A2 verb_system 3 دقیقه مطالعه

Obligation and Necessity with

Stop being the doer; in Hindi obligation, the duty happens *to* you using the `ko` marker.

The Rule in 30 Seconds

  • Subject becomes 'to Subject' (Mujhe/Tumhe).
  • Use 'chahie' for advice (should).
  • Use 'padta hai' for forced compulsion.
  • Verb stays infinitive or agrees with object.

Quick Reference

English Context Hindi Indicator Subject Form Example
Advice / Should chahie Mujhe / Tumhe Mujhe sona chahie (I should sleep)
Immediate Duty / Have to hai / hain Mujhe / Uske Mujhe jana hai (I have to go)
External Force / Must padta hai Mujhe / Unhe Mujhe kaam karna padta hai (I have to work)
Future Compulsion / Will have to padega Hamein / Ram ko Hamein wait karna padega (We will have to wait)
Past Duty / Had to tha / thi Mujhe / Tumhe Tumhe batana tha (You had to tell)
Past Compulsion / Had to (Force) pada Mujhe / Use Mujhe bhaagna pada (I had to run)

مثال‌های کلیدی

3 از 8
1

Mujhe ab jana hai.

I have to go now.

2

Tumhe doctor ko dikhana chahie.

You should see a doctor.

3

Hamein roz jaldi uthna padta hai.

We have to wake up early every day.

💡

The "Ko" Magnet

Imagine the word 'Obligation' is a magnet that attracts the word `ko`. Whenever you feel obligated, stick `ko` to yourself (`Mujh-ko` -> `Mujhe`).

⚠️

Don't Be Polite to Verbs

In these sentences, the verb agrees with the *object*, not the person. If you (male) have to eat `roti` (female), the verb becomes feminine: `Roti khani hai`.

The Rule in 30 Seconds

  • Subject becomes 'to Subject' (Mujhe/Tumhe).
  • Use 'chahie' for advice (should).
  • Use 'padta hai' for forced compulsion.
  • Verb stays infinitive or agrees with object.

Overview

### Overview

Ever feel like life is just a series of things you *have* to do versus things you *should* do? Hindi feels your pain. In Hindi, expressing obligation (like "I have to work") or necessity (like "You should eat") works a bit differently than English. Instead of saying "I should," you effectively say "To me, it is needed." Sounds poetic? Maybe. Confusing at first? Definitely. But stick with me.

### How This Grammar Works

The biggest shift here is the Subject. You are no longer the active doer (Main). You are the recipient of the obligation. So, instead of Main (I), you become Mujhe (To me). Instead of Tum (You), it's Tumhe (To you).

Think of the obligation as a heavy backpack. You don't *do* the backpack; the backpack *happens to you*.

### Formation Pattern

Here is the magic formula for 90% of these sentences:

  1. 1The Victim (Subject + ko): Mujhe (me), Tumhe (you), Ravi ko (Ravi).
  2. 2The Action (Infinitive Verb): The verb ending in -na (like jana, khana).
  3. 3The Pressure Word:
  • chahie (should/advice)
  • padta hai (have to/compulsion)
  • hai (have to/immediate plan)

Structure:

Mujhe + ghar jana + hai.

(To me + home go + is) = I have to go home.

### When To Use It

  • Advice (chahie): "You should sleep." -> Tumhe sona chahie.
  • External Compulsion (padna): "I have to work (boss makes me)." -> Mujhe kaam karna padta hai.
  • Internal/Immediate Necessity (hona): "I have to go (now)." -> Mujhe jana hai.
  • Future Compulsion: "You will have to study." -> Tumhe padhna padega.

### When Not To Use It

  • Don't use this for simple desires unless you use chahie as "want" (e.g., "I want tea" = Mujhe chai chahie). But if you *want* to do a verb, use the chahta hu pattern instead.
  • Don't use the standard Subject (Main, Woh) here. If you say Main jana hai, you sound like a caveman. Don't be that guy.

