Devanagari is such an elegant script. Probably the most beautiful one that I know of. I love the idea of the matras, though I'm still learning them all.
ATTENTION HINDI LEARNERS, for anybody finding it hard how to join consonants and vowels, let me tell you, this teacher isn't good enough. Joining vowels and consonants is pretty easy, its taught through a process called "varna vicheda"- वर्ण विच्छेद Before that, the teacher here makes fundamental problem of representing consonants without "halant" ् K, kh, g, gh, ch, chh, j ,jh Are perfectly represented as क्,ख्,ग्,घ्,च्,छ्,ज्,झ् KA, kha, ga, gha, cha, chha, ja, jha Are perfectly represented as क,ख,ग,घ,च,छ,ज,झ KAA, khaa, gaa, ghaa Are perfectly written as का,खा,गा,घा Now, whats difference between kA and kAA, see the pronounciation 1.(A) karma is pronounced as "KArma" 1. (AA) Car is pronounced as "KAAr" Now, once you get this difference between (k(क्), ka(क), kaa(का)), we can start. Vowels have independent existence and are used in words both as "mantra"/diacritics and also independently(i'll tell u later) as अ,आ,इ,ई,उ,ऊ A, AA, I, EE/II, U, UU eg , 1.(A) karma is pronounced as "KArma" 1. (AA) Car is pronounced as "KAAr" Did you see the difference Now, lets start "varn vicched" क्+अ=क ख्+अ=ख क्+आ=का ग्+आ=गा क्+इ=कि घ्+इ=घि क+ई=की क्+ई=की These diacritics will remain constant throughout all the consonants although there are some other variants in few consonants(like ri) Now, lets do varna vicched of few words Car/KAAR will be written as क्+आ+र्+= कार्(many indian people many wrongly pronounce it as kaara, therefore they'll omitt halant) Karma will be written as क्+अ+र्+म्+अ= कर्म( rm of karma is a consonant cluster and it's rules are different) Lets say we want to write the word "Kite" ,its pronounced as "kaaiit" So, it will be written as क्+आ+ई+ट= काईट, notice how ii/ई vowel appears independently, its because it doesn't follow any consonant but it follows another vowel. Varna vicched is different from sandhi vicched(word combination used in mainly sanskrit) After doing vowels , one must learn how to combine two consonants as sanskrit/hindi are full of consonant clusters. There are hell lot of work needed here because this combination is not consistent across all consonants like the vowel is क्(k)+र्(r)+अ(a)= क्र(kra) क्(k)+त्(t)+अ(a)=क्त(kta) क्(k)+म्(m)+अ(a)=क्म(kma) There are some very wierd consonant combinations as single phenome र्द,क्ष,श्र,द्द etc. Note---->TRY TO IMAGINE DEVNAGRI IN TERMS OF PHONEMES ENDING IN A VOWEL. EACH CHARACTER DENOTES A PHONEME.
As an Indian, I was freaking out while learning Spanish. But this video tells me that Hindi is definitely way more difficult than Spanish, if one wants to learn all the rules. When I did my research, I found that Hindi and German are considered to be almost at par in terms of difficulty! 🤔
As an Indian in Germany (born and brought up there), I disagree, it's just like any other language, it has it's difficult parts and easy parts to learn. In German it's the articles and sentence structure, in Hindi it's mostly the pronunciation. For different people the different parts of the language are more diffucult / different to learn.
@@matttube9369 I had a way easier time with the Japanese alphabet than Hindi. And Japanese has 3 Alphabets. Kanji sure has more signs but its pretty easy to memorise. Hindi just looked and sounded the same to me... k, kh, c ch, g, gh... I mean, thef*ck. 🤣
Makes sense, but I dont know, Hindi at least its a lot repeated the letters, Kanji is for a whole life basically But since I didnt go beyobd basic level yet in neither I cant speak much for sure
@@matttube9369 hindi grammer is pretty similar to Japanese hiragana and katakana are easy too, and indians can easily pronounce japanese words as hindi has more sounds than japanese , but kanji bought Letters from chinese, in written japanese only few characters are used here and there in sentences but just think whole of chinese uses these characters , so much much to memorize the characters and their pronunciation, what an inefficient system!
