C1 verb_system 3분 분량

Distributive Redu

Doubling a word in Hindi isn't redundancy; it creates plurality, specificity, lists, or continuous duration.

The Rule in 30 Seconds

  • Repeat adjectives to pluralize or categorize.
  • Repeat question words to ask for lists.
  • Repeat verb participles for continuous actions.
  • Repeat nouns to mean 'every' or 'each'.

Quick Reference

Word Type Pattern Meaning Shift Hindi Example
Adjective Word + Word Plurality / Selection lal lal (the red ones)
Interrogative Word + Word Requesting a list kya kya (what all)
Noun Word + Word Distribution (Every) ghar ghar (every house)
Verb (Participle) Root+te + Root+te While doing X chalte chalte (while walking)
Verb (Perfective) Root+e + Root+e State of being baithe baithe (just sitting)
Quantifier Word + Word Distribution per person ek ek (one each)

주요 예문

3 / 10
1

Mehmanon ne kya kya khaya?

What all did the guests eat?

2

Bazaar se bade bade aam lana.

Bring (specifically) big mangoes from the market.

3

Woh chalte chalte gir gaya.

He fell while walking.

🎯

The 'Selecting' Vibe

When shopping, using 'hare hare' (green ones) implies you want the shopkeeper to pick out specifically the green veggies from a mixed pile. It empowers your choice!

⚠️

Don't Stutter on Pronouns

You can say `main` (I), but never `main main`. Personal pronouns don't reduplicate like interrogatives do. Unless you are actually stuttering.

The Rule in 30 Seconds

  • Repeat adjectives to pluralize or categorize.
  • Repeat question words to ask for lists.
  • Repeat verb participles for continuous actions.
  • Repeat nouns to mean 'every' or 'each'.

Overview

Ever feel like one word just isn't enough to capture the vibe? Hindi agrees with you. Distributive Reduplication isn't a stutter; it's a feature. At this level, you know basic vocabulary, but this pattern is the secret sauce that makes you sound like a local. It turns a flat sentence into a 3D experience. It implies variety, distribution, or sheer intensity without needing extra descriptive clauses. Think of it as the grammar equivalent of a "buy one, get one free" deal—you double the word, but you more than double the nuance.

How This Grammar Works

Fundamentally, you are repeating a word immediately. But specific word types change the meaning differently. If you repeat an adjective, you are often pluralizing the noun it modifies (without making the noun plural). If you repeat a pronoun (like question words), you are demanding a list, not a single answer. If you repeat a verb participle, you are showing a continuous action or something happening "in the meantime." It is all about *scope*. A single word is a dot; a repeated word is a line or a cloud.

Formation Pattern

  1. 1The formula is deceptively simple, but don't let your guard down.
  2. 2Adjectives: Adjective + Adjective (Agrees with noun gender/number).
  3. 3* Example: achhe achhe (various good ones).
  4. 4Interrogatives: Question Word + Question Word.
  5. 5* Example: kya kya (what exactly/list of things).
  6. 6Nouns: Noun + Noun.
  7. 7* Example: ghar ghar (house to house / every house).
  8. 8Participles (Verbs): Verb stem + ta + Verb stem + ta (Usually masculine oblique e ending).
  9. 9* Example: chalte chalte (while walking).

When To Use It

Use this when you want to be specific about variety. If you say mujhe sev do (give me an apple), you get one. If you say mujhe lal lal sev do, you want specifically the red ones (implying a selection from a pile). Use it when asking questions where you expect a list. Tumne kya khaya? implies one dish. Tumne kya kya khaya? implies a buffet report. Use the verb form to describe background actions. "I thought of this *while sitting*" (baithe baithe).

When Not To Use It

Don't use it when you are talking about a single, specific entity. You wouldn't say yeh mera dost dost hai (this is my friend friend). That sounds like you are broken. Also, avoid it if the context is already strictly singular. If you strictly want *one* good book, don't ask for achhi achhi kitabein (good books). Just ask for ek achhi kitaab.

Common Mistakes

The biggest trap is the "Singular Trap." Learners often use kaun (who) when addressing a group. If you walk into a room of people, you ask kaun kaun aaya hai? (who all has come?), not just kaun aaya hai?. Another mistake is over-translating. garam garam chai isn't "hot hot tea"; it's "freshly hot tea." Don't translate literally; translate the *feeling*.

