Hindi Month Names: Gender
Every Hindi month name is masculine; always use masculine adjectives and verbs regardless of the month's ending sound.
The Rule in 30 Seconds
- All Hindi month names (Gregorian and Hindu) are grammatically masculine.
- Use masculine markers like 'kā', 'pichlā', and 'thā' with all months.
- Month names ending in 'ī' (like January) are still masculine.
- The word for 'date' (tārīkh) is feminine, unlike the months.
Quick Reference
| Month (Hindi) | Transliteration | Gender | Example Phrase |
|---|---|---|---|
| जनवरी | Janvarī | Masculine | पिछला जनवरी (Last January) |
| मार्च | Mārc | Masculine | मार्च अच्छा था (March was good) |
| मई | Maī | Masculine | मई का महीना (The month of May) |
| अगस्त | Agast | Masculine | अगस्त आ गया (August has come) |
| अक्टूबर | Aktūbar | Masculine | अक्टूबर ठंडा है (October is cold) |
| चैत्र | Caitra | Masculine | चैत्र का समय (The time of Chaitra) |
Exemples clés
3 sur 8पिछला जनवरी बहुत ठंडा था।
Last January was very cold.
जून का महीना गर्म होता है।
The month of June is hot.
मई आ गया है।
May has arrived.
The 'Mahīnā' Rule
If you forget the gender of a specific month, just remember that the word for month, 'mahīnā', is masculine. All months follow the leader!
The 'ī' Sound Trap
Don't be fooled by January (Janvarī) or May (Maī). They sound feminine but they are strictly masculine in Hindi grammar.
The Rule in 30 Seconds
- All Hindi month names (Gregorian and Hindu) are grammatically masculine.
- Use masculine markers like 'kā', 'pichlā', and 'thā' with all months.
- Month names ending in 'ī' (like January) are still masculine.
- The word for 'date' (tārīkh) is feminine, unlike the months.
Overview
Ever felt like Hindi genders are a wild guessing game? Well, I have some great news for you. When it comes to the names of months, the rules are incredibly kind. In Hindi, every single month name is masculine. It doesn't matter if you are using the English calendar (Gregorian) or the traditional Hindu calendar. Whether it is Janvarī or Phāgun, the grammar stays the same. This is a rare moment where Hindi grammar gives you a break. You can stop worrying about whether a month is a 'he' or a 'she'. They are all 'he'. Think of it as a universal rule with no hidden traps. This makes your life much easier when planning trips or scheduling meetings. You just need to focus on the vocabulary. The gender part is already solved for you.
How This Grammar Works
Since all months are masculine, everything around them must agree. This means your adjectives, possessive markers, and verbs will follow the masculine pattern. For example, the word for 'of' is kā (masculine) instead of kī (feminine). If you want to say 'last January', you use pichlā (masculine). You would never say pichlī Janvarī. Even if a month name ends in an 'ī' sound, like Janvarī or Maī, it stays masculine. This is a common pitfall because many Hindi words ending in 'ī' are feminine. But months are special. They follow the gender of the word for month itself, which is mahīnā. Since mahīnā is masculine, its specific names are too. It is like a family name where everyone takes the same title.
Formation Pattern
- 1Using months correctly follows a very predictable three-step process:
- 2Pick your month name (e.g.,
MārcorSitambar). - 3Use the masculine possessive marker
kāif you are showing belonging. - 4Ensure adjectives like
pichlā(last) oraglā(next) end in 'ā'. - 5If the month is the subject, the verb will use masculine endings like
-āor-tā. - 6For example, if you are in a job interview and say 'My contract ends in March', you would think of March as a masculine entity. If you say 'January was cold', you say
Janvarī thandā thā. Notice thethāat the end? That is the masculine 'was'. Even thoughJanvarīsounds feminine to a beginner, the grammar stays masculine. It is a solid, unbreakable pattern.
