Negating Simple Past
To say 'didn't' in Hindi, use `nahin` + past verb and completely delete the ending `thaa`.
The Rule in 30 Seconds
- Use `nahin` before the verb.
- Drop the auxiliary `thaa/the/thi`.
- Keep `ne` for transitive verbs.
- Verb agrees with object if `ne` exists.
Quick Reference
| Subject Type | Structure | Hindi Example | English Translation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Intransitive (Masculine) | Subj + nahin + Verb(aa) | `Main nahin gayaa` | I didn't go |
| Intransitive (Feminine) | Subj + nahin + Verb(i) | `Woh nahin aayi` | She didn't come |
| Transitive (Masc Object) | Subj-ne + Obj + nahin + Verb(aa) | `Maine seb nahin khaayaa` | I didn't eat the apple |
| Transitive (Fem Object) | Subj-ne + Obj + nahin + Verb(i) | `Usne chai nahin pee` | He/She didn't drink tea |
| Plural Subject (Intrans) | Subj + nahin + Verb(e) | `Hum nahin soye` | We didn't sleep |
| Plural Object (Trans) | Subj-ne + Objs + nahin + Verb(e) | `Ram ne paise nahin diye` | Ram didn't give money |
Wichtige Beispiele
3 von 9मैंने आज काम नहीं किया।
I didn't work today.
वह कल नहीं आया।
He didn't come yesterday.
उसने मेरी बात नहीं सुनी।
He/She didn't listen to me (my word).
The Zombie Auxiliary
Don't let `thaa` come back from the dead! In Simple Past Negative, kill it. Just `nahin` + Verb.
The 'Ne' Rule Still Applies
Just because it's negative doesn't mean you can ignore `ne`. `Maine nahin kiya` (I didn't do it) still needs `ne` because `karna` is transitive.
The Rule in 30 Seconds
- Use `nahin` before the verb.
- Drop the auxiliary `thaa/the/thi`.
- Keep `ne` for transitive verbs.
- Verb agrees with object if `ne` exists.
Overview
You know how to say you did something. That's great! But life isn't always about action. Sometimes, the most important thing is what you *didn't* do. Maybe you didn't eat the last cookie. Maybe you didn't break the vase. Today, we're mastering the art of denial. In Hindi, saying "I didn't do it" is actually cleaner and shorter than saying "I did it." It's one of the few times a language makes things easier for you. We are focusing on the Simple Past Negative.
How This Grammar Works
In English, when we negate the past, we bring in a helper: "did not." In Hindi, we have a trusty negator: नहीं (nahin). The magic of the Simple Past Negative is what disappears. If you've been using था, थे, or थी (thaa/the/thi) at the end of your past tense sentences, prepare to put them on a diet. In standard Simple Past Negative sentences, the auxiliary verb drops out completely. You are left with just the subject, the object, the negator, and the main verb. It's concise. It's punchy. It gets the job done without the extra baggage.
Formation Pattern
- 1Building these sentences is like making a sandwich. The
नहींsits right in the middle, flavoring everything. - 2Start with the Subject. (Remember the
nerule! If the verb is transitive—meaning it takes an object—you still neednewith the subject, just like in the positive past tense). - 3Add the Object (if there is one).
- 4Insert the Negator. Place
नहीं(nahin) here. This is crucial. It usually hugs the verb. - 5End with the Verb. Use the Past Participle form (like
gayaa,khaayaa,dekhaa). - 6STOP. Do not add
thaa,the, orthi. Seriously, stop typing. The sentence is done. - 7Structure: Subject (+
ne) + Object +नहीं+ Verb (Past Participle).
When To Use It
Use this pattern whenever you want to deny a specific completed action in the past. It covers a lot of ground.
- The Alibi: When the police ask where you were, you say, "I didn't go there!" (
Main vahaan nahin gayaa). - The Regret: "I didn't study." (
Maine padhaayi nahin ki). - The Correction: Someone says you ate pizza. You say, "I didn't eat pizza." (
Maine pizza nahin khaayaa). - Historical Facts: "He didn't become the king." (
Woh raaja nahin banaa).
When Not To Use It
Don't use this structure for every kind of past negative.
- Habits: If you want to say "I used to not eat sugar" (Past Habitual), the structure changes. That would require keeping the auxiliary or using a different form.
- Ongoing Actions: "I was not eating" (Past Continuous) is different. That uses
rahaa thaa. - Refusals in the moment: If someone offers tea right now, don't use this. This is strictly for history—yesterday, last year, or five minutes ago.