i m learning English if you help me i can help you i am native hindi speaker come on my face book or just email me on the link brother i am waiting for you
I can help you with Sanskrit I learned some basics and also a native I selected Sanskrit in school as additional subject as it was optional and learned for 4 years👍
@@katoonbabu I can't give you mine, but you can have many online resources, they can teach you better than me :) don't forget to check play store, and also Bollywood movies can help!! :) Happy learning :) Achche se padhna
The writing is beautiful, but what makes it difficult is the fact that each letter is completely different from the other and all of them have many lines, differently from arabic, for example, still i believe the hindi writing is the most beautiful one, i hope i master it some day. 😱
ATTENTION HINDI LEARNERS, for anybody finding it hard how to join consonants and vowels, let me tell you, this teacher isn't good enough. Joining vowels and consonants is pretty easy, its taught through a process called "varna vicheda"- वर्ण विच्छेद Before that, the teacher here makes fundamental problem of representing consonants without "halant" ् K, kh, g, gh, ch, chh, j ,jh Are perfectly represented as क्,ख्,ग्,घ्,च्,छ्,ज्,झ् KA, kha, ga, gha, cha, chha, ja, jha Are perfectly represented as क,ख,ग,घ,च,छ,ज,झ KAA, khaa, gaa, ghaa Are perfectly written as का,खा,गा,घा Now, whats difference between kA and kAA, see the pronounciation 1.(A) karma is pronounced as "KArma" 1. (AA) Car is pronounced as "KAAr" Now, once you get this difference between (k(क्), ka(क), kaa(का)), we can start. Vowels have independent existence and are used in words both as "mantra"/diacritics and also independently(i'll tell u later) as अ,आ,इ,ई,उ,ऊ A, AA, I, EE/II, U, UU eg , 1.(A) karma is pronounced as "KArma" 1. (AA) Car is pronounced as "KAAr" Did you see the difference Now, lets start "varn vicched" क्+अ=क ख्+अ=ख क्+आ=का ग्+आ=गा क्+इ=कि घ्+इ=घि क+ई=की क्+ई=की These diacritics will remain constant throughout all the consonants although there are some other variants in few consonants(like ri) Now, lets do varna vicched of few words Car/KAAR will be written as क्+आ+र्+= कार्(many indian people many wrongly pronounce it as kaara, therefore they'll omitt halant) Karma will be written as क्+अ+र्+म्+अ= कर्म( rm of karma is a consonant cluster and it's rules are different) Lets say we want to write the word "Kite" ,its pronounced as "kaaiit" So, it will be written as क्+आ+ई+ट= काईट, notice how ii/ई vowel appears independently, its because it doesn't follow any consonant but it follows another vowel. Varna vicched is different from sandhi vicched(word combination used in mainly sanskrit) After doing vowels , one must learn how to combine two consonants as sanskrit/hindi are full of consonant clusters. There are hell lot of work needed here because this combination is not consistent across all consonants like the vowel is क्(k)+र्(r)+अ(a)= क्र(kra) क्(k)+त्(t)+अ(a)=क्त(kta) क्(k)+म्(m)+अ(a)=क्म(kma) There are some very wierd consonant combinations as single phenome र्द,क्ष,श्र,द्द etc. Note---->TRY TO IMAGINE DEVNAGRI IN TERMS OF PHONEMES ENDING IN A VOWEL. EACH CHARACTER DENOTES A PHONEME.
Something I have difficulty with when it comes to learning Hindi is that native Indians have such crisp speech, as opposed to English-speakers. It makes it difficult to see the nuances in the short and long sounds of some of the vowels and consonants. This is something native Hindi speakers take for granted and need to know about teaching Hindi to native Angrezi speakers. I think this is where learning the alphabet (and the grammar along with it) will make a huge difference in my learning Hindi.
