2

챕터 내

Ongoing Actions and Future Plans

이 챕터의 규칙 15 / 44
A2 conjunctions_connectors 5분 분량

Hindi Time Clauses: Using Jab

Use `jab` to link two events in time, always balancing it with `tab` or `to` in the second clause.

The Rule in 30 Seconds

  • Use 'jab' for statements, NOT questions.
  • Pattern: Jab [Action 1], tab [Action 2].
  • Think 'When..., then...'.
  • 'Kab' asks when; 'Jab' tells when.

Quick Reference

Structure Part 1 (Cause/Time) Connector Structure Part 2 (Result/Action) English Meaning
Jab baarish hoti hai tab mor naachte hain When it rains, peacocks dance.
Jab main free hunga tab tumhe call karunga When I am free, I will call you.
Jab papa aaye tab humne khana khaya When dad came, we ate food.
Jab light jati hai to andhera hota hai When the light goes, it gets dark.
Jab tum kahoge tab main chalunga When you say, I will go.
Jab tak tum yahan ho tab tak main khush hun As long as you are here, I am happy.

주요 예문

3 / 8
1

जब मैं छोटा था, तब मैं शरारती था।

When I was young, (then) I was naughty.

2

जब बस आएगी, तब हम जाएंगे।

When the bus comes, we will go.

3

जब तुम तैयार हो, मुझे बता देना।

When you are ready, let me know.

⚠️

The Question Trap

Never start a question with `Jab`! If you see a question mark at the end of the sentence, 99% of the time you need `Kab`.

🎯

Future Tense Consistency

In English we say 'When I *go*, I will buy'. Hindi prefers 'When I *will go*, I *will buy*'. Matching the tenses makes you sound more native.

The Rule in 30 Seconds

  • Use 'jab' for statements, NOT questions.
  • Pattern: Jab [Action 1], tab [Action 2].
  • Think 'When..., then...'.
  • 'Kab' asks when; 'Jab' tells when.

Overview

Imagine a see-saw. On one side, you have an action happening at a specific time. On the other side, you have the result or the main event. In Hindi, we balance this see-saw using Time Clauses. Specifically, we use the word jab (when) to start the first side, and often tab (then) to balance the second side. It's not just about asking "When?"—in fact, it’s rarely about asking! It’s about telling a story: "When this happens, that happens."

Think of jab as a flag you wave to mark a specific moment in time. "When I was young...", "When the rain stops...", "When the chai is ready...". If you master this, you stop sounding like a robot listing facts ("I go home. I eat.") and start sounding like a real person connecting ideas ("When I go home, I eat").

How This Grammar Works

In English, we just say "When I go, I'll call you." We don't usually say "then" in the second part. But Hindi loves balance. Hindi loves pairs.

  • The relative marker jab introduces the time clause.
  • The correlative marker tab (or sometimes to) introduces the main clause.

So the structure literally translates to: "When I go, then I will call you."

It’s like a grammar sandwich. Jab is the top bun, your first sentence is the filling, tab is the bottom bun, and the result is the plate it sits on. Okay, maybe that analogy made you hungry, but you get the point! You need both parts to make it feel complete, especially when you are starting out.

Formation Pattern

  1. 1Here is the secret formula to building these sentences perfectly every time:
  2. 2Start with jab: This signals a time clause is coming.
  3. 3Add the first action: Subject + Object + Verb.
  4. 4Add a comma: Take a breath!
  5. 5Add tab (or to): This signals the consequence or next step.
  6. 6Add the second action: Subject + Object + Verb.
  7. 7The Pattern:
  8. 8Jab + [Subject 1] + [Verb 1], tab + [Subject 2] + [Verb 2].
  9. 9*Example:*
  10. 10Jab tum aaoge, tab hum khayenge.
  11. 11(When you come, then we will eat.)

When To Use It

Use this structure whenever one action depends on the timing of another. It’s perfect for:

  • Routines: "When I wake up, I drink water."
  • Future Plans: "When we reach Delhi, we will visit the Red Fort."
  • Past Narratives: "When I lived in Mumbai, I ate vada pav every day."
  • Instructions: "When the water boils, add the tea leaves."

Basically, anytime you want to link two events by time, jab is your best friend.

When Not To Use It

This is the big one. DO NOT use jab to ask a question.

If you want to ask "When are you coming?", you use kab.

  • Correct: Tum kab aaoge? (When will you come?)
  • Incorrect: Tum jab aaoge? (This sounds like an incomplete sentence: "When you come...?")