When To Use It
Use this rule every time you talk about time or schedules. Are you ordering food for a big party in Agast? Use masculine agreement. Are you telling a friend that Jūn is too hot for a road trip? Keep it masculine. It applies to formal writing, like business emails or news reports. It also applies to casual chats about your favorite time of year. If you are asking for directions to a festival that happens in Phāgun, the same rule applies. It is one of the most consistent parts of the language. You will use it when discussing birthdays, holidays, and deadlines. It is basically the backbone of any conversation involving a calendar.
When Not To Use It
There is one specific trap you must avoid. While the names of months are masculine, the word for 'date' is not. The word tārīkh (date) is feminine. This can be confusing. If you say 'The date of January', you are focusing on the word 'date'. So, you would say Janvarī kī tārīkh. Here, kī agrees with tārīkh, not Janvarī. Similarly, the traditional lunar date word tithi is also feminine. So, if you are talking about the month itself, stay masculine. If you shift the focus to a specific date or the word 'date', switch to feminine. It is like a grammar traffic light; the word 'date' turns the light red for masculine agreement.
Common Mistakes
Yes, even native speakers mess this up sometimes in very fast speech, but usually, it's learners who trip. The biggest mistake is the 'ī' sound trap. Because Janvarī, Farvarī, and Maī end in that long 'e' sound, learners often use kī or feminine adjectives. You might be tempted to say Janvarī acchī thī. Resist that urge! It must be Janvarī acchā thā. Another mistake is mixing up the month with the word for 'date' as mentioned before. People often say Janvarī kā tārīkh because they remember months are masculine. But remember: the word tārīkh always wins the gender battle when it's present. Don't let the month name bully the word 'date' into being masculine.
Contrast With Similar Patterns
Compare months with days of the week. In Hindi, days of the week like Somvār (Monday) or Ravivār (Sunday) are also masculine. This makes the whole calendar system quite consistent. However, contrast this with seasons. While most seasons like Basant (Spring) are masculine, the word for 'season' itself, rutu, can be feminine in some contexts or literary styles. Months are much more straightforward. Unlike languages like French or Spanish where you have to memorize genders for every noun, Hindi months are a 'set it and forget it' category. They don't change based on the weather or the length of the month. They are masculine through and through.
Quick FAQ
Q. Is Maī (May) feminine?
A. No, even though it ends in 'ī', it is masculine.
Q. What about the Hindu month Kārtik?
A. It is masculine, just like all other Hindu months.
Q. If I use aglā (next) with Janvarī, is it aglā or aglī?
A. It is aglā Janvarī. Always.
Q. Does the gender change if I'm a woman speaking?
A. No, the gender of the month is fixed. It doesn't matter who is talking. Your own gender only affects the verb if you are the subject of the sentence, not the month.
Reference Table
| Month (Hindi) | Transliteration | Gender | Example Phrase |
|---|---|---|---|
| जनवरी | Janvarī | Masculine | पिछला जनवरी (Last January) |
| मार्च | Mārc | Masculine | मार्च अच्छा था (March was good) |
| मई | Maī | Masculine | मई का महीना (The month of May) |
| अगस्त | Agast | Masculine | अगस्त आ गया (August has come) |
| अक्टूबर | Aktūbar | Masculine | अक्टूबर ठंडा है (October is cold) |
| चैत्र | Caitra | Masculine | चैत्र का समय (The time of Chaitra) |
The 'Mahīnā' Rule
If you forget the gender of a specific month, just remember that the word for month, 'mahīnā', is masculine. All months follow the leader!
The 'ī' Sound Trap
Don't be fooled by January (Janvarī) or May (Maī). They sound feminine but they are strictly masculine in Hindi grammar.
Agreement is Key
Always check your 'kā' vs 'kī'. With months, it is 100% 'kā' unless the word 'tārīkh' (date) appears right after it.
Hindu Calendar
Even if you use traditional months like 'Ashadh' or 'Sawan' in poems or festivals, this masculine rule still applies perfectly.
Exemples
8पिछला जनवरी बहुत ठंडा था।
Focus: पिछला
Last January was very cold.
