This study was intended to provide a comprehensive documentation and description of the verbrnmorphology of Borna, a little-documented North Omotic language spoken in Benishangul-rnGumuz National Regional State of Ethiopia. The data was collected through recording ofrnobserved and staged communicative events and elicitation. As concerns documentation,rncomprehensive and representative linguistic practices of the speech community were madernavailable. This was made by audio-video recordings of a variety of texts from a variety of genres.rnSimilarly, under description of the verb morphology, an in-debth analysis of both the verbrninflection and derivation was offered.rnThe study hasshowed that verb stems can be derived from verb roots, verb stems, nouns, andrnadjectives. The derived verbs include passives, causatives, reciprocals, middles, and inchoatives.rnIn the same way, it was identified that verbs are inflected for agreement, mood, tense, aspect,rnnegation, and focus. Subject agreement is expressed in three ways: suffixation, pronominalrnproclitics and unreduced personal pronouns. Similarly, verbs displaya twofold tense distinction:rnpast and non-past. Furthermore, verbs mark perfective and imperfective aspects. Thernimperfective aspect subsumes two types of aspects: habitual and progressive.rnNegation in Borna is commonly expressed in two ways, by affixation and by using a lexicallyrnnegative word.Itwasidentified that verbal and nonverbal clauses follow different strategies ofrnnegation formation. The verbal clauses are negated morphologically, whereas the non-verbalrnclauses are negated by introducing a lexically negative word to the clause.rnFocus is expressed in three ways in Borna: by suffixation, by word orderalternation and by cleftrnconstructions. It was also noted that some copula markers are also used to make an emphasis. Inrnthe language, either a constituent of a sentence or a whole sentence can be focused. Nonetheless,rnit is only one constituent of a clause that can be focused at a time.rnThe study has also revealed that there are major morphophonemic processes operating in thernlanguage. These are an insertion, deletion, assimilation, internal change and verb finalrnconsonant alternation. Regarding copula clauses, it has been shown that the copula subject and the non-verbal copularnpredicate is linked by different bound morphemes attached to the copula complement. It wasrnidentified that the choice among the copula markers is determined by the copula subject.rnFinally, the nature of multi-verb constructions is identified. The multi-verb constructions arernSVC, ideophone based multi-verbs, and converbs. The SVCs are formed by juxtaposing two verbsrnwithout the intervention of any other element. Similarly, the ideophone based multi-verbs arernformed by juxtaposing an ideophone and dummy verb. The converbs are marked by twornmorphemes whose choice is determined by the aspect of the verb.