Think of it this way: K words are usually for questions (kya, kyun, kab, kahan). J words are for answers or statements (jab, jo, jahan). If you use jab to ask a question, people will stare at you waiting for the rest of the sentence!

Common Mistakes

  • The English Hangover: In English, we often put the "when" part second. "I will call you when I arrive." In Hindi, while technically possible, it sounds much more natural to start with the jab clause first. Stick to the Jab... tab... order for now.
  • Mixing Tenses: If you are talking about the future, both verbs often take the future tense ending. In English, we say "When I *arrive* (present), I *will call* (future)." In Hindi, it's often "When I *will arrive* (future), I *will call* (future)." (Jab main pahunchunga, tab call karunga).
  • Forgetting tab: Native speakers sometimes drop tab when speaking fast, but as a learner, dropping it makes your sentence feel like it's falling off a cliff. Keep it safe—use tab.

Contrast With Similar Patterns

  • Jab vs. Agar: This is crucial. Agar means "if". Jab means "when".
  • Agar main aaunga... (If I come... implies doubt. Maybe I won't.)
  • Jab main aaunga... (When I come... implies certainty. I definitely will.)

Use jab when you are sure the event will happen. Use agar when you are betting on it.

Quick FAQ

Q: Can I use to instead of tab?

Yes! In spoken Hindi, to is very common and slightly less formal than tab. Jab main bolun, to suno. (When I speak, [then] listen.)

Q: Can I swap the order?

You can say "Main tab aaunga, jab tum bulaoge" (I will come then, when you call), but it puts heavy emphasis on the *condition*. The standard Jab... tab... flow is safer and more neutral.

Q: Is jaise hi the same?

Jaise hi means "as soon as". It's jab's hyperactive cousin. Use it for immediate reactions. Jab is for general timing.

Reference Table

Structure Part 1 (Cause/Time) Connector Structure Part 2 (Result/Action) English Meaning
Jab baarish hoti hai tab mor naachte hain When it rains, peacocks dance.
Jab main free hunga tab tumhe call karunga When I am free, I will call you.
Jab papa aaye tab humne khana khaya When dad came, we ate food.
Jab light jati hai to andhera hota hai When the light goes, it gets dark.
Jab tum kahoge tab main chalunga When you say, I will go.
Jab tak tum yahan ho tab tak main khush hun As long as you are here, I am happy.
⚠️

The Question Trap

Never start a question with `Jab`! If you see a question mark at the end of the sentence, 99% of the time you need `Kab`.

🎯

Future Tense Consistency

In English we say 'When I *go*, I will buy'. Hindi prefers 'When I *will go*, I *will buy*'. Matching the tenses makes you sound more native.

💬

Bollywood Drama

You'll hear `Jab tak hai jaan` (As long as there is life) in movies. It uses the extended `Jab tak` form for dramatic duration!

💡

The Comma Pause

If you forget the word `tab`, just pause for a second (a comma) in speech. 'Jab tum aaoge... [pause] ...hum jayenge.' It works in a pinch!

예시

8
#1 Jab main chhota tha, tab main shararati tha.

जब मैं छोटा था, तब मैं शरारती था।

Focus: Jab

When I was young, (then) I was naughty.

Standard past tense usage.

#2 Jab bus aayegi, tab hum jayenge.

जब बस आएगी, तब हम जाएंगे।

Focus: aayegi

When the bus comes, we will go.

Notice both verbs are in future tense (aayegi/jayenge), unlike English.

#3 Jab tum taiyaar ho, mujhe bata dena.

जब तुम तैयार हो, मुझे बता देना।

Focus: bata dena

When you are ready, let me know.

`tab` is implied/dropped here, common in casual speech.

#4 Jab tak tum padhoge, main wait karunga.

जब तक तुम पढ़ोगे, मैं वेट करूँगा।

Focus: Jab tak

As long as (until when) you study, I will wait.

Edge Case: `Jab tak` implies duration.

#5 Kab tum aaoge?

कब तुम आओगे? ✗

Focus: Kab

When will you come?

Mistake! This is a question, so use `Kab`, not `Jab`. Wait, this example shows the *correction*.

#6 Jab tum aaoge?

जब तुम आओगे? ✗ (Incorrect)

Focus: Jab

When you come...?

Common Mistake: Using `jab` for a question. It sounds incomplete.

#7 Jab office band hota hai, to traffic hota hai.

