Maltese Grammar Basics: A Simple Beginner Guide
Learn the essential building blocks of Maltese grammar: pronouns, demonstrative pronouns, articles, gender, plurals, word order, negatives, questions, possession, basic verbs and Semitic roots.
How to use this guide
Use this page as a quick introduction to how Maltese works. Each section gives you the rule, a simple table and beginner-friendly examples.
What this guide includes
This page covers Maltese pronouns, demonstratives, articles, gender, plurals, word order, negatives, question words, possession, basic verbs and roots.
Search by English, Maltese or grammar note.
Maltese grammar snapshot
Maltese is the only Semitic language written in the Latin alphabet and an official language of the European Union. Its grammar has a Semitic base, with strong influence from Sicilian, Italian and English vocabulary.
| Feature | Maltese | Beginner note |
|---|---|---|
| Basic word order | Often Subject + Verb + Object | For example: Jien nitkellem bil-Malti = I speak Maltese. |
| Subject pronouns | Used, but verb forms also carry meaning | Pronouns are important for beginners. |
| Demonstratives | dan, din, dawn, dak, dik, dawk | This is a key high-value beginner grammar topic. |
| Gender | Masculine and feminine | Nouns and adjectives may agree. |
| Article | il- with sound changes | Examples: il-ktieb, id-dar, ix-xemx. |
| Negatives | ma … -x / mhux | Maltese negation is different from English. |
| Roots | Semitic root system | Many related words share consonant roots. |
Personal pronouns in Maltese
Personal pronouns are an essential starting point in Maltese. They are especially useful with identity sentences, descriptions and beginner conversation.
| English | Maltese | Grammar note |
|---|---|---|
| I | jien | Used for “I”. |
| you singular | int | Used for one person. |
| he | hu | Masculine singular. |
| she | hi | Feminine singular. |
| we | aħna | Used for “we”. |
| you plural | intom | Used for more than one person. |
| they | huma | Used for “they”. |
Demonstrative pronouns in Maltese
Demonstrative pronouns are very important in Maltese because they help you say this, that, these and those. This is one of the most useful beginner grammar areas.
| English | Maltese | Grammar note |
|---|---|---|
| this one / this masculine | dan | Used with masculine singular nouns: dan il-ktieb = this book. |
| this one / this feminine | din | Used with feminine singular nouns: din id-dar = this house. |
| these | dawn | Used with plural nouns: dawn il-kotba = these books. |
| that one / that masculine | dak | Used with masculine singular nouns: dak il-ktieb = that book. |
| that one / that feminine | dik | Used with feminine singular nouns: dik id-dar = that house. |
| those | dawk | Used with plural nouns: dawk il-kotba = those books. |
| this is a book | dan ktieb | A simple beginner identity pattern. |
| this is a house | din dar | Uses din because dar is feminine. |
| these are books | dawn kotba | Uses dawn for plural meaning. |
| that is the sun | dik ix-xemx | xemx is feminine; the article assimilates: ix-xemx. |
The definite article in Maltese
The basic Maltese definite article is il-, but it changes depending on the first sound of the word. This makes the article one of the most important beginner grammar points.
| English | Maltese | Grammar note |
|---|---|---|
| the book | il-ktieb | Basic article before many consonants. |
| the house | id-dar | The article assimilates before d. |
| the sun | ix-xemx | The article assimilates before x. |
| the man | ir-raġel | The article assimilates before r. |
| the woman | il-mara | Basic article before m. |
| the school | l-iskola | Before a vowel, il- often becomes l-. |
| the child | it-tifel | The article assimilates before t. |
| the market | is-suq | The article assimilates before s. |
Gender and plurals in Maltese
Maltese nouns can be masculine or feminine. Plurals can be regular, but Maltese also has many broken plurals, which are inherited from its Semitic structure.
| English | Maltese | Grammar note |
|---|---|---|
| book / books | ktieb / kotba | Broken plural. |
| house / houses | dar / djar | Broken plural. |
| boy / boys | tifel / tfal | Irregular/broken plural. |
| girl / girls | tifla / tfajliet | Common irregular plural. |
| teacher / teachers | għalliem / għalliema | A common people-word pattern. |
| small boy | tifel żgħir | Masculine adjective form. |
| small girl | tifla żgħira | Feminine adjective form. |
| small children | tfal żgħar | Plural adjective form. |
Basic Maltese word order
Maltese often uses Subject + Verb + Object word order, but because it is a Semitic language, its sentence structure can feel different from English and Romance languages.
