@@phoenixhou4486 most welcome! And maybe songs can help you differentiate the pronunciation? Listen to dialogues in preferably old bollywood movies because they have more usage of Hindi words as compared to present years! Other than that, My personal experience being a native speaker studying the language is that I personally faced a lot of difficulties learning Hindi grammar (vyaakaran in hindi), so I'd suggest that you can pay attention to that after learning the basics and making your sentence formation and vocabulary a bit stronger. Although I don't know the curriculum of the course you're pursuing, this is some pointers I'd say are important from my perspective! उम्मीद है कि आपका अनुभव निस्संदेह बहुत अच्छा रहे!!
I hope these might help with the pronunciation: -for vowels - ua-cam.com/video/a4rz9NbMq0M/v-deo.html -for consonants - ua-cam.com/video/dq5VdY69RMc/v-deo.html Just slowly and mindfully read the sentences, then write and the pronunciation will stick. Yes, the Hindi now has a lot of words from other languages. Thank you, for inspiring! 🙏
I can feel the passion you have in life and language learning. When I graduated from high school 7 years ago, this is the life I dream of: travelling, learning languages and cultures, reading and writing, etc. But life started getting weird later on: I ended up studying engineering and getting a corporate job. Its paying me well but I just dont feel the same passion. I dont know your background but keep that damn passion. Once you lost it there is no way back.
well, everyone has their priorities straight for a reason. People who commit to extreme language studying, like this guy, dedicate so much time and it leaves little time for other things because they are very set on studying. Studying languages is definitely fun, but it doesn't really make your life lucrative....so, don't feel bad you can't pursue this passion. I know a guy who struggles financially because he dedicated so much time in language learning and didn't really focus on learning skills that could get him a good paying job or degree. So, there's a trade-off
That's so cool , I've always felt it was "uncool" to learn hindi for foreigners and to see someone learn it with this regard is heartwarming to say the least , btw I'm Indian and I can say about the "ka , kha , ga , gha" scheme , it's something that is taught to us in our kg books and most of us forget it right after that 😂, so don't take it as the definite thing , I feel there's a learning curve to Hindi and if you were to get the framework even childishly wrong at the start it would suffice as some learning or expression is always better than none , my mother tongue is a south indian language so I suffered a lot studying it but I think if you grasp the fundamentals tightly it's amazingly easy from there as most words (let's say perhaps derivative of Sanskrit or Persian or Urdu or Tamil can be pieced together to form more words , similarly the breaking down process goes here in the opposite fashion) I would say watching some hindi movies or reading some poems should get you going , Good luck friend. Excelsior ! ❤
Wow thanks a lot for your advice! It is true that a lot of people think learning a language spoken in less developed countries in the world is "not cool", and a lot of people around me in China feel that way. It is indeed a sad reality. India is a civilization rich in almost every aspect of the human experience. I hope to visit there someday! And regarding the consonants, I guess I'll just have to keep working on them haha. Thanks a lot my friend!
An inspired video, these days I don’t learn languages constantly but I enjoy these videos keep going. I assume that the word-lekin- it comes from Arabic language to all the Turkic languages besides Hindi Persian and Urdu.
First of all you have to learn vowels or vowel signs of hindi because vowel sign and consonant make words in hindi. Hindi originates from Sanskrit so tatsam words helps you a lot and tadvabh words also.ln hindi you'll find many words of other languages also as Pesian, Arabic ,sanskrit,english or urdu etc.Good luck to you.
Any Advice from Hindi learners or Hindi speakers please?!!
Learn about Tatsam and tadbhav words. Quite helpful if you wanna read Hindi literature
@@tracingalaxies Thanks! I’ll look into that🤓
@@phoenixhou4486 most welcome!
And maybe songs can help you differentiate the pronunciation? Listen to dialogues in preferably old bollywood movies because they have more usage of Hindi words as compared to present years!
Other than that, My personal experience being a native speaker studying the language is that I personally faced a lot of difficulties learning Hindi grammar (vyaakaran in hindi), so I'd suggest that you can pay attention to that after learning the basics and making your sentence formation and vocabulary a bit stronger. Although I don't know the curriculum of the course you're pursuing, this is some pointers I'd say are important from my perspective! उम्मीद है कि आपका अनुभव निस्संदेह बहुत अच्छा रहे!!