@@nealwright5630 ATTENTION HINDI LEARNERS, for anybody finding it hard how to join consonants and vowels, let me tell you, this teacher isn't good enough. Joining vowels and consonants is pretty easy, its taught through a process called "varna vicheda"- वर्ण विच्छेद Before that, the teacher here makes fundamental problem of representing consonants without "halant" ् K, kh, g, gh, ch, chh, j ,jh Are perfectly represented as क्,ख्,ग्,घ्,च्,छ्,ज्,झ् KA, kha, ga, gha, cha, chha, ja, jha Are perfectly represented as क,ख,ग,घ,च,छ,ज,झ KAA, khaa, gaa, ghaa Are perfectly written as का,खा,गा,घा Now, whats difference between kA and kAA, see the pronounciation 1.(A) karma is pronounced as "KArma" 1. (AA) Car is pronounced as "KAAr" Now, once you get this difference between (k(क्), ka(क), kaa(का)), we can start. Vowels have independent existence and are used in words both as "mantra"/diacritics and also independently(i'll tell u later) as अ,आ,इ,ई,उ,ऊ A, AA, I, EE/II, U, UU eg , 1.(A) karma is pronounced as "KArma" 1. (AA) Car is pronounced as "KAAr" Did you see the difference Now, lets start "varn vicched" क्+अ=क ख्+अ=ख क्+आ=का ग्+आ=गा क्+इ=कि घ्+इ=घि क+ई=की क्+ई=की These diacritics will remain constant throughout all the consonants although there are some other variants in few consonants(like ri) Now, lets do varna vicched of few words Car/KAAR will be written as क्+आ+र्+= कार्(many indian people many wrongly pronounce it as kaara, therefore they'll omitt halant) Karma will be written as क्+अ+र्+म्+अ= कर्म( rm of karma is a consonant cluster and it's rules are different) Lets say we want to write the word "Kite" ,its pronounced as "kaaiit" So, it will be written as क्+आ+ई+ट= काईट, notice how ii/ई vowel appears independently, its because it doesn't follow any consonant but it follows another vowel. Varna vicched is different from sandhi vicched(word combination used in mainly sanskrit) After doing vowels , one must learn how to combine two consonants as sanskrit/hindi are full of consonant clusters. There are hell lot of work needed here because this combination is not consistent across all consonants like the vowel is क्(k)+र्(r)+अ(a)= क्र(kra) क्(k)+त्(t)+अ(a)=क्त(kta) क्(k)+म्(m)+अ(a)=क्म(kma) There are some very wierd consonant combinations as single phenome र्द,क्ष,श्र,द्द etc. Note---->TRY TO IMAGINE DEVNAGRI IN TERMS OF PHONEMES ENDING IN A VOWEL. EACH CHARACTER DENOTES A PHONEME.
A phonetic language would technically denote each vowel sound with a character, while Hindi does have vowel characters, all consonants come with an implicit vowel, like in "वह" thus doing away with the need for "अ" in the middle of a word. There are two vowels in "वह" that aren't shown, one who can read devangari just knows that the vowels are implicit, only changed by matras. A phonetic writing system is one that denotes each and every vowel sound with a character, as it denotes each and every consonant with a character. Hindi can be largely predicted, but not completely, once someone has a grasp of the consonant-implicit vowel combination found in its abugida system. For example, English is not a phonetic language, but uses a phonetic writing system. Hindi is largely phonetic, as in it doesn't use split diagraphs like English does like in the word "line" or "sire". But techincally, it is not.
Susmita Majumdar i was talking about what constitutes as a phonetic language. Hindi is derived from Brahmi script. Phonetic languages are all derived from Greek writing. Sanskrit and Greek developed completely independently in regards to writing, despite both being indo European. Hindi therefore cannot possibly being phonetic. It does not come from ancient phonetican.
shiro kun do you mean to say Hindi is in Devanagari? Main jaanti hoon. Brahmi script is what it is derived from, like a great grand father. Brahmi script paved the way for the adaptation of non-Sanskrit derived languages into script.
