Learn Tigrinya: A Complete Guide for Beginners

Table of Contents

1. Why Learn Tigrinya? 2. History and Heritage of the Tigrinya Language 3. The Ge'ez Script: A Millennia-Old Writing System 4. Pronunciation and Phonology 5. Basic Grammar: Triconsonantal Roots and Conjugations 6. Greetings and Essential Expressions 7. Essential Vocabulary by Theme 8. Tigrinya Words You May Already Know 9. Eritrean and Tigrayan Culture: Living Traditions 10. The Tigrinya Diaspora Around the World 11. Learn Tigrinya with Targumi

---

Why Learn Tigrinya?

Tigrinya (ትግርኛ) is one of the great Semitic languages of Africa, spoken by approximately 9 million people in Eritrea and the Tigray region of Ethiopia. It is the primary working language of Eritrea and one of the most widely spoken languages in the Horn of Africa.

Learning Tigrinya in 2026 means discovering a language with a fascinating writing system, opening a door to a millennia-old culture at the crossroads of Africa and the Middle East, and connecting with a dynamic and influential global diaspora.

Eritrea's main language. While Eritrea has no constitutionally designated official language, Tigrinya and Arabic are the two working languages of the government and the most widely used in education, administration, and media. Approximately 55% of the Eritrean population speaks Tigrinya as a mother tongue. A unique writing system. Tigrinya is written in Ge'ez (ግእዝ), an alphasyllabary writing system more than 2,000 years old. Each character represents a consonant-vowel combination, creating a system that is both elegant and logical. The Ge'ez script is one of the few indigenous African writing systems still in daily use — alongside Tifinagh (Berber) and N'Ko (Manding). An African Semitic language. Tigrinya belongs to the Semitic language family — the same family as Arabic, Hebrew, and Amharic. This kinship means that learning Tigrinya facilitates access to other Semitic languages and vice versa. A bridge to the Horn of Africa. Understanding Tigrinya gives you a key to the Horn of Africa — a strategic region comprising Eritrea, Ethiopia, Djibouti, and Somalia. A massive and influential diaspora. Hundreds of thousands of Eritreans and Tigrayans live in the diaspora — in Europe (Germany, Sweden, Norway, Italy, Switzerland), the United States, Canada, Australia, and the Middle East. Learning Tigrinya connects you to this worldwide community.

---

History and Heritage of the Tigrinya Language

Semitic Origins in Africa

Tigrinya descends from Ge'ez, the classical language of Ethiopia and Eritrea, which itself descends from a Semitic branch that crossed the Red Sea from Southern Arabia approximately 3,000 years ago. The kingdom of D'mt (Dʿmt), which existed between the 10th and 5th centuries BCE in present-day northern Ethiopia and Eritrea, already used an early form of South Arabian script.

The Kingdom of Aksum

The Kingdom of Aksum (1st - 7th century CE) was one of the great civilizations of antiquity. Based in present-day northern Ethiopia and Eritrea, Aksum was a commercial power controlling trade between the Mediterranean and the Indian Ocean. It was under Aksum that the Ge'ez script was developed and Christianity was adopted as the state religion (around 330 CE, one of the first Christian states in the world).

Ge'ez became a liturgical and literary language, while the spoken languages evolved to give birth to Tigrinya, Tigre, and Amharic. Ge'ez is still used today in the liturgy of the Eritrean and Ethiopian Orthodox Churches, much as Latin is in the Catholic Church.

The Evolution of Tigrinya

Tigrinya differentiated from Ge'ez probably between the 9th and 13th centuries. The earliest texts written in Tigrinya (as opposed to classical Ge'ez) date from the 13th century. The language developed in the historical Tigray region — a territory now divided between Eritrea (eastern Tigrinya) and Ethiopia (Tigray region).

The Colonial Era and Linguistic Resistance

Eritrea was colonized by Italy (1890-1941), then administered by Britain (1941-1952), before being annexed by Ethiopia (1962-1991). Under Ethiopian occupation, Amharic was the imposed official language, and Tigrinya use was discouraged. The Eritrean independence struggle (1961-1991) was also a fight for linguistic rights: Tigrinya became a symbol of national identity.

Eritrean Independence

Eritrea gained independence in 1993 following a referendum. Tigrinya and Arabic became the main working languages. The Ge'ez script is today a symbol of cultural pride for Eritreans and Ethiopians alike.

---

The Ge'ez Script: A Millennia-Old Writing System

A Unique Alphasyllabary

The Ge'ez script (ግእዝ) — also called fidäl (ፊደል) — is an alphasyllabary: each character represents a consonant-vowel combination. It is neither an alphabet (where consonants and vowels are separate letters) nor a pure syllabary — it is an intermediate system, elegant and logical.

