Likes, Wants, and Needs in Indonesian
Suka, Mau, dan Perlu
This article is part of the Indonesian grammar tree on Settemila Lingue.
Overview
Expressing what you like, want, and need is fundamental to daily communication. Indonesian makes this easy with a small set of verbs that work the same way: they are followed directly by another verb or a noun, with no special linking words needed. Suka (like), mau/ingin (want), and perlu/butuh (need) are the key words.
These verbs function like modals — they precede the main verb without any changes. Saya suka makan literally translates as "I like eat," with no "to" or "-ing" required. This directness makes Indonesian very efficient for expressing preferences.
How It Works
Key Verbs
| Indonesian | English | Formality |
|---|---|---|
| suka | like | neutral |
| mau | want | casual |
| ingin | want/wish | more formal |
| perlu | need | neutral |
| butuh | need | casual |
| benci | hate | neutral |
| tidak suka | dislike | neutral |
Patterns
| Pattern | Example | English |
|---|---|---|
| Subject + suka + noun | Saya suka kopi. | I like coffee. |
| Subject + suka + verb | Saya suka makan. | I like eating. |
| Subject + mau + verb | Saya mau pergi. | I want to go. |
| Subject + perlu + noun | Saya perlu uang. | I need money. |
| Subject + tidak suka | Saya tidak suka pedas. | I don't like spicy food. |
Mau vs. Ingin
| Mau | Ingin |
|---|---|
| Casual, everyday | More formal, literary |
| Immediate want | Deeper desire |
| Saya mau makan. (I want to eat.) | Saya ingin menjadi dokter. (I wish to become a doctor.) |
Examples in Context
| Indonesian | English | Note |
|---|---|---|
| Saya suka makan nasi goreng. | I like eating fried rice. | Suka + verb |
| Kamu mau ke mana? | Where do you want to go? | Mau in question |
| Perlu beli lagi. | Need to buy more. | Perlu + verb |
| Saya tidak suka ini. | I don't like this. | Negation with tidak |
| Dia ingin belajar bahasa Indonesia. | She wants to study Indonesian. | Formal want |
| Kami butuh bantuan. | We need help. | Casual need |
| Mau minum apa? | What do you want to drink? | Common question |
| Saya benci macet. | I hate traffic jams. | Strong dislike |
| Anak-anak suka bermain. | Children like to play. | General preference |
| Saya tidak mau pergi. | I don't want to go. | Negated want |
Common Mistakes
Adding "to" between modal and verb
- Wrong: Saya mau untuk pergi.
- Right: Saya mau pergi.
- Why: Unlike English "want to," Indonesian mau is followed directly by the verb with no linking word.
Confusing mau and suka
- Wrong: Saya mau kopi when expressing a general preference
- Right: Saya suka kopi (I like coffee — general) vs. Saya mau kopi (I want coffee — right now)
- Why: Suka expresses general preferences; mau expresses an immediate desire.
Using perlu and butuh interchangeably in formal contexts
- Wrong: Kami butuh bantuan Anda in a formal letter
- Right: Kami memerlukan bantuan Anda (formal) or Kami perlu bantuan Anda
- Why: Butuh is informal. Perlu is neutral, and memerlukan is the formal affixed form.
Practice Tips
- Practice expressing preferences about food, activities, and places: Saya suka..., saya tidak suka..., saya mau..., saya perlu... Build a personal preference profile in Indonesian.
- Use mau in everyday interactions — it is one of the most useful words for ordering food, shopping, and making plans.
Related Concepts
- Basic Verb Structure — how modal-like verbs fit into sentence structure
Prerequisite
Basic Verb Structure in IndonesianA1More A1 concepts
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