Contrast With Similar Patterns

This is not the same as "Echo Words" (chai-wai). Echo words imply "tea and stuff like that." Reduplication (chai chai - though rare for nouns unless emphatic) means specifically "tea and more tea." Also, distinct from emphasis where you stretch the vowel (bahaaaat - very). Here, the repetition performs a grammatical function (plurality/distribution), not just an emotional one.

Quick FAQ

Q. Can I do this with every word?

A. Mostly adjectives, pronouns, and participles. Proper nouns? No. You can't be Rahul Rahul.

Q. Does dheere dheere mean the same as dheere?

A. dheere is slow. dheere dheere is gradually or slowly-slowly. Nuance matters!

Q. Is this formal or informal?

A. Both! You'll hear it in street slang and read it in high literature. It's universal.

Reference Table

Word Type Pattern Meaning Shift Hindi Example
Adjective Word + Word Plurality / Selection lal lal (the red ones)
Interrogative Word + Word Requesting a list kya kya (what all)
Noun Word + Word Distribution (Every) ghar ghar (every house)
Verb (Participle) Root+te + Root+te While doing X chalte chalte (while walking)
Verb (Perfective) Root+e + Root+e State of being baithe baithe (just sitting)
Quantifier Word + Word Distribution per person ek ek (one each)
🎯

The 'Selecting' Vibe

When shopping, using 'hare hare' (green ones) implies you want the shopkeeper to pick out specifically the green veggies from a mixed pile. It empowers your choice!

⚠️

Don't Stutter on Pronouns

You can say `main` (I), but never `main main`. Personal pronouns don't reduplicate like interrogatives do. Unless you are actually stuttering.

💬

Hospitality Hack

If a guest asks `aur kya kya hai?` (what else is there?), they aren't being greedy; they are culturally showing interest in the variety of your spread.

💡

The 'Idle' Verb

To say you did something 'idly' or 'just sitting around', use `baithe baithe`. E.g., `Baithe baithe bore ho gaya` (I got bored just sitting there).

예시

10
#1 Mehmanon ne kya kya khaya?

Mehmanon ne kya kya khaya?

Focus: kya kya

What all did the guests eat?

Implies a list is expected, not just one item.

#2 Bazaar se bade bade aam lana.

Bazaar se bade bade aam lana.

Focus: bade bade

Bring (specifically) big mangoes from the market.

Implies selection—pick only the big ones.

#3 Woh chalte chalte gir gaya.

Woh chalte chalte gir gaya.

Focus: chalte chalte

He fell while walking.

Shows the action happened during the process of walking.

#4 Ghar ghar mein yahi kahani hai.

Ghar ghar mein yahi kahani hai.

Focus: Ghar ghar

This is the story in every house.

Repetition of noun creates 'every'.

#5 Usne thanda thanda paani piya.

Usne thanda thanda paani piya.

Focus: thanda thanda

He drank nice cold water.

Here repetition implies intensity/pleasurable quality.

#6 ✓ Party mein kaun kaun aaya tha? | ✗ Party mein kaun aaya tha? (if asking for list)

Party mein kaun kaun aaya tha?

Focus: kaun kaun

Who all came to the party?

Correct way to ask for a list of people.

#7 ✓ Main baithe baithe thak gaya. | ✗ Main baithte baithte thak gaya.

Main baithe baithe thak gaya.

Focus: baithe baithe

I got tired of just sitting (idly).

Use 'baithe' (state) not 'baithte' (process of sitting down) for idleness.

#8 Baat karte karte hum shaher se bahar nikal gaye.

Baat karte karte hum shaher se bahar nikal gaye.

Focus: karte karte

While talking, we unknowingly went out of the city.

Shows passage of time during an action.

#9 Sabko ek ek samosa milega.

Sabko ek ek samosa milega.

Focus: ek ek

Everyone will get one samosa each.

Distributive number usage.

#10 Dekhte dekhte zamana badal gaya.

Dekhte dekhte zamana badal gaya.

Focus: Dekhte dekhte

The world changed right before our eyes (gradually/quickly).

