What Are Imbuhan?
Imbuhan are affixes — small word parts attached to a root word (kata dasar) to change its meaning or grammatical function. Malay uses three types of imbuhan:
- Awalan (Prefixes) — added to the front of a word. Examples: me-, ber-, pe-, per-, ke-.
- Akhiran (Suffixes) — added to the end of a word. Examples: -kan, -an, -i, -wan.
- Apitan (Circumfixes) — a prefix and suffix added simultaneously. Examples: ke-...-an, per-...-an, pen-...-an.
A single root word can produce many derived words through imbuhan. For example, the root word ajar (teach) becomes:
- mengajar (to teach) — awalan meng-
- pelajar (student) — awalan pe-
- pengajaran (lesson/teaching) — apitan peng-...-an
- belajar (to learn) — awalan ber-
- pembelajaran (learning) — apitan pem-...-an
Why Imbuhan Is Important for UPSR
Imbuhan is a core grammar component in the UPSR Bahasa Melayu examination. It is tested directly in Paper 1 (objective questions) and indirectly in Paper 2 (essay writing and comprehension). Students who master imbuhan rules can form words correctly, understand the meaning of derived words in context, and write more fluent essays. Without a solid grasp of imbuhan, students often lose marks in both papers.
Types of Imbuhan Covered
Our worksheets cover all major imbuhan categories in the UPSR syllabus:
Awalan (Prefixes)
- me- / mem- / men- / meng- / meny- / menye- — active verb prefixes
- ber- — reflexive and stative verbs
- per- — causative verbs
- ke- — ordinal numbers, passive
- pe- / pen- / pem- / peng- / peny- / penye- — noun-forming prefixes (doer/instrument)
Akhiran (Suffixes)
- -kan — causative or benefactive
- -an — noun-forming
- -i — locative or repetitive
- -wan — person associated with a field
Apitan (Circumfixes)
- ke-...-an — abstract nouns (e.g., keindahan, kebaikan)
- per-...-an — process or place nouns (e.g., perjalanan, perbincangan)
- pen-...-an — process nouns (e.g., pendidikan, penulisan)
Three Difficulty Levels
Sample Imbuhan Practice Questions
Below are 18 example items pulled directly from our generator’s question bank. Each row shows the root word (kata dasar), the imbuhan applied, the correct derived form, and its meaning — exactly the kind of practice your child gets when they generate a worksheet.
Beginner Set — P1–P2 (Awalan ber-, me-, mem-, men- & Akhiran -an)
Intermediate Set — P3–P4 (Pe-/Pen- doer prefixes & ke-...-an apitan)
Advanced Set — P5–P6 (ke-...-an abstract nouns, peng-...-an processes, -wan)
Common Imbuhan Mistakes UPSR Students Make
These are the high-frequency error patterns our generator targets repeatedly — spotting them in practice is the fastest way to improve marks:
- Confusing nasal allomorphs of me-: Students write memcuci instead of mencuci. The prefix me- changes form (mem-, men-, meng-, meny-, menye-) depending on the first letter of the root word. Letters c, d, j, t take men-; letters b, f, p take mem-; letters g, h, k, vowels take meng-.
- Dropping the initial consonant after me-/pe-: The root tulis becomes menulis (the t drops), and tulis + pe- becomes penulis (again the t drops). Students often keep the consonant (e.g. mentulis) which is wrong.
- Mixing up -kan vs -i: -kan is causative (do to something), while -i is locative (do at/on something). Memberi sesuatu kepada kawan uses memberikan; memberi sesuatu uses just memberi.
- Forgetting circumfix pairs: Apitan must be applied as a pair. Pendidik (a teacher) and pendidikan (education) are different words — the -an ending changes the meaning from doer to abstract concept.
- Using pe- instead of per- for causative verbs: Per- creates causative or stative meanings (perbuat, perbaiki), distinct from doer-forming pe- (pelajar, petani).
Frequently Asked Questions
Imbuhan are affixes added to root words (kata dasar) to form new words. They include awalan (prefixes like me-, ber-, pe-), akhiran (suffixes like -kan, -an, -i), and apitan (circumfixes like ke-...-an, per-...-an).
Yes. The worksheets cover all imbuhan types tested in UPSR Paper 1 and Paper 2, graded across three levels: P1–P2, P3–P4, and P5–P6.
Unlimited. Every worksheet is randomly generated with different questions and answer orders, so your child gets fresh practice each time. No account or payment required.
Yes. You can show or hide the answer key from the control panel before printing or saving as PDF.