A2 verb_system 4 Min. Lesezeit

Informal Imperatives:

Use 'Tum' (root + o) for friends and 'Tu' (root only) for God or very intimate connections.

The Rule in 30 Seconds

  • Tu = Root only (Intimate/Rude)
  • Tum = Root + 'o' (Friendly/Casual)
  • Negation uses 'mat' before verb
  • Irregulars: do, lo, piyo, karo

Quick Reference

Verb (Infinitive) Root Tu (Intimate) Tum (Casual)
bolna (to speak) bol bol bolo
aana (to come) aa aa aao
sunna (to listen) sun sun suno
rukna (to stop) ruk ruk ruko
karna (to do) kar kar karo (Irr.)
dena (to give) de de do (Irr.)
peena (to drink) pee pee piyo (Irr.)

Wichtige Beispiele

3 von 10
1

तुम यहाँ आओ

You come here. (Casual)

2

पानी पियो

Drink water.

3

चुप कर

Shut up! (Rude/Intimate)

⚠️

The 'Tu' Trap

Don't use 'Tu' with people just because they look younger than you. In Hindi culture, strangers usually get 'Tum' or 'Aap'. 'Tu' is for people you'd share a toothbrush with (gross, but accurate).

🎯

The Magic 'Na'

Want to sound softer without changing grammar? Add 'na' at the end. 'Suno' is 'Listen!', but 'Suno na' is 'Hey, listen please.' It's the ultimate softener.

The Rule in 30 Seconds

  • Tu = Root only (Intimate/Rude)
  • Tum = Root + 'o' (Friendly/Casual)
  • Negation uses 'mat' before verb
  • Irregulars: do, lo, piyo, karo

Overview

Welcome to the power dynamics of Hindi! Imperatives are just a fancy way of saying "commands" or "requests." In English, you simply say "Go" or "Eat." It doesn't matter if you're talking to your dog, your best friend, or the Prime Minister. But Hindi? Hindi cares deeply about who you're talking to. We're focusing on Informal Imperatives today. This covers the casual zone: chatting with friends, younger siblings, or that taxi driver you're arguing with (careful there!). Getting this right is the difference between sounding like a local and sounding like a robot.

How This Grammar Works

In Hindi, the verb changes based on the level of respect or intimacy. For informal situations, we have two main players: Tu (tu) and Tum (tum).

  • Tu (tu): The "Intimate" or "Very Informal" level. Used for God (yes, really), very close friends, small children, pets, or... when you want to be extremely rude.
  • Tum (tum): The "Standard Informal" level. Used for friends, colleagues of the same age, younger family members, and generally casual interactions.

Think of Tu as a raw, unfiltered connection (for better or worse) and Tum as a friendly high-five. Most of the time, as a learner, you'll want to stick to Tum to be safe. Tu is the danger zone—use it wrong, and you might offend someone's grandmother.

Formation Pattern

  1. 1Making these commands is surprisingly easy. You just need the verb root. The root is what's left when you take na off the infinitive (e.g., bolnabol).
  2. 2For Tu (The Raw Root):
  3. 3Just use the verb root. That's it. No endings.
  4. 4bolna (to speak) → bol (Speak!)
  5. 5aana (to come) → aa (Come!)
  6. 6For Tum ( The 'O' Ending):
  7. 7Take the root and add the sound -o.
  8. 8bol + obolo (Speak!)
  9. 9sun + osuno (Listen!)
  10. 10aa + oaao (Come!)
  11. 11The Four Irregulars (Memorize These!):
  12. 12Of course, there are exceptions. These four verbs don't follow the nice rules above for Tum.
  13. 13dena (to give) → tu de / tum do
  14. 14lena (to take) → tu le / tum lo
  15. 15peena (to drink) → tu pee / tum piyo
  16. 16karna (to do) → tu kar / tum karo

When To Use It

Context is king here. You aren't just conjugating verbs; you're reading the room.

  • Use Tu (tu) when:
  • Praying to God (Hey Bhagwan, madad kar - Oh God, help me).
  • Scolding a naughty child.
  • Talking to your cat or dog.
  • You are in a rap battle or a road rage incident (not recommended for beginners!).
  • Use Tum (tum) when:
  • Asking a friend to pass the salt.
  • Telling a rickshaw driver where to stop (yahan roko).
  • Chatting with younger cousins.
  • Ordering food at a casual dhabba or cafe.