| English | Maltese | Grammar note |
|---|---|---|
| I speak Maltese. | Jien nitkellem bil-Malti. | Subject + verb + phrase. |
| I speak Maltese. | Nitkellem bil-Malti. | The subject pronoun can often be omitted. |
| She reads a book. | Hi taqra ktieb. | A clear beginner sentence pattern. |
| We live in Malta. | Aħna noqogħdu Malta. | noqogħdu can mean “we live/stay”. |
| the big house | id-dar il-kbira | Adjective follows the noun and also takes the article. |
| the small book | il-ktieb iż-żgħir | Definite adjective agrees with a definite noun. |
Negatives in Maltese
Maltese negatives are very distinctive. With many verbs, Maltese uses ma before the verb and -x at the end of the verb. The word mhux is also very important and often means “not”.
| English | Maltese | Grammar note |
|---|---|---|
| I speak Maltese. | Nitkellem bil-Malti. | Positive sentence. |
| I do not speak Maltese. | Ma nitkellimx bil-Malti. | ma before the verb and -x at the end. |
| I understand. | Nifhem. | Positive verb. |
| I do not understand. | Ma nifhimx. | Negative verb pattern. |
| This is not a book. | Dan mhux ktieb. | mhux is often used for “is not / are not”. |
| I am not Maltese. | Jien mhux Malti. | mhux with identity/description. |
Question words in Maltese
Question words are very useful in Maltese because they help you build practical sentences quickly.
| English | Maltese | Example |
|---|---|---|
| who? | min? | Min hu? = Who is he? |
| what? | xiex? / xi? | X’inhu dan? = What is this? |
| where? | fejn? | Fejn hi l-iskola? = Where is the school? |
| when? | meta? | Meta tasal? = When do you arrive? |
| why? | għaliex? | Għaliex titgħallem il-Malti? = Why are you learning Maltese? |
| how? | kif? | Kif int? = How are you? |
| how much? | kemm? | Kemm jiswa? = How much does it cost? |
| which? | liema? | Liema ktieb? = Which book? |
Possession in Maltese
Maltese possession can be expressed with forms such as tiegħi, tiegħek and tiegħu. Possessive endings are also very common with family words and body parts.
| English | Maltese | Grammar note |
|---|---|---|
| my book | il-ktieb tiegħi | tiegħi = my / mine. |
| your book | il-ktieb tiegħek | tiegħek = your / yours. |
| his book | il-ktieb tiegħu | tiegħu = his. |
| her book | il-ktieb tagħha | tagħha = her / hers. |
| our house | id-dar tagħna | tagħna = our / ours. |
| their house | id-dar tagħhom | tagħhom = their / theirs. |
| my mother | ommi | Possessive ending attached to the noun. |
| my father | missieri | Common family word with possessive form. |
A simple Maltese verb pattern: nitkellem
The verb nitkellem means “I speak”. Maltese verbs are built differently from Romance verbs, but this is a useful beginner pattern.
| English | Maltese | Grammar note |
|---|---|---|
| I speak | nitkellem | First person singular. |
| you speak | titkellem | Singular “you”. |
| he speaks | jitkellem | Masculine singular. |
| she speaks | titkellem | Feminine singular has the same form as “you speak” here. |
| we speak | nitkellmu | First person plural. |
| you plural speak | titkellmu | Plural “you”. |
| they speak | jitkellmu | Third person plural. |
Semitic roots in Maltese
Many Maltese words are built around roots made of consonants. This is one of the features that connects Maltese to Arabic and other Semitic languages.
| Root / pattern | Example words | Beginner note |
|---|---|---|
| K-T-B | ktieb, kotba, kiteb | Connected with writing/books. |
| Q-R-A | qara, naqra, qari | Connected with reading. |
| F-H-M | fehem, nifhem, ftehim | Connected with understanding. |
| GĦ-L-M | għallem, għalliem, tagħlim | Connected with teaching/learning. |
| X-R-B | xorob, nixrob, xorb | Connected with drinking. |
Quick facts
Maltese grammar FAQ
Is Maltese grammar difficult for beginners?
Maltese grammar is different from English and Romance languages because it has a Semitic structure. Beginners should start with pronouns, demonstratives, articles, gender, plurals, negatives and common verbs.
What are the demonstrative pronouns in Maltese?
The main Maltese demonstrative pronouns are dan, din, dawn, dak, dik and dawk. They mean this, these, that and those, with different forms for masculine, feminine and plural nouns.
What is the difference between dan and din in Maltese?
Dan is used with masculine singular nouns, while din is used with feminine singular nouns. For example, dan il-ktieb means “this book” and din id-dar means “this house”.
Does Maltese have masculine and feminine nouns?
Yes. Maltese nouns are usually masculine or feminine, and adjectives can change depending on gender and number.
How does the Maltese definite article work?
The basic definite article is il-, but it changes depending on the following sound. For example, il-ktieb means “the book”, id-dar means “the house” and ix-xemx means “the sun”.