### Common Mistakes

  • The "I" Trap: Saying Main instead of Mujhe. Always ask: "Is this happening *to* me?" Yes? Use Mujhe.
  • Gender Confusion: The verb usually agrees with the object, not you. If a boy says "I should read a book (kitaab - feminine)," it's Mujhe kitaab padhni chahie.
  • Mixing hai and padta hai: Jana hai = I'm going/have to go (plan). Jana padta hai = I go because I must (routine/force).

### Contrast With Similar Patterns

  • English: "I must go."
  • Hindi: Mujhe jana hai (General urgency) OR Mujhe jana hi hai (Emphatic - I *really* must).
  • English: "I am supposed to go."
  • Hindi: Mujhe jana chahie implies it's the right thing to do.

### Quick FAQ

Q: Can I drop the ko?

Only with pronouns that merge with it (like Mujhe). If you say Ravi ko, you can't drop ko or Ravi just becomes the subject of a normal sentence.

Q: What if I have to do something in the past?

Easy! Change hai to tha. Mujhe jana tha (I had to go).

Q: Is chahie a verb?

Historically, yes. But treat it like a fixed sticker you slap on the end of a sentence. It doesn't change for gender usually, unless the object is plural (rarely used in spoken Hindi though).

Reference Table

English Context Hindi Indicator Subject Form Example
Advice / Should chahie Mujhe / Tumhe Mujhe sona chahie (I should sleep)
Immediate Duty / Have to hai / hain Mujhe / Uske Mujhe jana hai (I have to go)
External Force / Must padta hai Mujhe / Unhe Mujhe kaam karna padta hai (I have to work)
Future Compulsion / Will have to padega Hamein / Ram ko Hamein wait karna padega (We will have to wait)
Past Duty / Had to tha / thi Mujhe / Tumhe Tumhe batana tha (You had to tell)
Past Compulsion / Had to (Force) pada Mujhe / Use Mujhe bhaagna pada (I had to run)
💡

The "Ko" Magnet

Imagine the word 'Obligation' is a magnet that attracts the word `ko`. Whenever you feel obligated, stick `ko` to yourself (`Mujh-ko` -> `Mujhe`).

⚠️

Don't Be Polite to Verbs

In these sentences, the verb agrees with the *object*, not the person. If you (male) have to eat `roti` (female), the verb becomes feminine: `Roti khani hai`.

🎯

The 'Padna' Trick

`Padna` literally means 'to fall'. Think of 'kaam karna padta hai' as 'work falls upon me'. It helps you remember the passive, burdened feeling.

💬

Softening the Blow

Indians often use `chahie` (should) to ask for things politely in shops. `Mujhe pani chahie` (I should have water -> I want water). It's less demanding than straight imperatives.

مثال‌ها

8
#1 मुझे अब जाना है।

Mujhe ab jana hai.

Focus: jana hai

I have to go now.

Standard immediate obligation.

#2 तुम्हें डॉक्टर को दिखाना चाहिए।

Tumhe doctor ko dikhana chahie.

Focus: chahie

You should see a doctor.

Advice given to a friend.

#3 हमें रोज जल्दी उठना पड़ता है।

Hamein roz jaldi uthna padta hai.

Focus: padta hai

We have to wake up early every day.

Routine compulsion (maybe for work/school).

#4 राम को दवाई लेनी पड़ेगी।

Ram ko dawai leni padegi.

Focus: padegi

Ram will have to take medicine.

Future necessity. Note 'leni' agrees with 'dawai' (feminine).

#5 मुझे हिंदी सीखनी है।

Mujhe Hindi seekhni hai.

Focus: seekhni

I have to/want to learn Hindi.

Strong intent/plan. 'Seekhni' agrees with 'Hindi' (fem).

#6 मैं जाना चाहिए। (Wrong) -> मुझे जाना चाहिए। (Correct)

Main jana chahie ✗ -> Mujhe jana chahie ✓

Focus: Mujhe

I should go.

Common Mistake: Using nominative 'Main' instead of oblique 'Mujhe'.