When Not To Use It

Avoid these like the plague in formal settings. If you use Tu or Tum with:

  • Your boss
  • An elder (uncle, aunty, grandparent)
  • A police officer
  • A stranger in a formal setting

...you will sound uneducated or disrespectful. For them, we use the Aap form (which we aren't covering today, but just know it exists!). Think of Tum as "casual Friday" jeans. You wouldn't wear them to a wedding.

Common Mistakes

  • Using Tu too early: Learners often think Tu is just "singular you." It's not. It carries emotional weight. Don't Tu your waiter.
  • The Mat vs. Nahi trap: To make a negative command (Don't do X), use mat before the verb, not nahi.
  • Correct: wahan mat jao (Don't go there).
  • Wrong: wahan nahi jao (Sounds weird, like "There no go").
  • Forgetting the Irregulars: Saying de-o instead of do is a classic rookie error. It screams "I learned this from a textbook yesterday."

Contrast With Similar Patterns

  • English: "Sit down." (Context implies politeness).
  • Hindi: Baith (Order/Rude) vs. Baitho (Casual/Friendly) vs. Baithiye (Polite/Respectful).

In English, we add "please" to soften things. In Hindi, the grammar itself does the softening. You can add kripya (please), but honestly, nobody uses it in casual speech. The o ending in baitho is polite enough for friends.

Quick FAQ

Q: Can I mix Tu and Tum?

No. If you start with Tum, stay with Tum. Switching mid-sentence sounds schizophrenic.

Q: Is chalo an imperative?

Yes! It comes from chalna (to move/walk). Chalo means "Let's go" or "Move it" depending on tone.

Q: What if I don't know which one to use?

When in doubt, default to Tum. It's the safest bet for casual interactions without risking the rudeness of Tu.

Reference Table

Verb (Infinitive) Root Tu (Intimate) Tum (Casual)
bolna (to speak) bol bol bolo
aana (to come) aa aa aao
sunna (to listen) sun sun suno
rukna (to stop) ruk ruk ruko
karna (to do) kar kar karo (Irr.)
dena (to give) de de do (Irr.)
peena (to drink) pee pee piyo (Irr.)
⚠️

The 'Tu' Trap

Don't use 'Tu' with people just because they look younger than you. In Hindi culture, strangers usually get 'Tum' or 'Aap'. 'Tu' is for people you'd share a toothbrush with (gross, but accurate).

🎯

The Magic 'Na'

Want to sound softer without changing grammar? Add 'na' at the end. 'Suno' is 'Listen!', but 'Suno na' is 'Hey, listen please.' It's the ultimate softener.

💬

God gets 'Tu'

It seems weird to use the 'rude' form with the Almighty, but in Hindi, 'Tu' represents the highest level of intimacy and oneness. You don't have formalities with God.

💡

Remembering Irregulars

Think of the irregulars 'Do', 'Lo', 'Piyo', 'Karo' as a rhyme. "Do Lo Piyo Karo"—sounds like a weird magic spell, but it sticks!

Beispiele

10
#1 yahan aao

तुम यहाँ आओ

Focus: aao

You come here. (Casual)

Standard casual command using 'tum' structure.

#2 paani piyo

पानी पियो

Focus: piyo

Drink water.

Uses the irregular 'piyo' instead of 'pee-o'.

#3 chup kar

चुप कर

Focus: kar

Shut up! (Rude/Intimate)

Using 'tu' form (kar) makes this aggressive.

#4 ye mat karo

ये मत करो

Focus: mat

Don't do this.

Negative command uses 'mat' before the verb.

#5 mujhse baat mat kar

मुझसे बात मत कर

Focus: baat

Don't talk to me.

High emotion/fight scenario using 'tu' form.

#6 apna kaam karo

अपना काम करो

Focus: karo

Do your work.

Common advice or instruction to a peer.

#7 wahan nahi jao ✗ → wahan mat jao ✓

वहाँ मत जाओ

Focus: mat

Don't go there.