Advanced Idiomatic usage.

셀프 테스트

Choose the correct form to ask for a list of items.

Tum bazaar se ___ laye?

✓ 정답! ✗ 아쉬워요. 정답: kya kya

Since you want to know the various items brought from the market, the reduplicated 'kya kya' is required.

Select the correct phrase for 'gradually' or 'slowly'.

Gaadi ___ chalao, baarish ho rahi hai.

✓ 정답! ✗ 아쉬워요. 정답: dheere dheere

While 'dheere' works, 'dheere dheere' emphasizes the continuous manner of driving slowly and carefully.

Complete the sentence: 'He got tired just by standing.'

Woh ___ thak gaya.

✓ 정답! ✗ 아쉬워요. 정답: khade khade

For a state of being (standing), we use the perfective participle form 'khade khade' (oblique), not the continuous 'khadte'.

🎉 점수: /3

시각 학습 자료

Singular vs. Distributive

Singular (Specific/One)
Lal seb A red apple
Kya khaya? What did you eat? (1 item)
Reduplicated (Distributed/List)
Lal lal seb The red apples (variety)
Kya kya khaya? What all did you eat? (List)

Selecting the Right Repetition

1

Is it a question word?

YES ↓
NO
Check Adjective/Verb
2

Do you expect a list answer?

YES ↓
NO
Use Single Word
3

Are you asking about people?

YES ↓
NO
Use Kya Kya
4

Use Kaun Kaun

YES ↓
NO
Done

Common Usage Scenarios

🛍️

Shopping

  • Achhe achhe dikhao
  • Saste saste
📋

Reporting

  • Kya kya hua?
  • Kaun kaun tha?
🚗

Journey

  • Jate jate
  • Raste raste

자주 묻는 질문

22 질문

Yes! Ek ek karke aao means 'come one by one.' Repeating a number distributes it to everyone or organizes the group.

Kya asks for a single answer or definition. Kya kya explicitly asks for a list or inventory of things.

Not exactly. It usually means 'specifically the red ones' (plural/distributive). For 'very red', you might use bahut lal or bilkul lal.

Generally, no. That implies there are multiple Rahuls and you are picking them out, which is rare. Usually, proper nouns are not reduplicated.

Use the repeated verb stem + te: chalte chalte. Example: Hum chalte chalte baat kar rahe the.

It depends on the noun! Garam garam chai (singular feminine). Garam garam samose (plural masculine). The adjective repeats, but grammar follows the noun.

No. If you ask kaun kaun, you expect multiple names. If you think only one person came, just ask kaun.

It can imply 'important' or 'adult' people. Bade bade log means 'big shots' or 'VIPs', not necessarily physically large people.

It often implies 'gradually' or 'step-by-step' rather than just speed. Dheere dheere sab theek ho jayega (Gradually, everything will be fine).

Yes, kab kab means 'on what occasions' or 'how often'. Example: Tum wahan kab kab jate ho? (How often/when all do you go there?).

Same logic! Tum kahan kahan gaye? means 'Where all did you go?' (List of places).

Very similar. Chalte chalte emphasizes the duration or the action happening *alongside*, while chalte hue is more adjectival 'walking'.

Sometimes. Tarah tarah ke means 'various kinds of'. Tarah (way/kind) is abstract.

It often means 'gradually happening' or 'almost happened'. Kaam hote hote reh gaya means 'The work was almost done but stopped at the last second'.

No, you don't say gaya gaya. You repeat the participle (jate jate) to modify the past tense sentence.

Absolutely. It allows for precision without wordiness. Vibhinn (various) is formal, but alag alag is used everywhere.

Personal pronouns are already specific. You cannot 'distribute' yourself. It sounds nonsensical.

Use intensifiers like bahut, kaafi, or ati (formal). Or lengthen the vowel tone in speech.

It means 'on the verge of dying' or 'with great difficulty'. Main hanste hanste mar gaya (I died laughing - figuratively).

Rarely. Usually, it's just two. Three sounds like a broken record or a song lyric, not standard grammar.

Yes, usually implies urgency or rushing. Jaldi jaldi khana khao (Eat quickly/hurry up).

Yes! Saath is with. Saath saath implies 'together continuously' or 'simultaneously'.

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