#7 उसको काम करना है।

Usko kaam karna hai.

Focus: Usko

He/She has to work.

Third person obligation.

#8 क्या हमें वहाँ जाना ज़रूरी है?

Kya hamein wahan jana zaroori hai?

Focus: zaroori

Is it necessary for us to go there?

Using 'zaroori' (necessary) explicitly.

خودت رو بسنج

Choose the correct subject form for 'I should eat'.

___ khana khana chahie.

✓ درسته! ✗ نه دقیقاً. پاسخ صحیح: Mujhe

Obligation requires the oblique 'ko' form. For 'I', that is 'Mujhe'.

Complete the sentence: 'We have to wait' (Compulsion/Rule).

Hamein intezaar karna ___.

✓ درسته! ✗ نه دقیقاً. پاسخ صحیح: padta hai

'Padta hai' indicates an external force or rule making you wait, stronger than just 'hai'.

Select the correct future form: 'You will have to go'.

Tumhe jana ___.

✓ درسته! ✗ نه دقیقاً. پاسخ صحیح: padega

'Padega' is the future tense of the compulsion verb 'padna'.

🎉 امتیاز: /3

ابزارهای بصری یادگیری

Subject Transformation

Normal Subject (Doer)
Main (I) I eat
Tum (You) You go
Woh (He/She) He sleeps
Obligation Subject (Receiver)
Mujhe (To me) I have to
Tumhe (To you) You have to
Use (To him/her) He has to

Which Word Do I Choose?

1

Is it advice or a moral duty?

YES ↓
NO
Go to next
2

Is it an external pressure (boss, rules)?

YES ↓
NO
Use 'hai' (General/Plan)

Tense Changes

👇

Present

  • Mujhe jana hai
  • Mujhe jana padta hai
⏮️

Past

  • Mujhe jana tha
  • Mujhe jana pada
🔜

Future

  • Mujhe jana hoga
  • Mujhe jana padega

سوالات متداول

20 سوال

Mujhe jana hai is neutral—it's a plan or internal need ("I have to go"). Mujhe jana padta hai implies reluctance or external force ("I *have* to go" because my mom said so).

Because the grammar logic is "To me, going is necessary." You are the receiver of the necessity, marked by ko. Main + ko becomes Mujhe.

Rarely in modern spoken Hindi. Technically it can (chahiyein for plural), but 99% of the time, chahie stays invariant. Keep it simple!

Use tha (was) or pada (fell). "I had to go" is Mujhe jana tha (plan) or Mujhe jana pada (compulsion).

Yes! Mujhe pen chahie means "I need/want a pen." It works for nouns too, not just verbs.

Just add nahi before the verb or obligation word. Mujhe nahi jana hai (I don't have to go).

The verb might change. "I have to eat bananas (kele)." -> Mujhe kele khane hain. Notice khane and hain.

Yes, exactly the same. Tumhe is just a slightly smoother, more common contraction of Tumko.

Use padega. Tumhe wait karna padega (You will have to wait).

You might hear it in very broken or specific regional dialects (like Mumbai slang sometimes), but it's grammatically incorrect. Stick to Mujhe.

Here, hai (form of hona) acts as the auxiliary "is". "Going *is* for me."

The structure itself is neutral. The formality depends on the pronoun you use (Tumhe vs Aapko).

Start with Kya. Kya tumhe jana hai?

Add hi or bilkul. Mujhe jana hi hai (I absolutely must go).

Yes, zaroorat means 'need'. Mujhe jane ki zaroorat hai. It's a bit wordier but correct.

This is tricky! Mujhe jana chahie tha. Literally "Me go should was."

Yes, when used with chahie or hai for obligation, the verb stays in its infinitive form (ending in -na, -ne, -ni).

Pada is one-time past ("I had to run yesterday"). Padta hai is recurring present ("I have to run every morning").

Use sona hai (Plan) or Use sona chahie (Advice).

All the time! "Mujhe neend na aaye" (Sleep doesn't come to me) uses a similar dative structure.

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