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챕터 내

The Building Blocks of Hindi

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A1 verbs_basic 4분 분량

Basic sentence with है: [Subject] [Noun/Adjective] है

In Hindi, the verb `hai` (is) always acts as the anchor at the very end of the sentence.

The Rule in 30 Seconds

  • Sentence structure is Subject + Noun/Adj + Verb.
  • Always place `hai` at the very end.
  • Used for singular 'He', 'She', 'It', 'This', 'That'.
  • Never put the verb in the middle like English.

Quick Reference

Subject (Hindi) Noun/Adjective Verb Meaning
Yeh (This) kitaab (book) hai This is a book
Woh (That/He/She) ladka (boy) hai That is a boy
Chai (Tea) garam (hot) hai The tea is hot
Mera naam (My name) Rahul hai My name is Rahul
Paani (Water) thanda (cold) hai The water is cold
Yeh (It) sahi (correct) hai It is correct

주요 예문

3 / 10
1

This is my friend.

This is my friend.

2

The weather is very pleasant.

The weather is very pleasant.

3

He/She is angry.

He/She is angry.

💡

The 'Is' Anchor

Imagine `hai` is a heavy anchor that you must drop at the very end of the boat (sentence) to stop it.

⚠️

Respect the Elder

If talking about your dad or teacher, don't use `hai` even if they are one person. Use `hain` to show respect!

The Rule in 30 Seconds

  • Sentence structure is Subject + Noun/Adj + Verb.
  • Always place `hai` at the very end.
  • Used for singular 'He', 'She', 'It', 'This', 'That'.
  • Never put the verb in the middle like English.

Overview

Welcome to the absolute bedrock of Hindi grammar! If Hindi were a house, this rule would be the concrete foundation. We are talking about the verb 'to be'—specifically the word hai. It’s the linguistic glue that holds sentences together, allowing you to say things like "This is a book," "He is a teacher," or "The tea is hot."

In English, we throw verbs in the middle of sentences (Subject-Verb-Object). Hindi prefers to save the best for last. This might feel like waiting for the beat to drop in a song, but you'll get used to it fast. This rule is your ticket to making thousands of simple, useful sentences immediately. Ready to start speaking?

How This Grammar Works

In Hindi, the sentence structure is strictly Subject + Object/Adjective + Verb. This is often abbreviated as SOV. Unlike English, where the verb "is" sits comfortably between the subject and the description, Hindi pushes the verb hai right to the very end.

Think of hai as a period or full stop that you pronounce. It signals that the thought is complete. If you stop before hai, listeners are left hanging, waiting for the other shoe to drop. It’s used for singular subjects in the third person (he, she, it, this, that, name).

Formation Pattern

  1. 1Building a sentence is as easy as 1-2-3:
  2. 2Identify the Subject: Who or what are we talking about? (e.g., yeh = this, woh = that/he/she, Raj).
  3. 3Choose the Description: What are they? A noun (doctor, cat) or an adjective (happy, tall)?
  4. 4Seal it with hai: Place hai at the very end.
  5. 5Structure: [Subject] + [Noun/Adjective] + hai

When To Use It

Use this pattern whenever you want to:

  • Identify something: "This is a pen" (Yeh kalam hai).
  • Describe a quality: "The food is good" (Khana achha hai).
  • State a profession: "He is a singer" (Woh gayak hai).
  • Talk about names: "His name is Amit" (Uska naam Amit hai).

It’s your go-to for defining the world around you. If you can point at it and describe it, you need this rule.

When Not To Use It

Don't get hai happy and use it everywhere!

  • Don't use for "I am": That's Main ... hoon.
  • Don't use for "You are" (informal/formal): That's Tum ... ho or Aap ... hain.
  • Don't use for Plurals: "They are" uses the nasalized hain (with a dot on top in script), not the sharp hai.
  • Don't use for Possession: "I have a car" uses a different structure (Mere paas...), even though it translates to "is" in some contexts.

Common Mistakes

  • The English Hangover: Beginners often try to put hai in the middle: Yeh hai kitaab (This is book). While poetic, it sounds distinctively like Yoda. Keep the verb at the end: Yeh kitaab hai.
  • Gender Bending: Hai itself doesn't change for gender, but the adjective before it might! Ladka lamba hai (Boy is tall) vs Ladki lambi hai (Girl is tall). Hai stays cool and constant.
  • Missing the Polite Plural: Using hai for someone you respect (like a teacher or elder) can sound rude. Even if they are one person, we use the plural hain for respect. Using hai is like calling your boss "dude."

Contrast With Similar Patterns

  • Hai vs Tha: Hai is present tense (is). Tha is past tense (was). Woh khush hai (He is happy) vs Woh khush tha (He was happy).
  • Hai vs Hota hai: Hai is for right now or specific states. Hota hai is for general truths. Chai garam hai (The tea is hot right now) vs Chai garam hoti hai (Tea is generally hot).

Quick FAQ

Q: Can I drop the subject like in Spanish?

Sometimes, if context is clear. Achha hai (It's good) is a very common complete sentence in conversation.

Q: Is hai pronounced like 'Hi'?

Close! It's more like the 'he' in 'hen', but stretches a bit like 'hey' without the 'y' glide. Short and sharp.

Q: Does hai change if the subject is a thing or a person?

Nope! Yeh phone hai (It's a phone) and Woh Ravi hai (He is Ravi). The verb treats everyone equally.

