe
25 To cook
26 To buy
27 To sell
28 Kọ To write / sing / refuse
29 Kàá To read
30 Yan To choose

Frequently Asked Questions

Do Yoruba verbs change form for tense? No. Yoruba verbs are invariant. Tense and aspect are expressed by pre-verb markers (ti, ń, máa, etc.) placed before the verb root, while the verb itself never inflects.

Are tones really critical for verbs? Yes. Many verbs are minimal pairs differing only by tone. (to gather), kọ (to write), kọ́ (to teach), kọ̀ (to refuse) are pronounced with different tones and mean entirely different things.

What is a serial verb construction? A sequence of two or more verbs sharing a subject and combining to express a single complex meaning. Common examples include mú wá ("bring" = take + come) and lọ rí ("go and see" = visit).

How do I form the imperative? The bare verb is the simplest command: Lọ! = "Go!" Polite versions use ẹ jọ̀ọ́ (please) and the plural respectful pronoun .

Why are some verbs followed by ní, fún, or sí? These are functional particles or postpositions that mark indirect objects, recipients, and directional goals. Fún marks beneficiary ("to / for"), marks goal ("to a place").

Can I memorize verbs without their tones? Not safely. The tone is part of the word. Romanizations without tones leave learners producing forms that may be wrong or unintelligible.

What is the most useful single verb to learn first? ("to be located") and lọ ("to go") are foundational. Combined with the pre-verb markers, they generate hundreds of common sentences.

See Also

Author: Kalenux Team

Frequently Asked Questions

Do Yoruba verbs change form for tense?

No. Yoruba verbs are invariant. Tense and aspect are expressed by pre-verb markers like ti, n, and maa placed before the verb root, while the verb itself never inflects.

Are tones really critical for verbs?

Yes. Many verbs are minimal pairs differing only by tone. Ko meaning gather, ko meaning write, ko meaning teach, and ko meaning refuse are pronounced with different tones and mean entirely different things.

What is a serial verb construction?

A sequence of two or more verbs sharing a subject and combining to express a single complex meaning. Common examples include mu wa for bring (take plus come) and lo ri for visit (go plus see).

How do I form the imperative?

The bare verb is the simplest command: Lo means Go. Polite versions use e joo meaning please and the plural respectful pronoun e.

Why are some verbs followed by ni, fun, or si?

These are functional particles or postpositions that mark indirect objects, recipients, and directional goals. Fun marks beneficiary, and si marks goal or destination.

Can I memorize verbs without their tones?

Not safely. The tone is part of the word. Romanizations without tones leave learners producing forms that may be wrong or unintelligible to native speakers.

What is the most useful single verb to learn first?

Wa meaning to be located and lo meaning to go are foundational. Combined with the pre-verb markers, they generate hundreds of common sentences.