जब ऑफिस बंद होता है, तो ट्रैफिक होता है।

Focus: to

When the office closes, (then) there is traffic.

Using `to` instead of `tab` is very natural.

#8 Jahan chah, wahan raah.

जहाँ चाह, वहाँ राह।

Focus: Jahan

Where there is a will, there is a way.

Advanced: Similar relative-correlative structure (Jahan-Wahan) just like Jab-Tab.

셀프 테스트

Choose the correct word to start the sentence.

___ main station pahuncha, train nikal gayi.

✓ 정답! ✗ 아쉬워요. 정답: Jab

We are stating a time fact ('When I reached...'), not asking a question or posing a condition.

Select the correct connector for the second part of the sentence.

Jab baarish rukegi, ___ hum khelenge.

✓ 정답! ✗ 아쉬워요. 정답: tab

'Jab' (when) is almost always paired with 'tab' (then) to complete the logic.

Identify the correct question word.

Tum ___ ja rahe ho?

✓ 정답! ✗ 아쉬워요. 정답: kab

This is a question ('When are you going?'), so we must use 'kab', not 'jab'.

🎉 점수: /3

시각 학습 자료

J-Words vs. K-Words

Relative (Statements)
Jab (When...) Used to tell time
Jahan (Where...) Used to tell place
Interrogative (Questions)
Kab? (When?) Used to ask time
Kahan? (Where?) Used to ask place

Jab or Kab?

1

Are you asking a question?

YES
Use 'Kab'
NO
Use 'Jab'
2

Are you connecting two events?

YES
Use 'Jab' ... 'Tab'

Common Pairs with Jab

⚖️

Standard

  • Jab ... Tab (When... Then)
🗣️

Spoken/Casual

  • Jab ... To (When... Then)

Duration

  • Jab tak ... Tab tak (As long as...)

자주 묻는 질문

20 질문

Yes! Often jab or jab bhi is used for 'whenever'. Jab bhi tum aao means 'Whenever you come'.

It's not a crime! In casual conversation, people will understand you, especially if you pause where tab should be. But for proper grammar, keep it in.

Absolutely. Jab main wahan tha (When I was there). It works for past, present, and future.

That is usually Kab se (since when - question) or Jab se (since [the time] - statement). E.g., Jab se tum gaye ho... (Since you left...).

Jab ki usually means 'whereas' or 'while'. It contrasts two things. Main padh raha tha, jab ki woh so raha tha. (I was reading, whereas he was sleeping.)

Usually, yes. It marks the start of the second clause. Putting it later sounds poetic or confusing.

You can, like Main tab aaunga jab tum free ho. But it emphasizes the condition strongly. The standard way is Jab first.

Jab is 'when' (connector). Kabhi is 'sometime' or 'ever'. Don't confuse them! Kabhi kabhi means 'sometimes'.

Yes. Jab wo aaye, mujhe call karo. (When he comes, call me.)

It is neutral. You use it with your boss and your best friend. The formality changes with the verb endings (aap/tum), not the word jab.

You can say Bas jab... or Thik jab.... Thik jab main nikla... (Just when I left...).

Nope! Jab is invariant. It doesn't care if you are a boy, girl, or a group. It stays jab.

Jab tak means 'until' or 'as long as'. It's about duration. Jab tak tum nahi aaoge... (Until you don't come / Until you come...).

Hindi logic! Jab tak tum nahi aaoge literally means 'Until you *don't* come'. It translates to 'Until you come' in English. It's a double negative quirk.

Yes, it sets the scene. Jab main chhota tha... is a classic way to start a story.

No. In 'Then what happened?', 'then' is usually phir. Tab is specifically for linking to jab. Phir is for sequence.

Not really. Jab needs an event or state. You can't just say Jab school. You need Jab school khatam hua (When school ended).

No problem. Jab baarish ruki, tab hum nikle. (When rain stopped [subj 1], then we left [subj 2].)

Rhymes with 'tub' or 'rub'. It's a short 'u' sound. Juh-b.

Constantly! Jab koi baat bigad jaye... (When something goes wrong...). It's everywhere in lyrics.

도움이 되었나요?

먼저 이것을 배우세요

이 개념들을 이해하면 이 문법 규칙을 마스터하는 데 도움이 됩니다.

계속 배우기

더 배울 준비가 됐나요? 이 규칙들은 방금 배운 내용을 기반으로 합니다.

아직 댓글이 없습니다. 첫 번째로 생각을 공유하세요!

무료로 언어 학습 시작하기

무료로 학습 시작