@@Ahn-mu3db tried to memorize the chart off the internet, installed a Bengali keyboard (this really helps) to practice and I was familiar with each letter by a week ,well except the conjucts which I slowly memorized later on Aswell
ATTENTION HINDI LEARNERS, for anybody finding it hard how to join consonants and vowels, let me tell you, this teacher isn't good enough. Joining vowels and consonants is pretty easy, its taught through a process called "varna vicheda"- वर्ण विच्छेद Before that, the teacher here makes fundamental problem of representing consonants without "halant" ् K, kh, g, gh, ch, chh, j ,jh Are perfectly represented as क्,ख्,ग्,घ्,च्,छ्,ज्,झ् KA, kha, ga, gha, cha, chha, ja, jha Are perfectly represented as क,ख,ग,घ,च,छ,ज,झ KAA, khaa, gaa, ghaa Are perfectly written as का,खा,गा,घा Now, whats difference between kA and kAA, see the pronounciation 1.(A) karma is pronounced as "KArma" 1. (AA) Car is pronounced as "KAAr" Now, once you get this difference between (k(क्), ka(क), kaa(का)), we can start. Vowels have independent existence and are used in words both as "mantra"/diacritics and also independently(i'll tell u later) as अ,आ,इ,ई,उ,ऊ A, AA, I, EE/II, U, UU eg , 1.(A) karma is pronounced as "KArma" 1. (AA) Car is pronounced as "KAAr" Did you see the difference Now, lets start "varn vicched" क्+अ=क ख्+अ=ख क्+आ=का ग्+आ=गा क्+इ=कि घ्+इ=घि क+ई=की क्+ई=की These diacritics will remain constant throughout all the consonants although there are some other variants in few consonants(like ri) Now, lets do varna vicched of few words Car/KAAR will be written as क्+आ+र्+= कार्(many indian people many wrongly pronounce it as kaara, therefore they'll omitt halant) Karma will be written as क्+अ+र्+म्+अ= कर्म( rm of karma is a consonant cluster and it's rules are different) Lets say we want to write the word "Kite" ,its pronounced as "kaaiit" So, it will be written as क्+आ+ई+ट= काईट, notice how ii/ई vowel appears independently, its because it doesn't follow any consonant but it follows another vowel. Varna vicched is different from sandhi vicched(word combination used in mainly sanskrit) After doing vowels , one must learn how to combine two consonants as sanskrit/hindi are full of consonant clusters. There are hell lot of work needed here because this combination is not consistent across all consonants like the vowel is क्(k)+र्(r)+अ(a)= क्र(kra) क्(k)+त्(t)+अ(a)=क्त(kta) क्(k)+म्(m)+अ(a)=क्म(kma) There are some very wierd consonant combinations as single phenome र्द,क्ष,श्र,द्द etc. Note---->TRY TO IMAGINE DEVNAGRI IN TERMS OF PHONEMES ENDING IN A VOWEL. EACH CHARACTER DENOTES A PHONEME.
Those are not vowel they are called अं = anusvaar( अनुसवार) अः =visarga(विसर्ग) although they are typically written along with vowels just for the 'completness' of it. There are many way in which varnmaalaa( वर्णमाला) can be arranged , the one we see in our text book is the most common way to arrange वर्ण. Hope it helps ☺️
I do know that hindi is related to my native language, Bengali, but the "e", "ai" , "o", "ao" and "ri" is written differently in Bengali. Most of the consonants seem similar. The only difference is the extra "v" which is usually "b" in Bengali. Now I understood more about why the "om" is pronounced like that.
If you want to learn perfect Hindi 1st of learn vowels and consonants after that go for barakhadi(vowel + consonant) it's very important for learning perfect Hindi
ATTENTION HINDI LEARNERS, for anybody finding it hard how to join consonants and vowels, let me tell you, this teacher isn't good enough. Joining vowels and consonants is pretty easy, its taught through a process called "varna vicheda"- वर्ण विच्छेद Before that, the teacher here makes fundamental problem of representing consonants without "halant" ् K, kh, g, gh, ch, chh, j ,jh Are perfectly represented as क्,ख्,ग्,घ्,च्,छ्,ज्,झ् KA, kha, ga, gha, cha, chha, ja, jha Are perfectly represented as क,ख,ग,घ,च,छ,ज,झ KAA, khaa, gaa, ghaa Are perfectly written as का,खा,गा,घा Now, whats difference between kA and kAA, see the pronounciation 1.(A) karma is pronounced as "KArma" 1. (AA) Car is pronounced as "KAAr" Now, once you get this difference between (k(क्), ka(क), kaa(का)), we can start. Vowels have independent existence and are used in words both as "mantra"/diacritics and also independently(i'll tell u later) as अ,आ,इ,ई,उ,ऊ A, AA, I, EE/II, U, UU eg , 1.(A) karma is pronounced as "KArma" 1. (AA) Car is pronounced as "KAAr" Did you see the difference Now, lets start "varn vicched" क्+अ=क ख्+अ=ख क्+आ=का ग्+आ=गा क्+इ=कि घ्+इ=घि क+ई=की क्+ई=की These diacritics will remain constant throughout all the consonants although there are some other variants in few consonants(like ri) Now, lets do varna vicched of few words Car/KAAR will be written as क्+आ+र्+= कार्(many indian people many wrongly pronounce it as kaara, therefore they'll omitt halant) Karma will be written as क्+अ+र्+म्+अ= कर्म( rm of karma is a consonant cluster and it's rules are different) Lets say we want to write the word "Kite" ,its pronounced as "kaaiit" So, it will be written as क्+आ+ई+ट= काईट, notice how ii/ई vowel appears independently, its because it doesn't follow any consonant but it follows another vowel. Varna vicched is different from sandhi vicched(word combination used in mainly sanskrit) After doing vowels , one must learn how to combine two consonants as sanskrit/hindi are full of consonant clusters. There are hell lot of work needed here because this combination is not consistent across all consonants like the vowel is क्(k)+र्(r)+अ(a)= क्र(kra) क्(k)+त्(t)+अ(a)=क्त(kta) क्(k)+म्(m)+अ(a)=क्म(kma) There are some very wierd consonant combinations as single phenome र्द,क्ष,श्र,द्द etc. Note---->TRY TO IMAGINE DEVNAGRI IN TERMS OF PHONEMES ENDING IN A VOWEL. EACH CHARACTER DENOTES A PHONEME.