Even though January ends in 'ī', we use 'pichlā' and 'thā'.
जून का महीना गर्म होता है।
Focus: का
The month of June is hot.
We use 'kā' because 'mahīnā' and 'Jūn' are both masculine.
मई आ गया है।
Focus: आ गया
May has arrived.
The verb 'ā gayā' is masculine.
मेरा पिछला काम जुलाई में खत्म हुआ।
Focus: जुलाई
My last job finished in July.
July is treated as a masculine point in time.
✗ जनवरी अच्छी थी → ✓ जनवरी अच्छा था।
Focus: अच्छा था
January was good.
Don't let the 'ī' sound trick you into using feminine 'acchī'.
✗ फरवरी की महीना → ✓ फरवरी का महीना।
Focus: का
The month of February.
Always use 'kā' with months.
अगस्त के बाद सितंबर आता है।
Focus: के बाद
September comes after August.
The oblique form 'ke bād' is used with the masculine month.
फागुन का त्यौहार सुंदर होता है।
Focus: का
The festival of Phagun is beautiful.
Traditional months follow the same masculine rule.
Teste-toi
Choose the correct adjective for the month of December.
___ दिसंबर बहुत व्यस्त था।
Since 'Disambar' is masculine, we must use the masculine singular adjective 'pichlā'.
Choose the correct possessive marker for the month of May.
मई ___ मौसम अच्छा है।
Months are masculine, so we use 'kā' to link it to 'mausam' (weather).
Complete the sentence with the correct verb form.
अगस्त आ ___।
August is masculine, so the verb must be 'gayā'.
🎉 Score : /3
Aides visuelles
Month vs. Date Gender
Is it Masculine or Feminine?
Is it a name of a month?
Does it end in 'ī'?
Is it still a month?
Grammar Agreement for Months
Adjectives
- • Pichlā (Last)
- • Aglā (Next)
Verbs
- • Thā (Was)
- • Gayā (Went/Has)
Questions fréquentes
21 questionsYes, every single one of the 12 months in the Gregorian calendar is masculine in Hindi. There are no exceptions to this rule.
They are also all masculine. Whether you say Chaitra or Kartik, you use masculine grammar agreement.
It's because of the long 'ī' sound at the end, which usually indicates feminine nouns in Hindi. However, months are an exception to that phonetic rule.
Yes, mahīnā is a masculine noun. This is why all specific month names are also treated as masculine.
You say pichlā Farvarī. Use the masculine ending -ā for the adjective.
You say aglā Julāī. Again, use the masculine form of the adjective.
The word tārīkh is feminine. So you would say Janvarī kī das tārīkh (the 10th date of January).
No, that is grammatically incorrect. You must say Janvarī acchā thā because it is masculine.
Mostly, but seasons are a different category. While Basant (Spring) is masculine, the word for season rutu can be feminine.
Yes, Maī is masculine. You would say Maī kā mahīnā (The month of May).
Always use kā. For example, Aktūbar kā mahīnā is the correct way to say 'the month of October'.
Use masculine endings like -ā. For example, Sitambar ā gayā (September has arrived).
Standard Hindi strictly treats it as masculine. Some learners might use it as feminine by mistake, but it's not standard.
The word tithi (lunar date) is feminine. This is similar to tārīkh and changes the agreement to feminine.
Yes, Aprail is masculine. You would say Aprail thandā thā if it was a cold April.
Months are rarely used in plural, but if they were, they would follow masculine plural rules (e.g., do Janvarī).
Yes, in Urdu as well, the names of the months are generally treated as masculine.
It helps you avoid common agreement mistakes when talking about your schedule or past events. It's a quick win for your grammar accuracy.
No, use merā. For example, merā pahlā Julāī (my first July) if you are referring to a specific experience.
Yes, days like Somvār and Mangalvār are also masculine, making the calendar very consistent!
No. Every single month name in Hindi is masculine. You can use this rule with 100% confidence.
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