Using 'Kaise' to Ask
Use `kaise` (invariant) for actions, but agree `kaisa/ke/ki` with the noun when asking about quality or state.
The Rule in 30 Seconds
- Used to ask 'How' or 'In what way'.
- Stays `kaise` for actions (adverbs).
- Changes to `kaisa/kaisi` for nouns (adjectives).
- Usually placed before the verb.
Quick Reference
| Usage Type | Hindi Word | Agreement Rule | Example Context |
|---|---|---|---|
| Adverb (Method) | Kaise (कैसे) | Never changes | How do you go? |
| Adjective (Masc. Sing.) | Kaisa (कैसा) | Matches Noun | How is the room? |
| Adjective (Masc. Plur.) | Kaise (कैसे) | Matches Noun | How are the mangoes? |
| Adjective (Fem. Sing/Plur) | Kaisi (कैसी) | Matches Noun | How is the tea? |
| Health (Formal) | Kaise (कैसे) | Matches Subject (Aap) | How are you (sir)? |
| Health (Fem. Subject) | Kaisi (कैसी) | Matches Subject | How are you (ma'am)? |
주요 예문
3 / 10आप कैसे हैं?
How are you? (Formal/Male)
ये खाना कैसे बनता है?
How is this food made?
तुम स्कूल कैसे जाते हो?
How do you go to school?
The Default Mode
If you aren't sure about the gender of a noun, or if you're asking generally "How is it going?", just use the masculine `Kaisa` or the general `Kaise`. People will understand you perfectly.
Don't confuse Price & Manner
In English "How is the chicken?" could mean price in some very specific slang, but in Hindi, `Chicken kaisa hai?` only means "How does it taste/look?". For price, use `Kitne ka`.
The Rule in 30 Seconds
- Used to ask 'How' or 'In what way'.
- Stays `kaise` for actions (adverbs).
- Changes to `kaisa/kaisi` for nouns (adjectives).
- Usually placed before the verb.
Overview
Ready to become the most curious person in the room? Today we're tackling kaise (कैसे), the magic word for asking "How?" in Hindi. Whether you want to know how to cook a delicious curry, how someone is feeling, or how to get to the Taj Mahal, this is your go-to word. It's one of the most frequent interrogatives you'll use, right up there with "what" and "where." Think of kaise as your tool for unlocking the *method*, *manner*, or *condition* of things. It’s versatile, essential, and honestly, pretty fun to use once you get the hang of it. Let's dive in!
How This Grammar Works
At its core, kaise asks about the process or state of something. In English, we use "How" for a lot of different things, and Hindi is similar, but with a twist. Kaise can function in two main ways: as an adverb (asking *how* an action is done) and as an adjective (asking *what kind* or *how* a person/thing is).
When it modifies a verb (like "speak," "go," "eat"), it stays kaise. But—and here’s the kicker—when it asks about a noun (like "How is the food?"), it changes its outfit to match the gender and number of that noun (becoming kaisa, kaise, or kaisi). Don't panic! We'll break this down. Basically, it’s like a grammar chameleon that sometimes matches the furniture and sometimes just hangs out unchanged.
Formation Pattern
- 1The placement of
kaiseis generally quite flexible, but for the most neutral, standard questions, here is the golden rule: - 2Subject (The person or thing)
- 3Object (If there is one)
- 4
kaise(The question word) - 5Verb (The action or state)
- 6Pattern 1: Asking about Action (Adverb)
- 7Subject + Object +
kaise+ Verb? - 8*Example:*
Tum(You) +school+kaise+jaate ho(go)? - 9Pattern 2: Asking about State/Quality (Adjective)
- 10Subject +
kaisa/kaise/kaisi+ Verb (is/are)? - 11*Example:*
Khana(Food) +kaisa+hai(is)?
When To Use It
You will use kaise constantly. Here are the big moments:
- Asking about health/well-being: "How are you?" (
Aap kaise hain?). This is the classic opener. - Asking about method: "How do you make tea?" (
Chai kaise banate hain?). Essential for foodies. - Asking for directions/transport: "How do I go to Delhi?" (
Delhi kaise jaun?). - Asking for opinions: "How was the movie?" (
Movie kaisi thi?).
When Not To Use It
Don't use kaise when you are asking for a specific quantity—that's kitna (how much). If you ask a shopkeeper Aloo kaise hain? (How are the potatoes?), they might tell you "They are happy and round." If you want the *price*, you ask Kitne ke hain?. Also, avoid using it when asking for a definition; for "What is X?", use kya.
Common Mistakes
The biggest trap students fall into is ignoring the gender agreement when kaise acts as an adjective.
- Mistake: Asking a girl, "Tum kaisa ho?" (Masculine adjective).
- Correction: "Tum kaisi ho?" (Feminine adjective).
Another slip-up is word order. In English, "How" starts the sentence. In Hindi, putting Kaise at the very beginning adds heavy emphasis or shock ("HOW did you do that?!"), but for normal questions, keep it before the verb. It sounds much more natural, like you're a local and not reading from a script.
Contrast With Similar Patterns
Kaisevs.Kyun(Why):Kyunasks for the reason;kaiseasks for the method.Kaisevs.Kitna(How much):Kitnais for quantity/amount.Kaiseis for quality/manner.Ye kaise hai?= How is this? (Quality)Ye kitna hai?= How much is this? (Quantity/Price)
Quick FAQ
Q: Can I just say Kaise? as a one-word question?
Yes! If someone says "I fixed the car," you can say "Kaise?" (How?). It's perfectly natural conversationally.
Q: Does kaise always change for gender?
No. Only when it describes a noun (like asking "How is the food?"). If it describes a verb (action), like "How do you speak?", it stays kaise regardless of gender.
Q: Is kaise formal or informal?
