Dazun na nemi maɓalli na a jaka amma ban samu shi ba.

Questions & Answers about Dazun na nemi maɓalli na a jaka amma ban samu shi ba.

What does dazun mean, and where can it go in the sentence?

Dazun means a short while ago / earlier (today)—recent past. It often comes at the beginning to set the time frame: Dazun na…
It can also appear later for emphasis, but sentence-initial is very common.

Why is it na nemi and not something like ina nema?

na nemi uses the perfective pattern (completed event): I looked for / I searched for.
ina nema is typically imperfective/progressive: I am looking for / I usually look for.
Because the sentence is about a completed attempt earlier (dazun), na nemi fits.

What exactly does nemi mean here—look for or ask for?

nemi can mean look for/search for or request/seek depending on context.
In this sentence (with a jaka and followed by ban samu shi ba), it clearly means look for/search for.

Why does maɓalli have that special letter ɓ?

Hausa uses ɓ for an implosive b sound (different from regular b).
So maɓalli is pronounced with that implosive consonant; English doesn’t have the exact same sound, but it’s a standard Hausa spelling contrast.

How does possession work in maɓalli na?

maɓalli na literally means key of memy key.
Hausa commonly places the possessed noun first, then the possessive pronoun:

  • maɓalli na = my key
  • jaka ta = her bag (example)
Why is it a jaka and not a cikin jaka?

a jaka means in/at the bag and is often enough when the meaning is clear: in the bag.
a cikin jaka is more explicit: inside the bag. Both can work; a jaka is just shorter and natural.

What is amma, and can it start a sentence?

amma means but/however. It can connect two clauses like English but.
It can also start a new sentence in casual speech/writing, similar to English But…, though some styles prefer linking it within one sentence.

How does the negation ban … ba work?

ban … ba is a common negative frame for the perfective with ni (I). It wraps around the verb phrase:

  • ban samu ba = I didn’t get/find
    Structure (simplified): ba + pronoun + verb + ba
    Here: ba + n + samu + baban samu ba.
Why does it say ban samu shi ba—what is shi doing?

shi is an object pronoun meaning him/it (masculine/neuter). It refers back to maɓalli (key), which is treated as grammatically masculine here.
So ban samu shi ba = I didn’t find it.

Could you drop shi and just say ban samu ba?

Usually you keep the object if it’s specific: ban samu shi ba (didn’t find it).
Saying ban samu ba can sound incomplete unless the object is obvious from context, or you mean something broader like I didn’t succeed / I didn’t get (any).

Why is it samu for find? Doesn’t samu also mean get?

Yes—samu is flexible: get, obtain, find, manage to get.
With searching contexts (nemi), samu naturally means find: you searched and (didn’t) succeed in getting it.

Can you break down the whole sentence word by word?
  • Dazun = earlier / a short while ago
  • na = I (perfective marker with 1st person)
  • nemi = looked for / searched for
  • maɓalli na = my key
  • a = in/at
  • jaka = bag
  • amma = but
  • ban … ba = I did not … (negative perfective frame)
  • samu = find/get
  • shi = it (object pronoun referring to the key)
AI Language TutorTry it ↗
What's the best way to learn Hausa grammar?
Hausa grammar becomes intuitive with practice. Focus on understanding the core patterns first — how sentences are structured, how verbs change form, and how words relate to each other. Our course breaks these concepts into small lessons so you can build understanding step by step.

Sign up free — start using our AI language tutor

Start learning Hausa

Master Hausa — from Dazun na nemi maɓalli na a jaka amma ban samu shi ba to fluency

All course content and exercises are completely free — no paywalls, no trial periods.

  • Infinitely deep — unlimited vocabulary and grammar
  • Fast-paced — build complex sentences from the start
  • Unforgettable — efficient spaced repetition system
  • AI tutor to answer your grammar questions