I'm a Hindi speaker but I've always struggled with Hindi counting since English numbers are preferred due to being easy to learn. So it's a learning experience for me as well.
I am now studying Icelandic and I notice that it is a mix between Norwegian and Danish because they have words and letters in common being Germanic languages but also some words are similar to English such as Japan or Hallò very similar to German. They say Jà (pronounced Jau) but it sounds German and Nei (No) very similar to German Nein (No)!
@@waleed172 Sanskrit is even closer to the main European languages. Most languages in Europe belong to language families like Germanic, Celtic, Slavic, Italic, but they also belong to a super family of languages called Indo-European which is called that because the two main continents that the superfamily exists in is India and Europe. Tajik, Persian and Kurdish are also part of this family.
@@waleed172 I think you were referring to Arabic, as that is the only language of all (except Dravidian languages) which is not Indo-European. Old Hindi (Saurasheni Prakrit) descending from Sanskrit is a part of the Indo-Aryan Language Family. Then how is Old Hindi not like European languages?
Bahut Dhanyavad! Your video is one of the best for learning one of the most challenging topics in Hindi, the fonts and colors are beautiful and your accent mellow and easy to follow. By the way, whereabouts in India are you from? You accent (and spelling partly) is somewhat different from that of other sources I've been learning Hindi from this year. Southern maybe? Namaskar from Colombia!
Great if made a video and just the hindi. There is no reason to say the English as everyone knows the sequence and number written on the screen. Maybe if people listen audio only say every 10th number in English encase people lose track. This was too slow for me and the English was too distracting
I would never understand when they're saying 7 or 60. They sound exactly the same to me. And the transcription to the Roman alphabet must be wrong at 67, because it is spelled exactly the same as in 66.
So is there no real numbering system in Hindi? I’m listening to this as I do my grocery shopping and there doesn’t sound to be any kind of repetitive application of numbers. Am I crazy?
I'm a Hindi speaker but I've always struggled with Hindi counting since English numbers are preferred due to being easy to learn. So it's a learning experience for me as well.
😅
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I’ve been treathened by my Indian dad that if I don’t learn 1-100 by the end of today he’ll beat my ass
As a Brazilian Portuguese speaker, I got very surprised when number 10 was pronounced in Hindi! So similar to Portuguese "dez".
Achei o máximo!
They're both Indo-European by origin.
@NuclearNoobda I didn't say it was. And you're making up the last part.
I am now studying Icelandic and I notice that it is a mix between Norwegian and Danish because they have words and letters in common being Germanic languages but also some words are similar to English such as Japan or Hallò very similar to German.
They say Jà (pronounced Jau) but it sounds German and Nei (No) very similar to German Nein (No)!
Indo-European connection
As Hindi speaker, I don't know why m watching it.
🤣🤣🤣🤣
Thanks a lot today is my hindi exam Iwas watching tv then i remembered we have numbers ti study i took the phone and started watching
As Hindi is an Indo-European language, there are similarilties between hindi and other European languages.
This is modern hindi. Old hindi didnt had similarities with european languages
@@waleed172 Sanskrit is even closer to the main European languages. Most languages in Europe belong to language families like Germanic, Celtic, Slavic, Italic, but they also belong to a super family of languages called Indo-European which is called that because the two main continents that the superfamily exists in is India and Europe. Tajik, Persian and Kurdish are also part of this family.
@@waleed172 I think you were referring to Arabic, as that is the only language of all (except Dravidian languages) which is not Indo-European. Old Hindi (Saurasheni Prakrit) descending from Sanskrit is a part of the Indo-Aryan Language Family. Then how is Old Hindi not like European languages?
This help my daughter alot Thank you 🙏💐🌸🦋🙏
Very useful vedio you are the best hindi youtuber in this video thank you so much
I like it 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
Bahut Dhanyavad! Your video is one of the best for learning one of the most challenging topics in Hindi, the fonts and colors are beautiful and your accent mellow and easy to follow. By the way, whereabouts in India are you from? You accent (and spelling partly) is somewhat different from that of other sources I've been learning Hindi from this year. Southern maybe? Namaskar from Colombia!
This is a North Indian accent. The way it is supposed to be.
It helped my son a lot
Good job
Quick feedback:
67 is written as 66 chyasadh
Thank you
Great if made a video and just the hindi. There is no reason to say the English as everyone knows the sequence and number written on the screen. Maybe if people listen audio only say every 10th number in English encase people lose track. This was too slow for me and the English was too distracting
Send a video on 1 to 1000 numbers in hindi
😮 o 🙀 no you are doing hard work 💪 I love you 💗 byee 😊
Thnx for sharing, so helpful
I would never understand when they're saying 7 or 60.
They sound exactly the same to me.
And the transcription to the Roman alphabet must be wrong at 67, because it is spelled exactly the same as in 66.
Pronunciation of seven is "SAAT"
Pronunciation of sixty "SAATH"
@@TheShoBoTTGIE don't use romanized transliteration to teach. You just made it more confusing.
@@tideghost in Sanskrit
7= "SAPTA"
60= "SHASHTIHI" or "SHATHA"
@@TheShoBoTTGIE Still, it sounds exactly the same to me.
@@brunopiatto ok but in Indian accent you will sound different
Hi I am from India and it exalent🇮🇳🇮🇳
Thank you😊😊
Can u pls make the same video with backward counting. Thank u
Supre good teacher
Hi
i am indian...idk why i am watching this video XD
Bruh same I’m trying to learn so I can understand my family 😑
I literally forget every other number after 16 so that's why I'm here
I’m trying to learn cause I’m going to india😅
Well, do you know how to count from 1 to 100 in Hindi?
Can someone that this pronounciation is correct? It is different than the written words and different from Google Translate pronounciation.
This is not the best vid the pronunciation is wrong.
the numbers sixty six and sixty seven are written the same ( sixty six chiyasadh , sixty seven also chiyasadh)
I liked 👍 ♥️ this
Do 1.75x or 2x
Yes
Yepp
how?
Watch 2X to save your time
What's 2x
So is there no real numbering system in Hindi? I’m listening to this as I do my grocery shopping and there doesn’t sound to be any kind of repetitive application of numbers. Am I crazy?
🇺🇲🇮🇳
Can someone explain to me what the difference is between 7 and 60 in the pronunce …
Good 💯💯💯👍☺️😊😌
English counting is so easy. Just a number and another number
21 ikkes two ka will come
I am an Indian idk 3:43 way
number
67 should be written at Saisadh
1-2 🇺🇲🇮🇳
2 idomas
Número inglés hindi 🇺🇲🇮🇳
Please do Sinhala 🇱🇰 🇱🇰 🇱🇰 🇱🇰 🇱🇰
Super super super super super super super 👌👌👌👌👌👏👏👏👏😊😊
Why 23 and 30 sound the same 😅
I'm Aussie and learning😅
🎉🎉
🙂
Ώρα
Dhde
I am tamizhan
Me to bro
So?
@@Aman-qr6wi Yeah they exist.
✌️🙏🙏🙏🙏👍🏼
Any malayalis . And I am 🇮🇳
More
797
67 is spelled wrong
😂😂😂😂😂
Wow so dangerous it can effect kids
@@nataniakamal762😮
😢
Any malayalees
Inglés hindi
I'm Pakistani why I'm watching this 😂😂
Kya kya karna par raha hai bhai uff
Apu its you?
Yeah except it's not English
Damn bro you just achieved comedy
Apu is south indian. He doesn't speak hindi
Hi
this is not good band only'
everoney sa
67 is not spellt wrong😂
Tamil
I like thi
Gfyfyf f
Phaltu ha 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😜