The word itself is neutral. The formality comes from the pronoun (Tu/Tum/Aap) and the verb ending you pair with it.
Reference Table
| Usage Type | Hindi Word | Agreement Rule | Example Context |
|---|---|---|---|
| Adverb (Method) | Kaise (कैसे) | Never changes | How do you go? |
| Adjective (Masc. Sing.) | Kaisa (कैसा) | Matches Noun | How is the room? |
| Adjective (Masc. Plur.) | Kaise (कैसे) | Matches Noun | How are the mangoes? |
| Adjective (Fem. Sing/Plur) | Kaisi (कैसी) | Matches Noun | How is the tea? |
| Health (Formal) | Kaise (कैसे) | Matches Subject (Aap) | How are you (sir)? |
| Health (Fem. Subject) | Kaisi (कैसी) | Matches Subject | How are you (ma'am)? |
The Default Mode
If you aren't sure about the gender of a noun, or if you're asking generally "How is it going?", just use the masculine `Kaisa` or the general `Kaise`. People will understand you perfectly.
Don't confuse Price & Manner
In English "How is the chicken?" could mean price in some very specific slang, but in Hindi, `Chicken kaisa hai?` only means "How does it taste/look?". For price, use `Kitne ka`.
Politeness Hack
When asking elders "How are you?", always use `Aap kaise hain?`. Using `Tum` or `Tu` with `kaise` can sound disrespectful unless you are close friends.
The Rhetorical Kaise
Hindi speakers often use `Kaise?` to express disbelief. "Tumne ye kaise kiya?!" (How did you DO this?!) implies they are impressed or shocked, just like in English.
예시
10आप कैसे हैं?
Focus: kaise
How are you? (Formal/Male)
Standard greeting for a male.
ये खाना कैसे बनता है?
Focus: kaise
How is this food made?
Asking about method/process.
तुम स्कूल कैसे जाते हो?
Focus: kaise
How do you go to school?
Asking about mode of transport.
आज मौसम कैसा है?
Focus: kaisa
How is the weather today?
Adjective use matching 'mausam' (masculine).
चाय कैसी थी?
Focus: kaisi
How was the tea?
Adjective use matching 'chai' (feminine).
तुम कैसे हो?
Focus: kaise
How are you?
Incorrect gender agreement. Should be 'kaisi'.
तुम कैसी हो?
Focus: kaisi
How are you? (to a female)
Correct feminine agreement.
वो लोग कैसे हैं?
Focus: kaise
How are those people?
Plural agreement.
मुझे कैसे पता होगा?
Focus: kaise
How would I know?
Rhetorical/Advanced usage.
आपका दिन कैसा रहा?
Focus: kaisa
How was your day?
Past tense quality check.
셀프 테스트
Ask how the movie (feminine noun) was.
Movie ___ thi?
Because 'Movie' is treated as feminine in Hindi (or usually equated with 'film'), and definitely takes the feminine form 'kaisi'.
Ask someone how they will go home (method).
Tum ghar ___ jaoge?
We are asking about the method of travel (adverb), so we use the invariant 'kaise'.
Ask about the condition of the room (masculine noun).
Kamra ___ hai?
Kamra (room) is a masculine singular noun, so the adjective form must be 'kaisa'.
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시각 학습 자료
Action vs. Description
Which Form to Use?
Are you asking about an action?
Is the noun Feminine?
Is the noun Plural or Formal?
Common Contexts
Health
- • Aap kaise hain?
- • Tabiyat kaisi hai?
Travel
- • Airport kaise jaaun?
- • Rasta kaisa hai?
Social
- • Party kaisi thi?
- • Kaise ho yaar?
자주 묻는 질문
20 질문Usually, yes. It sounds most natural there, e.g., Aap office kaise jaate hain?. Putting it at the start (Kaise aap office jaate hain?) sounds poetic or dramatic.
You can often just use Kaise? alone contextually. Or sometimes Aisa kaise? (How is it like this/How come?).
No, for time you use kab (when) or kitne baje (at what time). Kaise is strictly for manner or condition.
Use kitne (for countable things) or kitna (for uncountable). Kaise is never used for numbers.
Because the adjective agrees with the **object** (tea/chai), not the person drinking it. Chai is feminine, so it's Chai kaisi thi?.
Absolutely. Tum kaise jaoge? (How will you go?). The question word doesn't change with tense.
That's actually kitni door. Kaise doesn't combine with distance adjectives like 'far' the way 'how' does in English.
Use kitni der or kab tak. Again, kaise isn't used for duration.
Yes! Ye kaisa insaan hai? means "What kind of person is this?" (literally: How is this person?).
No! In English we might say "How are you called?" in old dialects, but in Hindi it's Aapka naam kya hai? (What is your name?).
Yes, spoken Hindi and Urdu are nearly identical here. Aap kaise hain works perfectly in both.
Kaise ho is informal (used with Tum). Kaise hain is formal (used with Aap) or plural.
Yes. Main kaise nahi jaunga? (How will I *not* go? / Why wouldn't I go?). It's used for emphasis.
Strictly grammar speaking: Aap (log) kaisi hain?. But in mixed groups or general speech, masculine/plural kaise often dominates.
Here we usually use kitna for exclamations of degree: Kitna sundar hai! (How beautiful!). Kaise is rarely used for exclamations of degree.
Yes, meaning 'how'. "Look how he runs" -> Dekho wo kaise bhaagta hai.
It means "anyhow" or "somehow". Kaise bhi karke aao (Come somehow/by any means).
No, it's a standard function word. Tone matters more than the word itself.
Use kitna. Aapki umar kitni hai?. Do not use kaise.
Colloquially, yes! It means "Which type/kind?" or "The one that is how?". Very common in shopping.
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