Correction: 'Nahi' is for statements, 'Mat' is for commands.

#8 phone de do

फ़ोन दे दो

Focus: do

Give (me) the phone.

Compound verb 'de do' (give-give) softens the request.

#9 hey bhagwan, meri sun

हे भगवान, मेरी सुन

Focus: sun

Oh God, listen to me.

Using 'tu' (sun) with God is a sign of closeness, not disrespect.

#10 jaldi aao

जल्दी आओ

Focus: jaldi

Come quickly.

Adverbs like 'jaldi' usually come before the imperative.

Teste dich selbst

Tell your friend to 'speak' (bolna).

Suno, zor se ___.

✓ Richtig! ✗ Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort: bolo

Since you are talking to a friend, use the 'Tum' form (Root + o). 'Bol' is too rude, 'Boliye' is too formal.

Tell a younger sibling NOT to touch your phone.

Mera phone ___ chuo.

✓ Richtig! ✗ Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort: mat

For negative commands (imperatives), we always use 'mat'. 'Nahi' is for stating facts.

Ask your colleague to 'give' (dena) the file.

Ye file mujhe ___.

✓ Richtig! ✗ Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort: do

'Dena' is irregular. The 'Tum' form is 'do', not 'deo'.

🎉 Ergebnis: /3

Visuelle Lernhilfen

Tu vs Tum Endings

Tu (Singular/Raw)
bol Speak!
ruk Stop!
Tum (Plural/Friendly)
bolo Speak!
ruko Stop!

Which Command To Use?

1

Are they God, a pet, or are you insulting them?

NO
Use 'Tu' (Root)
2

Are they a friend, sibling, or waiter?

NO
Use 'Tum' (Root + o)

Irregular Verbs (Tum Form)

🎁

Dena (Give)

  • do
🤲

Lena (Take)

  • lo
🥤

Peena (Drink)

  • piyo
⚙️

Karna (Do)

  • karo

Häufig gestellte Fragen

21 Fragen

Using Tu with service staff like waiters or drivers. It sounds arrogant. Stick to Tum or even Aap if you want to be extra nice.

You can add kripya, but it sounds very formal and weird with Tum. Instead, just use a polite tone of voice or add na at the end (aao na).

Mat is strictly for commands (Imperatives). Nahi is for facts. Jao mat (Don't go) vs. Woh nahi jaata (He doesn't go).

If it followed the rule, it would be karo, which it is! Actually, karna is regular in the Tum form (karo), but people list it with irregulars because it changes drastically in other tenses.

Tum works for plural groups too! Dosto, suno! (Friends, listen!).

Yes, telling someone to be quiet is generally rude regardless of grammar. Chup raho is firm. Chup kar is fighting words.

You can use Aap (formal) sarcastically with a close friend, or Tu with someone acting high and mighty to bring them down.

Use Chalo. It literally means 'walk/move' in the Tum form, but functions as 'Let's go'.

Totally. This is Hinglish. Wait karo (Do wait), Relax karo (Do relax). Just add karo after the English verb.

Bollywood loves Tu. Tu jaane na, Tu aake dekh le. It's romantic and intimate.

Yes, because the root is pee. If it were regular, it might be pee-o, but we add a 'y' glide to make it piyo.

Use Ruko. If it's a driver/car, you can also say Roko (Stop the car).

Please don't. You will sound like a caveman or a bully. The o sound is crucial for basic social survival.

Strangers you call bhaiya (shopkeepers, drivers) usually get Tum or Aap depending on your age and region.

Nope! Suno is valid for a man or a woman. Tu sun is also gender-neutral. One less thing to worry about!

Add toh after the verb. Suno toh! (Just listen! / Listen, will you!).

Yes. Root kha + o = khao. Khana khao (Eat food).

It is de. Paise de (Give money). Very blunt.

Head wobbles help, but they won't turn a rude command into a polite one. Grammar comes first.

Oh yes. In Mumbai, you might hear bindaas bol (speak freely). In Delhi, aggression levels with Tu might be higher.

Zara means 'a little' or 'just'. Zara suno (Just listen / Listen a sec). It softens the blow.

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