Ya kamata mu yi atisaye kullum domin jiki ya sami ƙarfi.

Breakdown of Ya kamata mu yi atisaye kullum domin jiki ya sami ƙarfi.

samu
to get
yi
to do
mu
we
kullum
every day
ya kamata
should
domin
so that
ya
it
atisaye
exercise
jiki
body
ƙarfi
strength
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Questions & Answers about Ya kamata mu yi atisaye kullum domin jiki ya sami ƙarfi.

What does ya kamata do grammatically in this sentence?

Ya kamata is a very common Hausa expression meaning it is proper / it is necessary / one should. Grammatically it works like an impersonal “necessity” or “obligation” phrase, and it is typically followed by a verb phrase in the subjunctive (the “should/let’s” type of form), like mu yi.


Why is there a ya in ya kamata if we aren’t talking about “he”?

Here ya is not really “he” in meaning. Hausa often uses a 3rd-person marker (ya) in impersonal expressions, a bit like English uses a dummy subject in it is necessary.... So ya kamata is best learned as a fixed pattern: ya kamata + (subjunctive clause).


Why does it say mu yi and not muna yi?

Because after ya kamata, Hausa normally uses the subjunctive form:

  • mu yi = (that) we should do Whereas muna yi is imperfective/continuous:
  • muna yi = we are doing / we do (habitually)

So ya kamata mu yi ... is “we should ...”, not “we are ...”.


What exactly is the form yi here—an infinitive?

Hausa doesn’t have an infinitive that works exactly like English to do. After subjunctive pronouns like mu, the verb commonly appears as a bare verb stem:

  • mu + yi (subjunctive)
    So yi here is the verb stem do/make used after the subjunctive marker mu.

Is atisaye a native Hausa word? Can I say something else?

Atisaye is a very common loanword meaning exercise/practice. Many speakers also use a more “Hausa” expression depending on context, such as motsa jiki (literally “move the body”) for physical exercise. Which one sounds best can depend on region and whether you mean “training/practice” vs “exercise for fitness”.


What is kullum, and can it move around in the sentence?

Kullum is an adverb meaning always / every day / daily (depending on context). It often comes after the verb phrase, as in the sentence, but it can sometimes be moved for emphasis. The most neutral placement here is exactly what you see: after the object atisaye.


What does domin do here? Is it “because” or “so that”?

Domin introduces a reason/purpose clause. In this sentence it’s clearly purpose: in order that / so that.
Hausa can also express “because” with domin in some contexts, but if you want an unambiguous “because (reason)” you’ll often see saboda.


Why does the second part start again with a subject: jiki ya ...?

Because domin introduces a new clause, and Hausa normally states the subject explicitly in that clause:

  • Main clause: mu yi atisaye kullum
  • Purpose clause: domin jiki ya sami ƙarfi

So jiki is the subject of the purpose clause, not an object of the first clause.


Why is it jiki ya (with ya)? Is that agreement?

Yes. Jiki (body) is grammatically treated as masculine singular in Hausa, so the 3rd-person masculine marker ya is used. If the subject were feminine, you’d typically see ta instead.


Does ya sami mean “got” (past)? The English meaning is not past.

Good catch: ya can look like a past/perfective marker, but Hausa also uses the same-looking form (ya) as the 3rd-person marker in the subjunctive set. In a purpose clause after domin, ya sami is best understood as may get / should get / can get (purpose), not as a simple past “got”.


What’s the difference between sami, samu, and samun?

They’re related forms of the same verb idea get/obtain:

  • samun is commonly the verbal noun (often like “getting/obtaining”).
  • samu/sami are finite verb forms you’ll see with subject markers (exact choice can vary by usage, style, and speaker).
    In many contexts learners will meet ya samu as a very common “he got/obtained”, but ya sami is also widely used and understood.

How do I pronounce ƙarfi and what is ƙ?

Ƙ/ƙ is a distinct Hausa letter (an implosive “k”-type sound), not the same as plain k. In careful pronunciation it’s produced with an inward “gulped” k-like articulation.
So ƙarfi is not pronounced like English karfi—the ƙ has its own sound. If you can’t produce it yet, many learners approximate it with k, and people will usually still understand, but it’s worth practicing because it distinguishes words in Hausa.


How would I make the whole sentence negative: “We shouldn’t exercise every day…”?

A common way is to negate ya kamata:

  • Bai kamata mu yi atisaye kullum ba, domin jiki ya sami ƙarfi.
    Depending on exactly what you want to negate (the obligation vs the purpose), speakers may adjust the wording, but bai kamata ... ba is the core pattern for “it’s not necessary / one shouldn’t ...”.