The Basic System

Ge'ez has 33 base consonants, each declined in 7 orders corresponding to 7 vowels. This gives approximately 231 base characters — an impressive number, but the logic is systematic: each vowel modification follows the same visual pattern.

Here is the example with the consonant (l):

Vowel Pronunciation | ----------------------| ä (ə) lä | u lu | i li | a la | é lé | (ı̈) or Ø l (brief or silent) | o lo |

This pattern repeats for all consonants. Once you recognize the base form of a consonant, you can deduce its 7 variants.

Essential Consonants

Sound ------- h m s b t n k

Learning Strategy

The most effective approach is to learn consonant groups with similar visual shapes, starting with the most frequent ones. Most motivated learners can read Ge'ez within a few weeks of daily practice.

---

Pronunciation and Phonology

Vowels

Tigrinya has 7 vowels, corresponding to the 7 orders of the Ge'ez script:

Pronunciation --------------- schwa, like the "a" in "about" /u/ as in "moon" /i/ as in "see" /a/ as in "father" /e/ as in "day" very brief or silent /o/ as in "go"

Special Consonants

Tigrinya has several consonants not found in English:

Ejective consonants — pronounced with additional glottal pressure:
  • (ṭ): an ejective t
  • (q): an ejective k, pronounced at the back of the throat
  • (ṣ): an ejective s
  • (ṗ): an ejective p
  • Pharyngeal consonants:
  • (ḥ): a pharyngeal h, like Arabic ح
  • (ʿ): a pharyngeal "ayn," like Arabic ع
  • Gemination

    Tigrinya uses gemination (consonant doubling) distinctively: a long consonant changes word meaning. Gemination is not always indicated in writing, which presents a challenge for learners.

    ---

    Basic Grammar: Triconsonantal Roots and Conjugations

    The Consonantal Root System

    Like Arabic and Hebrew, Tigrinya is a consonantal root language. Each word is built on a root of (usually) three consonants carrying the basic meaning. Vowels and affixes are inserted between consonants to form different derivations.

    Example with the root ṣ-ḥ-f, carrying the idea of "writing":

  • ṣäḥafä = he wrote
  • ṣäḥafi = writer
  • ṣıḥuf = written
  • mäṣḥaf = book
  • This system is remarkably beautiful and logical: once you know the root, you can guess the meaning of words you have never seen.

    SOV Word Order

    Tigrinya follows Subject-Object-Verb (SOV) word order, like Japanese, Korean, or Turkish:

  • English: "I eat bread" → S-V-O
  • Tigrinya: Anä bani yıbälʿ → S-O-V (literally: "I bread eat")
  • Verb Conjugation

    The Tigrinya verb conjugates for person, number, and gender:

Tigrinya ---------- ፈሊጠ ፈሊጥካ ፈሊጥኪ ፈሊጡ ፈሊጣ ፈሊጥና ፈሊጥኩም ፈሊጥክን ፈሊጦም ፈሊጠን

Tigrinya distinguishes gender in both singular AND plural — a complexity shared with Arabic and Amharic.

Main Tenses

Tigrinya has two basic tenses:

  • Perfect (past): ṣäḥafä = he wrote
  • Imperfect (present/future): yıṣäḥıf = he writes / he will write
  • Negation

    Negation is formed with the prefix ay- and the suffix -n:

  • yıṣäḥıf = he writes → ayıṣäḥıfın = he does not write
  • ---

    Greetings and Essential Expressions

    Greetings in Tigrinya are warm and often lengthy — people ask about family, health, and work. It is an essential social ritual.

    Basic Greetings

    Transliteration ---------------- sälam kämäy aläka? kämäy aläki? dähhan ṣıbuq yäqänyäläy aziyé yäqänyäläy ıwä aykwänän yıqräta sälam qänyı

    Introductions

    Transliteration ---------------- sımäy... ıyu sımka män iyu? sımki män iyu? kabäy ika? tigrinya yımähar aläku

    Everyday Expressions

    Transliteration ---------------- kındäy iyu? ayrdʼanın qäs ilka täzaräb bıkıbrät nıkid

    ---

    Essential Vocabulary by Theme

    Family — ስድራ (sıdra)

    Transliteration ---------------- abo adä wädi gwal ḥaw ḥabti abo ḥago adä ḥago sıdra

    Numbers — ቁጽሪ (quṣri)

    Transliteration ---------------- ḥadä kılätä sälästä arbaʿtä ḥamushtä shıdıshtä shäwʿatä shämontä tıshäʿatä ʿasärtä

    Nature — ተፈጥሮ (täfäṭro)

