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Hindi Days: Mascul
Every day of the week in Hindi is masculine, so always modify them with masculine adjectives and verbs.
The Rule in 30 Seconds
- All 7 days are masculine.
- Adjectives end in -ā (e.g., acchā).
- Most days end in suffix -vār.
- Use 'ko' for 'on' a day.
Quick Reference
| English | Hindi | Gender | Adjective Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| Monday | `Somvār` | Masc | `aglā Somvār` (next) |
| Tuesday | `Mangalvār` | Masc | `pichlā Mangalvār` (last) |
| Wednesday | `Budhvār` | Masc | `kaisā Budhvār?` (how) |
| Thursday | `Guruvār` | Masc | `lambā Guruvār` (long) |
| Friday | `Shukravār` | Masc | `acchā Shukravār` (good) |
| Saturday | `Shanivār` | Masc | `burā Shanivār` (bad) |
| Sunday | `Ravivār / Itvār` | Masc | `vah Ravivār` (that) |
Exemples clés
3 sur 9मेरा सोमवार व्यस्त था।
My Monday was busy.
अगला शुक्रवार छुट्टी है।
Next Friday is a holiday.
मैं शनिवार को आऊँगा।
I will come on Saturday.
The 'Vār' Trick
If it ends in 'vār', it's a star (boy). Just rhyme it to remember the gender!
Don't Translate 'On' Literally
In English we say 'On the table' and 'On Monday'. Hindi differentiates. Table = `par`, Monday = `ko`.
The Rule in 30 Seconds
- All 7 days are masculine.
- Adjectives end in -ā (e.g., acchā).
- Most days end in suffix -vār.
- Use 'ko' for 'on' a day.
Overview
Start your engines! We are talking about the days of the week in Hindi. The good news? They are all on the same team. Every single day of the week—from Monday to Sunday—is masculine. No guessing games, no coin flips. Whether it's a sunny Sunday or a manic Monday, grammatically, it's a 'he'.
How This Grammar Works
In Hindi, nouns have gender. This affects the words around them. Adjectives and verbs must agree with the noun. Since days are masculine, you will use masculine endings like -ā for adjectives and verbs. Think of the days as a group of seven brothers. You wouldn't say "She is coming on Monday," referring to the day itself as 'she'. The day is a 'he'. Simple, right? It's like a grammar club where only the guys are allowed.
Formation Pattern
- 1Most days in Hindi end with the suffix
vār. This little tag is your best friend. It signals the day. - 2Take the planet/deity name (e.g.,
Somfor Moon). - 3Add
vār. - 4Result:
Somvār(Monday). - 5Treat the whole package as Masculine Singular.
- 6For example, if you want to say "The coming Friday," you say
aglā shukravār. Note theāat the end ofaglā. If it were feminine, it would beaglī, but Friday is a bro, soaglāit is.
When To Use It
Use this rule literally every time you mention a day of the week. Scheduling a meeting? "Next Tuesday is open" (aglā mangalvār khālī hai). Complaining about the work week? "Monday was long" (somvār lambā thā). Anytime a day is the subject or object of your sentence, remember its gender.
When Not To Use It
Don't apply this to other time words blindly. Rāt (night) is feminine. Subah (morning) is feminine. Shām (evening) is feminine. The days of the week are the exception in the time family, standing tall as the masculine squad. Also, don't use this gender rule if you are just using the day as an adverb without an adjective (e.g., "I go on Monday"). Well, you still don't treat it as feminine, but the gender marking might not be as visible unless you add an adjective like "on that Monday".
Common Mistakes
Here is where people trip up.
- The "Ko" Confusion: Beginners often try to say "on Monday" by translating "on" as
par. Nope! In Hindi, for days, we useko.Somvār ko. - The Feminine Slip: Because
subah(morning) is feminine, learners sometimes drag that gender over to the day. "Acchī somvār" is wrong. It'sacchā somvār. Don't let the morning boss the day around!
Contrast With Similar Patterns
Compare Somvār (Monday - Masc.) with Tārīkh (Date - Fem.). If you ask "What is the date?", tārīkh triggers feminine grammar (kaun sī tārīkh hai?). But if you ask "What is the day?", din triggers masculine grammar (kaun sā din hai?). Yes, even the word for "day" (din) is masculine. Consistency for the win!
Quick FAQ
Q: Are there any exceptions?
Zero. Zilch. Even Itvār (Sunday), which doesn't end in vār sometimes, is still masculine.
Q: Can I use vār alone?
Vār implies a day or a turn/time, and yes, it's masculine too. But you usually stick it to the end of the name.
Q: What about slang names for days?
Stick to the standard names for now to keep your grammar safe. The gender won't change even if you shorten them in speech.
Reference Table
| English | Hindi | Gender | Adjective Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| Monday | `Somvār` | Masc | `aglā Somvār` (next) |
| Tuesday | `Mangalvār` | Masc | `pichlā Mangalvār` (last) |
| Wednesday | `Budhvār` | Masc | `kaisā Budhvār?` (how) |
| Thursday | `Guruvār` | Masc | `lambā Guruvār` (long) |
| Friday | `Shukravār` | Masc | `acchā Shukravār` (good) |
| Saturday | `Shanivār` | Masc | `burā Shanivār` (bad) |
| Sunday | `Ravivār / Itvār` | Masc | `vah Ravivār` (that) |
The 'Vār' Trick
If it ends in 'vār', it's a star (boy). Just rhyme it to remember the gender!