ATTENTION HINDI LEARNERS, for anybody finding it hard how to join consonants and vowels, let me tell you, this teacher isn't good enough. Joining vowels and consonants is pretty easy, its taught through a process called "varna vicheda"- वर्ण विच्छेद Before that, the teacher here makes fundamental problem of representing consonants without "halant" ् K, kh, g, gh, ch, chh, j ,jh Are perfectly represented as क्,ख्,ग्,घ्,च्,छ्,ज्,झ् KA, kha, ga, gha, cha, chha, ja, jha Are perfectly represented as क,ख,ग,घ,च,छ,ज,झ KAA, khaa, gaa, ghaa Are perfectly written as का,खा,गा,घा Now, whats difference between kA and kAA, see the pronounciation 1.(A) karma is pronounced as "KArma" 1. (AA) Car is pronounced as "KAAr" Now, once you get this difference between (k(क्), ka(क), kaa(का)), we can start. Vowels have independent existence and are used in words both as "mantra"/diacritics and also independently(i'll tell u later) as अ,आ,इ,ई,उ,ऊ A, AA, I, EE/II, U, UU eg , 1.(A) karma is pronounced as "KArma" 1. (AA) Car is pronounced as "KAAr" Did you see the difference Now, lets start "varn vicched" क्+अ=क ख्+अ=ख क्+आ=का ग्+आ=गा क्+इ=कि घ्+इ=घि क+ई=की क्+ई=की These diacritics will remain constant throughout all the consonants although there are some other variants in few consonants(like ri) Now, lets do varna vicched of few words Car/KAAR will be written as क्+आ+र्+= कार्(many indian people many wrongly pronounce it as kaara, therefore they'll omitt halant) Karma will be written as क्+अ+र्+म्+अ= कर्म( rm of karma is a consonant cluster and it's rules are different) Lets say we want to write the word "Kite" ,its pronounced as "kaaiit" So, it will be written as क्+आ+ई+ट= काईट, notice how ii/ई vowel appears independently, its because it doesn't follow any consonant but it follows another vowel. Varna vicched is different from sandhi vicched(word combination used in mainly sanskrit) After doing vowels , one must learn how to combine two consonants as sanskrit/hindi are full of consonant clusters. There are hell lot of work needed here because this combination is not consistent across all consonants like the vowel is क्(k)+र्(r)+अ(a)= क्र(kra) क्(k)+त्(t)+अ(a)=क्त(kta) क्(k)+म्(m)+अ(a)=क्म(kma) There are some very wierd consonant combinations as single phenome र्द,क्ष,श्र,द्द etc. Note---->TRY TO IMAGINE DEVNAGRI IN TERMS OF PHONEMES ENDING IN A VOWEL. EACH CHARACTER DENOTES A PHONEME.