    Transliteration ---------------- baḥri ruba gobo may ṣähay wärḥi sämay nıfas zınab ḥawi

    Food — መግቢ (mägbi)

    Transliteration ---------------- ınjära ṣäbḥi sıga ʿasa bani ṣäba bun bärbärä
    Order
    Character
    -------
    -----------
    1st
    2nd
    3rd
    4th
    5th
    6th
    7th
    Base consonant
    Full series
    ---------------
    -------------
    ሀ (h)
    ሀ-ሁ-ሂ-ሃ-ሄ-ህ-ሆ
    መ (m)
    መ-ሙ-ሚ-ማ-ሜ-ም-ሞ
    ሰ (s)
    ሰ-ሱ-ሲ-ሳ-ሴ-ስ-ሶ
    በ (b)
    በ-ቡ-ቢ-ባ-ቤ-ብ-ቦ
    ተ (t)
    ተ-ቱ-ቲ-ታ-ቴ-ት-ቶ
    ነ (n)
    ነ-ኑ-ኒ-ና-ኔ-ን-ኖ
    ከ (k)
    ከ-ኩ-ኪ-ካ-ኬ-ክ-ኮ
    Vowel
    Example
    -------
    ---------
    ä (ə)
    ለ (lä)
    u
    ሉ (lu)
    i
    ሊ (li)
    a
    ላ (la)
    é
    ሌ (lé)
    ı̈ / Ø
    ል (l)
    o
    ሎ (lo)
    Person
    Transliteration
    --------
    ----------------
    I
    fäliṭé
    You (m.)
    fäliṭka
    You (f.)
    fäliṭki
    He
    fäliṭu
    She
    fäliṭa
    We
    fäliṭna
    You (m. pl.)
    fäliṭkum
    You (f. pl.)
    fäliṭkın
    They (m.)
    fäliṭom
    They (f.)
    fäliṭän
    Tigrinya
    English
    ----------
    ---------
    ሰላም
    Hello / Peace
    ከመይ ኣለኻ?
    How are you? (to a man)
    ከመይ ኣለኺ?
    How are you? (to a woman)
    ደሓን
    Fine / Healthy
    ጽቡቕ
    Good
    የቐንየለይ
    Thank you
    ኣዚየ የቐንየለይ
    Thank you very much
    እወ
    Yes
    ኣይኮነን
    No
    ይቕረታ
    Excuse me / Sorry
    ሰላም ቀንዩ
    Goodbye (stay well)
    Tigrinya
    English
    ----------
    ---------
    ስመይ... እዩ
    My name is...
    ስምካ መን ኢዩ?
    What is your name? (to a man)
    ስምኪ መን ኢዩ?
    What is your name? (to a woman)
    ካበይ ኢኻ?
    Where are you from? (to a man)
    ትግርኛ ይመሃር ኣለኹ
    I am learning Tigrinya
    Tigrinya
    English
    ----------
    ---------
    ክንደይ ኢዩ?
    How much is it?
    ኣይርድኣንን
    I don't understand
    ቀስ ኢልካ ተዛረብ
    Speak slowly
    ብኽብረት
    Please
    ንኺድ
    Let's go
    Tigrinya
    English
    ----------
    ---------
    ኣቦ
    father
    ኣደ
    mother
    ወዲ
    son
    ጓል
    daughter
    ሓው
    brother
    ሓብቲ
    sister
    ኣቦ ሓጎ
    grandfather
    ኣደ ሓጎ
    grandmother
    ስድራ
    family
    Tigrinya
    English
    ----------
    ---------
    ሓደ
    one
    ክልተ
    two
    ሰለስተ
    three
    ኣርባዕተ
    four
    ሓሙሽተ
    five
    ሽድሽተ
    six
    ሸውዓተ
    seven
    ሸሞንተ
    eight
    ትሸዓተ
    nine
    ዓሰርተ
    ten
    Tigrinya
    English
    ----------
    ---------
    ባሕሪ
    sea
    ሩባ
    river
    ጎቦ
    mountain
    ማይ
    water
    ጸሓይ
    sun
    ወርሒ
    moon / month
    ሰማይ
    sky
    ንፋስ
    wind
    ዝናብ
    rain
    ሓዊ
    fire
    Tigrinya
    English
    ----------
    ---------
    እንጀራ
    injera (fermented flatbread)
    ጸብሒ
    stew / sauce
    ስጋ
    meat
    ዓሳ
    fish
    ባኒ
    bread
    ጸባ
    milk
    ቡን
    coffee
    በርበረ
    spice mix

