Abstract
This study examines aspectual distinctions and their contrasts in Hausa, a Chadic language widely spoken across the West African Sub-Saharan region. In linguistic theory, aspect refers to the non-deictic temporal structure of a verb, how an action unfolds over time, independent of tense. In Hausa, aspectual distinctions do not describe the action itself but rather capture its durative dynamics: whether an event begins, continues, concludes, or recurs. The research investigates both the semantic and morphosyntactic properties of aspect in Hausa, with particular attention to its classification and contrastive patterns. Drawing on theoretical frameworks as well as empirical evidence from natural speech and elicited examples, the study identifies and analyses recurring patterns in aspectual usage. Findings reveal that Hausa exhibits a rich inventory of aspectual categories, including stative, progressive, inceptive, completive, and habitual forms. In addition, the study proposes a set of aspectual contrasts that shed light on the language’s grammatical architecture. These insights underscore the relevance of Hausa aspectual distinctions for applications in language pedagogy, translation studies, and natural language processing. Ultimately, this research contributes to the broader discourse on aspect in linguistic theory and deepens our understanding of an understudied feature in Hausa.
Keywords: Aspectual verb, Classification, Contrast, Semantics, Hausa
DOI: www.doi.org/10.36349/sojolics.2025.v01i02.005
author/Nasiru Abubakar & Prof. Baridisi Hope Isaac
journal/Sokoto JOLICS 1(2) | November 2025 |