Don't Translate 'On' Literally
In English we say 'On the table' and 'On Monday'. Hindi differentiates. Table = `par`, Monday = `ko`.
Religious Fasting
Many people fast on specific days (like `Somvār` for Shiva). You'll hear 'Mera somvār hai' meaning 'I am fasting this Monday'.
Yesterday vs Tomorrow
Remember `Kal` means both yesterday and tomorrow. Use the verb tense to know which one, but `Kal` itself is also masculine!
Exemples
9मेरा सोमवार व्यस्त था।
Focus: merā
My Monday was busy.
Notice 'merā' (my) and 'thā' (was) are masculine.
अगला शुक्रवार छुट्टी है।
Focus: aglā
Next Friday is a holiday.
We say 'aglā' (next), not 'aglī'.
मैं शनिवार को आऊँगा।
Focus: ko
I will come on Saturday.
Use 'ko' for 'on'. Never 'par'.
रविवार कैसा था?
Focus: kaisā
How was Sunday?
Asking 'how' uses the masculine 'kaisā'.
हर बुधवार अच्छा होता है।
Focus: hotā
Every Wednesday is good.
General statement, masculine 'hotā'.
अगले मंगलवार मिलते हैं।
Focus: agle
Let's meet next Tuesday.
Oblique case! 'Aglā' becomes 'agle' before 'ko' (implied or stated).
सोमवार को आना।
Focus: ko
Come on Monday.
Common mistake: using 'par' instead of 'ko'.
यह वाला गुरुवार।
Focus: vālā
This specific Thursday.
'Vālā' connects to the masculine noun.
क्या तुम्हारा इतवार खाली है?
Focus: tumhārā
Is your Sunday free?
'Tumhārā' agrees with 'itvār'.
Teste-toi
Choose the correct form of 'good' for Monday.
___ somvār.
Somvār is masculine singular, so we use 'Acchā'.
Select the correct word for 'on' Saturday.
Shanivār ___.
For days of the week, Hindi uses the postposition 'ko'.
Complete the sentence: 'Last Tuesday was hot.'
___ mangalvār garam thā.
Mangalvār is masculine, so 'last' must be 'Pichlā'.
🎉 Score : /3
Aides visuelles
Time Words Gender Clash
Choosing the Adjective
Is the word a Day of the Week?
Is it singular?
Use Masculine Singular (-ā)
Planetary Connections
Celestial Bodies
- • Som (Moon)
- • Mangal (Mars)
- • Budh (Mercury)
- • Guru (Jupiter)
- • Shukra (Venus)
- • Shani (Saturn)
- • Ravi (Sun)
Questions fréquentes
21 questionsIn Hindi, the word for day, din, is masculine. Since all specific days are types of 'days', they inherit this masculine gender.
No. Unlike some languages where 'Sunday' might change, Hindi is consistent. From Somvār to Ravivār, they are all masculine.
Vār comes from Sanskrit and means a turn, a time, or a day. It acts like a suffix tagging the word as a day of the week.
No. 'Mein' means 'in'. You wouldn't say 'In Monday'. Use Somvār ko (On Monday).
Rarely needed, but follow masculine noun rules. Direct: Somvār (same). Oblique: Somvāron. E.g., Sabhi Somvāron ko (On all Mondays).
Yes. Even though it doesn't strictly end in 'vār' (it's a variation of Adityavār), Itvār is fully masculine.
Yes. Ravivār is more formal/Sanskrit-based (Ravi = Sun). Itvār is more common in spoken Urdu/Hindi. Both are masculine.
It is the formal name for Thursday (Guruvār). It's a mouthful! But yes, it is also masculine.
No! Subah (morning) is feminine. So Acchī subah. But Acchā somvār (Good Monday). Mixing these is a classic learner mistake.
Use Aglā Somvār. Aglā is the masculine form of 'next'.
Use Pichlā Somvār. Pichlā is the masculine form of 'previous/last'.
No. The gender belongs to the *word* (the day), not the speaker. A woman says Mera Somvār (My Monday), not Meri Somvār.
Good question! Even borrowed English days are treated as masculine in Hindi. Monday acchā thā.
You say Kaun sā din?. Notice sā (masculine), not sī.
Yes, Aaj functions as masculine. Aaj kā din (Today's day).
Yes, this is a redundant but common way to say 'On the day of Monday'. It's grammatically fine.
Any postposition like ko, se, kā/ke/kī. E.g., Agle Somvār se (From next Monday). Note Aglā became Agle.
Hindi script (Devanagari) doesn't have capital letters! So, no. Just write सोमवार.
Hindi often uses the English word 'Weekend', treated as masculine. Or saptāhānt, which is also masculine.
Somvār ko milenge. Simple and sweet.
Probably Bṛhaspativār (Thursday). That's why everyone just says Guruvār!
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