    ---

    Tigrinya Words You May Already Know

    Injera — The fermented teff flatbread, the iconic dish of Eritrea and Ethiopia, has become known to food lovers worldwide. In Tigrinya: እንጀራ (ınjära). Teff — Teff (ጣፍ, ṭaf in Tigrinya) is a tiny grain native to the Horn of Africa, now a global "superfood." It is the base of injera and a source of protein, iron, and calcium. Habesha — The term ሓበሻ (Habesha) refers to the peoples of the Ethiopian and Eritrean highlands, primarily speakers of Semitic languages. It has become an identity symbol in the diaspora. Ge'ez — The name of the script and liturgical language is known to calligraphy enthusiasts and script historians worldwide. Berbere — The spice blend በርበረ (bärbärä) — red chili, ginger, fenugreek, cardamom, and many other spices — is essential in Tigrinya and Amharic cuisine. It is increasingly used in global gastronomy. Shiroሽሮ (shıro), a spiced chickpea puree, is one of the most popular Eritrean dishes, now available in Ethiopian and Eritrean restaurants worldwide.

    ---

    Eritrean and Tigrayan Culture: Living Traditions

    The Coffee Ceremony — ቡን (bun)

    The coffee ceremony is one of the most important rituals in Tigrinya culture. Coffee is roasted in front of guests, ground with a pestle, then brewed in a jebena (traditional clay coffee pot). Three rounds are served — awäl (first), kalaay (second), and bäraka (third, "the blessing"). The ceremony lasts about an hour and is a moment of socialization and community bonding. Coffee is native to the Horn of Africa, and Eritreans and Ethiopians take great pride in this heritage.

    Injera — More Than Food

    Injera (እንጀራ) is not simply a dish: it is the center of the table, literally. Injera is a large spongy flatbread, fermented for several days from teff flour. It is spread on a large tray, and various stews (ṣäbḥi) are placed on top. You eat by tearing off pieces of injera and using them to scoop up food — no utensils. Sharing injera is an act of communion.

    Religious Festivals

    Eritrea is religiously diverse — approximately 50% Orthodox Christian, 48% Muslim, 2% Catholic. Religious festivals mark the calendar:

  • Meskel (መስቀል): the Festival of the Cross, celebrated in September with spectacular bonfires (damera)
  • Timkat (ጥምቀት): the Orthodox Epiphany, celebrated in January with colorful processions
  • Eid al-Fitr and Eid al-Adha: the great Muslim festivals
  • Tigrinya Music

    Tigrinya music is rich and varied. Traditional instruments include the krar (ክራር, a five- or six-string lyre), the wata (ዋታ, a single-string fiddle), and the kebero (ከበሮ, a large ceremonial drum). Modern Tigrinya music blends traditional instruments with synthesizers and pop influences. Artists like Helen Meles, Bereket Mengisteab, and Yemane Barya are cultural icons.

    Asmara's Architecture — World Heritage

    The Eritrean capital Asmara has been a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 2017 for its exceptional modernist architecture. Built mainly in the 1930s under Italian occupation, Asmara has remarkably preserved Art Deco, Futurist, and Rationalist buildings — a unique "modernist African city."

    ---

    The Tigrinya Diaspora Around the World

    Europe

    Europe hosts a massive Eritrean and Tigrayan diaspora. Germany (approximately 70,000-100,000 Eritreans), Sweden (approximately 50,000), Norway, Switzerland, Italy, and the Netherlands all have significant communities.

    The United States and Canada

    In the United States, Eritrean and Tigrayan communities live in Washington DC (the largest concentration), California (Los Angeles, San Francisco, San Jose), Texas (Dallas, Houston), and Minnesota. Washington DC is often called "Little Asmara." In Canada, Toronto hosts a significant community.

    The Middle East

    Tens of thousands of Eritreans work in Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and Kuwait.

    Sudan

    Neighboring Sudan hosts hundreds of thousands of Eritrean refugees, many of whom are Tigrinya-speaking.

    ---

    Learn Tigrinya with Targumi

    Tigrinya is a language of extraordinary richness and depth. Its millennia-old Ge'ez script, its elegant Semitic grammar based on consonantal roots, and the warmth of its culture make it as demanding as it is rewarding.

    Every Ge'ez character you learn connects you to a writing tradition more than two millennia old. Every Tigrinya word you pronounce opens a door to the Horn of Africa, its music, its legendary cuisine, and its communities around the world.

    Start your language journey today with Targumi. Our platform offers progressive learning paths, vocabulary with pronunciation, Ge'ez writing exercises, and cultural content to understand the language in its living context.

    Also discover our guides on Chichewa and Samoan to explore other fascinating world languages.

    ሰላም! Welcome to the world of Tigrinya!