Common Mistakes
The Ghost of thaa is the biggest villain here. Learners love attaching thaa to everything because it feels "past-y." Resist the urge.
- Mistake:
Main nahin gayaa thaa.(This sounds like Past Perfect Negative: "I hadn't gone.") - Correct:
Main nahin gayaa.(I didn't go.)
Another trap is the ne marker. Even though the sentence is negative, the grammatical gender of the verb is still controlled by the object if ne is present.
- Mistake:
Maine chai nahin peeya.(Assuming verb agrees with subject). - Correct:
Maine chai nahin peeee.(Verb agrees withchai, which is feminine).
Contrast With Similar Patterns
Let's clear up the confusion between Simple Past and Past Perfect. In English, "I didn't go" and "I hadn't gone" are distinct. In Hindi, adding thaa pushes it to Past Perfect.
- Simple Past Negative:
Woh nahin aayaa.(He didn't come.) -> Focus is on the event not happening. - Past Perfect Negative:
Woh nahin aayaa thaa.(He hadn't come.) -> Focus is on the completion relative to another time.
Also, compare it with the Imperative "Don't".
- Imperative:
Mat jaao.(Don't go.) - Past:
Main nahin gayaa.(I didn't go.)
Never use mat for the past tense. Mat is bossy; nahin is factual.
Quick FAQ
Q: Can I use na instead of nahin?
You can, especially in poetry or very rapid speech (Maine na dekhaa), but nahin is the standard for conversation. Stick to nahin to be safe.
Q: Does the verb ending change?
Yes! It changes based on gender and number. Gayaa (masc. sing.), gaye (masc. pl.), gayi (fem. sing.), gayin (fem. pl.).
Q: What if I forget the ne?
People will understand you, but you'll sound like a cute toddler. Aim for accuracy!
Q: Is thaa ever allowed?
Only if the verb "to be" is the main verb. "I was not happy" -> Main khush nahin thaa. Here thaa is the main verb, not a helper. But for action verbs? Drop it like a hot potato.
Reference Table
| Subject Type | Structure | Hindi Example | English Translation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Intransitive (Masculine) | Subj + nahin + Verb(aa) | `Main nahin gayaa` | I didn't go |
| Intransitive (Feminine) | Subj + nahin + Verb(i) | `Woh nahin aayi` | She didn't come |
| Transitive (Masc Object) | Subj-ne + Obj + nahin + Verb(aa) | `Maine seb nahin khaayaa` | I didn't eat the apple |
| Transitive (Fem Object) | Subj-ne + Obj + nahin + Verb(i) | `Usne chai nahin pee` | He/She didn't drink tea |
| Plural Subject (Intrans) | Subj + nahin + Verb(e) | `Hum nahin soye` | We didn't sleep |
| Plural Object (Trans) | Subj-ne + Objs + nahin + Verb(e) | `Ram ne paise nahin diye` | Ram didn't give money |
The Zombie Auxiliary
Don't let `thaa` come back from the dead! In Simple Past Negative, kill it. Just `nahin` + Verb.
The 'Ne' Rule Still Applies
Just because it's negative doesn't mean you can ignore `ne`. `Maine nahin kiya` (I didn't do it) still needs `ne` because `karna` is transitive.
Polite Denials
In India, saying a flat 'No' can be rude. But grammatically, `Main nahin aayaa` is neutral. To soften it, add `Sorry, main nahin aayaa`.
Word Order Flexibility
While `Main nahin gayaa` is standard, you might hear `Main gayaa nahin` in emotional drama scenes. Stick to the standard for now!
Beispiele
9मैंने आज काम नहीं किया।
Focus: nahin
I didn't work today.
Transitive verb 'karna' requires 'ne'.
वह कल नहीं आया।
Focus: aayaa
He didn't come yesterday.
Intransitive verb, no 'ne', verb matches subject.
उसने मेरी बात नहीं सुनी।
Focus: suni
He/She didn't listen to me (my word).
'Baat' is feminine, so verb is 'suni'.
हमने कोई फिल्म नहीं देखी।
Focus: dekhi
We didn't see any movie.
Edge case: 'Film' is feminine in Hindi.
आज बारिश नहीं हुई।
Focus: hui
It didn't rain today.
Edge case: Weather phrases often use 'hona' (to happen).
पिता जी नहीं गए।
Focus: gaye
Father didn't go.
Formal/Respect: Plural verb 'gaye' used for singular 'Father'.
मैं कल नहीं गया था (✗)
Focus: thaa
I hadn't gone yesterday (Incorrect for Simple Past).