Reference Table

Subject (Hindi) Noun/Adjective Verb Meaning
Yeh (This) kitaab (book) hai This is a book
Woh (That/He/She) ladka (boy) hai That is a boy
Chai (Tea) garam (hot) hai The tea is hot
Mera naam (My name) Rahul hai My name is Rahul
Paani (Water) thanda (cold) hai The water is cold
Yeh (It) sahi (correct) hai It is correct
💡

The 'Is' Anchor

Imagine `hai` is a heavy anchor that you must drop at the very end of the boat (sentence) to stop it.

⚠️

Respect the Elder

If talking about your dad or teacher, don't use `hai` even if they are one person. Use `hain` to show respect!

🎯

Intonation Matters

You can turn a statement into a question just by raising your pitch at `hai`? `Yeh garam hai?` (Is this hot?)

💬

Short & Sweet

In casual street Hindi, if you point at something and just say the adjective + `hai` (e.g., `Mehenga hai` - It's expensive), everyone understands.

예시

10
#1 Yeh mera dost hai.

This is my friend.

Focus: hai

This is my friend.

Standard identification pattern.

#2 Mausam bahut suhana hai.

The weather is very pleasant.

Focus: suhana

The weather is very pleasant.

Using an adjective to describe a subject.

#3 Woh naraz hai.

He/She is angry.

Focus: naraz

He/She is angry.

Emotions are treated as adjectives here.

#4 Kya yeh tumhara phone hai?

Is this your phone?

Focus: kya

Is this your phone?

Question form still keeps `hai` at the end.

#5 Yeh rasta band hai.

This road is closed.

Focus: band

This road is closed.

Describing a state of being.

#6 Yeh hai bilkul galat. (✗) -> Yeh bilkul galat hai. (✓)

This is totally wrong.

Focus: galat

This is totally wrong.

Mistake: Putting verb before adjective.

#7 Woh ek adhyapak hai.

He is a teacher.

Focus: adhyapak

He is a teacher.

Profession description.

#8 Kamra saaf hai.

The room is clean.

Focus: saaf

The room is clean.

Simple adjective usage.

#9 Main thaka hai. (✗) -> Main thaka hoon. (✓)

I am tired.

Focus: hoon

I am tired.

Mistake: Using `hai` with 'I' (Main).

#10 Bharat ek bada desh hai.

India is a big country.

Focus: desh

India is a big country.

Complex noun phrase before verb.

셀프 테스트

Complete the sentence describing the house.

Yeh ghar bada ___.

✓ 정답! ✗ 아쉬워요. 정답: hai

We are talking about 'Yeh ghar' (This house), which is a singular third-person subject, so we use `hai`.

Translate 'This is easy' choosing the correct word order.

Yeh ___ hai.

✓ 정답! ✗ 아쉬워요. 정답: aasaan

The adjective (easy = aasaan) comes before the verb `hai`.

Identify the correct ending for 'His name is Raj'.

Uska naam Raj ___.

✓ 정답! ✗ 아쉬워요. 정답: hai

Since the name is a singular fact in the present, we use `hai`.

🎉 점수: /3

시각 학습 자료

Word Order Clash

English (SVO)
Subject + Verb + Obj He is happy
Hindi (SOV)
Subject + Obj + Verb Woh khush hai

Which 'To Be' Verb?

1

Is the subject 'I'?

NO
Use 'Hoon'
2

Is the subject 'You'?

NO
Use 'Ho' or 'Hain'
3

Is it Singular (He/She/It)?

YES ↓
NO
Use 'Hain' (Plural)
4

Use 'Hai'

Common Pairs with Hai

🎨

Adjectives

  • Laal (Red)
  • Bada (Big)
  • Sundar (Beautiful)
👤

Nouns

  • Dost (Friend)
  • Ghar (House)
  • Mez (Table)

자주 묻는 질문

21 질문

It translates to 'is'. It connects the subject to its description in the present tense.

Hindi follows the SOV (Subject-Object-Verb) structure. It's just the rule of the road, like driving on the left in London.

No, for plurals you must use hain (pronounced with a nasal 'n' at the end). Hai is strictly for singular.

You would replace hai with tha (for masculine) or thi (for feminine). E.g., Woh khush thi.

No! For 'I' (Main), you always pair it with hoon. Main doctor hoon.

Generally no. 'Tum' uses ho and 'Aap' uses hain. Tu (very informal) uses hai, but be careful using Tu!

You can add Kya at the start, or just raise your voice at the end. Kya yeh sach hai? (Is this true?).

The word hai itself is neutral. It doesn't change form whether the subject is a boy or a girl.

Yes! If it's an adjective, it often changes. Ladka mota hai vs Ladki moti hai.

Yes, often in conversation. If you are holding a bag, you can just say Bhaari hai (It is heavy).

Just add nahi (not) before hai. Yeh sahi nahi hai (This is not right).

Hai sounds like 'hey' (rhymes with say). Hain sounds similar but you push air through your nose at the end.

It's neutral. The formality comes from the subject pronoun (Tu/Tum/Aap) and the verb ending that matches it.

Absolutely. Phone naya hai (Phone is new). It works for anything singular.

You still use hai. Ek billi hai (A cat is [there]).

Yes! Woh ghar par hai (He is at home). It indicates presence.

Not directly. 'I have a car' is Mere paas car hai. Note that hai is still there, but the structure is different.

We usually say Baarish ho rahi hai. Hai is there as the helper verb.

The pronunciation is the same, but the script is different. In Devanagari it is है.

Yes, Hinglish is very common! Meeting boring hai is perfectly acceptable in casual chat.

Kaun hai? Simple as that.

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