Being a hindi native , i still i can't give u advice.Since i am a bad teacher. But u are going great .Keep it up❤
I hope these might help with the pronunciation:
-for vowels - ua-cam.com/video/a4rz9NbMq0M/v-deo.html
-for consonants - ua-cam.com/video/dq5VdY69RMc/v-deo.html
Just slowly and mindfully read the sentences, then write and the pronunciation will stick.
Yes, the Hindi now has a lot of words from other languages.
Thank you, for inspiring! 🙏
When a person shares their language studies and process, I find it very interesting. It inspires me to keep going and keep learning.
Glad you find it motivating! 💪🏻
I can feel the passion you have in life and language learning. When I graduated from high school 7 years ago, this is the life I dream of: travelling, learning languages and cultures, reading and writing, etc. But life started getting weird later on: I ended up studying engineering and getting a corporate job. Its paying me well but I just dont feel the same passion. I dont know your background but keep that damn passion. Once you lost it there is no way back.
well, everyone has their priorities straight for a reason. People who commit to extreme language studying, like this guy, dedicate so much time and it leaves little time for other things because they are very set on studying. Studying languages is definitely fun, but it doesn't really make your life lucrative....so, don't feel bad you can't pursue this passion. I know a guy who struggles financially because he dedicated so much time in language learning and didn't really focus on learning skills that could get him a good paying job or degree. So, there's a trade-off
Awesome. I did not expect there to be similarities with Hindi and Uyghur
That's so cool , I've always felt it was "uncool" to learn hindi for foreigners and to see someone learn it with this regard is heartwarming to say the least , btw I'm Indian and I can say about the "ka , kha , ga , gha" scheme , it's something that is taught to us in our kg books and most of us forget it right after that 😂, so don't take it as the definite thing , I feel there's a learning curve to Hindi and if you were to get the framework even childishly wrong at the start it would suffice as some learning or expression is always better than none , my mother tongue is a south indian language so I suffered a lot studying it but I think if you grasp the fundamentals tightly it's amazingly easy from there as most words (let's say perhaps derivative of Sanskrit or Persian or Urdu or Tamil can be pieced together to form more words , similarly the breaking down process goes here in the opposite fashion) I would say watching some hindi movies or reading some poems should get you going , Good luck friend. Excelsior ! ❤
Wow thanks a lot for your advice! It is true that a lot of people think learning a language spoken in less developed countries in the world is "not cool", and a lot of people around me in China feel that way. It is indeed a sad reality. India is a civilization rich in almost every aspect of the human experience. I hope to visit there someday! And regarding the consonants, I guess I'll just have to keep working on them haha. Thanks a lot my friend!
An inspired video, these days I don’t learn languages constantly but I enjoy these videos keep going.
I assume that the word-lekin- it comes from Arabic language to all the Turkic languages besides Hindi Persian and Urdu.
Love from india bro ❤❤
Love your content 😍
@@Ashwini-l2g thank you!
Hindi ❤ Love from India❤
I love your videos! :)
First of all you have to learn vowels or vowel signs of hindi because vowel sign and consonant make words in hindi. Hindi originates from Sanskrit so tatsam words helps you a lot and tadvabh words also.ln hindi you'll find many words of other languages also as Pesian, Arabic ,sanskrit,english or urdu etc.Good luck to you.
Yo I've heard about the typhoons out there in SH. Stay safe !
Yes! There was some quite some strong wind haha. Thanks my friend!
Can you talk about the textbooks you used while learning the language you learned and which ones you recommend ?
짜장면, 탕수육 ~ ‘한국식 중국음식’ 어릴적부터 좋아했고 맛있어요😊
저도요! 제가 대학교에서 짬뽕 처음 먹었을 때 깜짝 놀났어요, 이 세상에서 이런 맛있는 음식이 있구나, 그리고 놀랍게도 이거 중화요리? 나 중국사람인데 어떻게 한번 본적도 없냐고 ㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋ지금가지도 대부분 중국사람들이 이 한국식 중화요리를 잘 모를 걸요
Have a good day!
Thank you my friend!
Bro in India every avg person learns atleast 3 languages
Could you tell a good resource for hsk and hskk
日夜翹首以盼著你更新
争取抓紧更新!!
语言学上的大佬,我精神支柱,你到底什么时候更新???