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Hausa for English speakers

  1. Flashcards
  2. What is Hausa?
  3. Core Vocabulary
  4. Essential Grammar
  5. Pronunciation
  6. Common Mistakes
  7. Learning Resources
  8. Culture & Context
  9. Related Guides

1. Flashcards

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2. What is Hausa?

Hausa is the largest Chadic language (a branch of Afro-Asiatic, related distantly to Arabic and Amharic) and one of Africa's great lingua francas.1 With around 50–80 million speakers when second-language users are counted, it dominates northern Nigeria and Niger and is used for trade and broadcasting across the Sahel.

Today it is most often written in the Boko Latin alphabet, though the older Ajami Arabic script is still seen. Hausa is tonal, distinguishes vowel length, has grammatical gender, and packs subject + tense into a single "person-aspect" pronoun.

Why learn Hausa?

3. Core Vocabulary (1–63)

High-frequency words and phrases. This is the exact deck used by the flashcard trainer above. Use the search box to filter.

#HausaEnglish

4. Essential Grammar

Hausa marks tense/aspect not on the verb but in a person-aspect pronoun (PAC) that fuses the subject with the aspect. The verb itself barely changes.

Person-aspect pronouns ("I", with verb 'eat' = ci)

Aspect"I" formExample
completive (past)nana ci — I ate
continuousinàinà ci — I am eating
futurezânzân ci — I will eat
habitualnakànnakàn ci — I usually eat

Gender

Nouns are masculine or feminine (feminine usually ends in -a). Adjectives and some pronouns agree: shi = he/it (m.), ita = she/it (f.); "good" is nagàri (m.) / tagàri (f.).

Word order is Subject–Verb–Object. The genitive linker na (m.) / ta (f.) joins possessor and possessed: motar Audu = Audu's car.

5. Pronunciation

Hausa has both tone (high, low, falling) and contrastive vowel length; these are often unmarked in everyday writing but must be heard and learned. It also has special consonants:

LetterSoundExample
ɓimplosive b (swallowed)ɓera (mouse)
ɗimplosive dɗaki (room)
ƙejective k (popped)ƙasa (land)
tsejective tstsuntsu (bird)
'yglottalised y'ya'ya (children)

Long vs. short vowels distinguish words, as does tone — pay attention to both from day one.

6. Common Mistakes

7. Learning Resources

8. Culture & Context

Trade and the Sahel

Hausa spread along centuries-old trans-Saharan trade routes. Cities like Kano have been commercial and Islamic-learning hubs for a thousand years, and Hausa remains the language of West African commerce.

Greetings and respect

Elaborate, layered greetings (sannu, ina kwana, ina aiki) are essential courtesy; rushing past them is rude. Islamic phrases (assalamu alaikum) are woven into daily speech.

Kannywood

Northern Nigeria's Hausa-language film and music industry ("Kannywood") is huge, giving learners endless contemporary listening material.

Notes

  1. H. Ekkehard Wolff, "Hausa language," Encyclopædia Britannica, accessed June 4, 2026, https://www.britannica.com/topic/Hausa-language.

Bibliography

Wolff, H. Ekkehard. "Hausa language." Encyclopædia Britannica. Accessed June 4, 2026. https://www.britannica.com/topic/Hausa-language.