Mistake: Removing 'thaa' makes it standard simple past.
उसने नहीं देखा (✓)
Focus: usne
He didn't see.
Correct correction: 'thaa' is removed.
तुमने मुझे क्यों नहीं बताया?
Focus: bataayaa
Why didn't you tell me?
Advanced: Question word + Negative.
Teste dich selbst
Complete the sentence: 'I didn't buy the book.' (Book = kitaab, feminine)
Maine kitaab ___ ___.
Kitaab is feminine, so the verb must be 'khareedi'. We drop 'thi' for simple past.
Complete the sentence: 'They didn't sleep.'
Ve ___ ___.
'Ve' is plural, so we need 'soye'. 'Mat' is only for commands.
Identify the error: 'Rahul ne paani nahin peeya thaa.'
To make this Simple Past ('Rahul didn't drink water'), remove:
In Simple Past Negative, we drop the auxiliary 'thaa'.
🎉 Ergebnis: /3
Visuelle Lernhilfen
Positive vs. Negative Past
Should I use 'thaa'?
Is the sentence Negative?
Is it Simple Past?
Is the main verb an action?
Action verb?
Verb Endings in Negative
Masculine Sing.
- • nahin gayaa
- • nahin khaayaa
Feminine Sing.
- • nahin gayi
- • nahin khayi
Plural / Respect
- • nahin gaye
- • nahin khaye
Häufig gestellte Fragen
22 FragenYou usually need the verb. In English, 'I didn't' stands alone. In Hindi, you'd say Maine nahin kiya (I didn't do [it]) or Main nahin gayaa (I didn't go).
Yes, 99% of the time! Nahin acts like a bodyguard standing right in front of the verb. Maine khaana *nahin* khaayaa.
No! Mat is strictly for orders (Imperative). You can't command the past. Use nahin for history.
That's technically Past Perfect ('I hadn't gone'). It implies something happened after. For a simple 'I didn't go', drop the thaa.
Absolutely. If you are a girl, you say Main nahin gayi. If you are a guy, Main nahin gayaa.
If you use ne (transitive verb), the verb agrees with the object. Maine chai (f) nahin pee (f).
No. That is Past Continuous. For that, you keep the auxiliary: Main nahin jaa rahaa thaa.
Use kabhi nahin instead of just nahin. Main kabhi nahin gayaa (I never went).
It is grammatically acceptable but sounds very poetic or regional. Stick to nahin for daily life.
Negate the main finite verb. Main use dekhne nahin gayaa (I didn't go to see him).
As a one-word answer? Yes, a bit blunt. Better to say Ji nahin (No, sir/ma'am) or the full sentence.
No. Transitivity is a property of the verb itself. If the verb needs ne, it needs it in negative sentences too.
Use koi nahin. Koi nahin aayaa.
No, that's a habit. For habits, use Main nahin jaata thaa.
The verb becomes plural. Hum nahin gaye (We didn't go).
Yes! It's important. It's not nahi, it's nahin (with a nasal dot).
Only for emphasis, like 'No, I didn't go!' -> Nahin, main nahin gayaa. But you need the second nahin near the verb.
Yes, in Past Continuous (raha thaa) and Past Perfect (chuka thaa), but NOT in Simple Past.
For 'was/were', you KEEP the thaa. Main khush nahin thaa (I was not happy). This is the exception because thaa is the main verb here.
Saying Maine nahin khaayaa thaa when they just mean 'I didn't eat'. It sounds like you're setting up a flashback story.
Mujhe accha nahin lagaa. Note the subject is Mujhe (to me).
In informal texting, yes (nai or ni), but don't say it that way in a speech!
Ähnliche Regeln
Dative Subjects and Object Agreement
Overview Welcome to the world of the "Dative Subject." Sounds fancy, right? It's actually one of the most distinctive fe...
Hindi Past Continuous and Habitual
Overview Welcome to the time machine! Today, we're distinguishing between **what you were doing** at a specific moment i...
Hindi Passive Voice: Using
Overview Passive voice in Hindi is your best friend when you want to sound diplomatic, formal, or just plain mysterious...
Expressing Comp
Overview Ever felt like life is just a series of things you *have* to do? "I have to work," "I have to eat vegetables,"...
Expressing Simultaneous Actions
Overview Ever tried rubbing your stomach and patting your head at the same time? That's what we're doing with verbs toda...
Kommentare (0)
Zum Kommentieren AnmeldenStarte kostenlos mit dem Sprachenlernen
Kostenlos Loslegen