I'm from Afghanistan 🇦🇫 i love ❤️ hindi basaha 🇮🇳 main koshesh karte ho ke hindi basha ke lek na or badh na seek sa ko I am good at speaking but not writing and reading 📖 hope my hindi was good with respect Nida Shaiq tnx
@@kutushrfurut6310 ??? I think consonants are easy but vowels are difficult cuz if vowel comes after a consonant , the initial vowel is not used rather "maatra" Is used like,we dont write कइ rather कि
52 letters and a few Mattras which are often interchangable and easy to memorise... associating Mattras with pronunciation is a bigger problem for me. 😆
ATTENTION HINDI LEARNERS, for anybody finding it hard how to join consonants and vowels, let me tell you, this teacher isn't good enough. Joining vowels and consonants is pretty easy, its taught through a process called "varna vicheda"- वर्ण विच्छेद Before that, the teacher here makes fundamental problem of representing consonants without "halant" ् K, kh, g, gh, ch, chh, j ,jh Are perfectly represented as क्,ख्,ग्,घ्,च्,छ्,ज्,झ् KA, kha, ga, gha, cha, chha, ja, jha Are perfectly represented as क,ख,ग,घ,च,छ,ज,झ KAA, khaa, gaa, ghaa Are perfectly written as का,खा,गा,घा Now, whats difference between kA and kAA, see the pronounciation 1.(A) karma is pronounced as "KArma" 1. (AA) Car is pronounced as "KAAr" Now, once you get this difference between (k(क्), ka(क), kaa(का)), we can start. Vowels have independent existence and are used in words both as "mantra"/diacritics and also independently(i'll tell u later) as अ,आ,इ,ई,उ,ऊ A, AA, I, EE/II, U, UU eg , 1.(A) karma is pronounced as "KArma" 1. (AA) Car is pronounced as "KAAr" Did you see the difference Now, lets start "varn vicched" क्+अ=क ख्+अ=ख क्+आ=का ग्+आ=गा क्+इ=कि घ्+इ=घि क+ई=की क्+ई=की These diacritics will remain constant throughout all the consonants although there are some other variants in few consonants(like ri) Now, lets do varna vicched of few words Car/KAAR will be written as क्+आ+र्+= कार्(many indian people many wrongly pronounce it as kaara, therefore they'll omitt halant) Karma will be written as क्+अ+र्+म्+अ= कर्म( rm of karma is a consonant cluster and it's rules are different) Lets say we want to write the word "Kite" ,its pronounced as "kaaiit" So, it will be written as क्+आ+ई+ट= काईट, notice how ii/ई vowel appears independently, its because it doesn't follow any consonant but it follows another vowel. Varna vicched is different from sandhi vicched(word combination used in mainly sanskrit) After doing vowels , one must learn how to combine two consonants as sanskrit/hindi are full of consonant clusters. There are hell lot of work needed here because this combination is not consistent across all consonants like the vowel is क्(k)+र्(r)+अ(a)= क्र(kra) क्(k)+त्(t)+अ(a)=क्त(kta) क्(k)+म्(m)+अ(a)=क्म(kma) There are some very wierd consonant combinations as single phenome र्द,क्ष,श्र,द्द etc. Note---->TRY TO IMAGINE DEVNAGRI IN TERMS OF PHONEMES ENDING IN A VOWEL. EACH CHARACTER DENOTES A PHONEME.
There's 200+ letter combos from what I know. The large number is nothing most of them are very obvious to make and even the exceptions become intuitive after a while.
@@triptisingh6218 wow you sure are an inquisitive person. CBSE 10th boards are coming up and im screwed because hindi is my weakest subject so I gotta do something about that. Also im from down south where we dont speak hindi generally so I'm not a native speaker either.
i speak hindi and telugu but i don`t how to write hindi or telugu but i can write and speak in english and koran and thai and etc and learned thail because lisa from blackpink is from thailand and love u lisa
@@abhishekdas2940 no, I was asking Umar actually . btw I happen to hail from bihar as well and yeah it's nice to see people making an effort to learn our native tounge : ))
ATTENTION HINDI LEARNERS, for anybody finding it hard how to join consonants and vowels, let me tell you, this teacher isn't good enough. Joining vowels and consonants is pretty easy, its taught through a process called "varna vicheda"- वर्ण विच्छेद Before that, the teacher here makes fundamental problem of representing consonants without "halant" ् K, kh, g, gh, ch, chh, j ,jh Are perfectly represented as क्,ख्,ग्,घ्,च्,छ्,ज्,झ् KA, kha, ga, gha, cha, chha, ja, jha Are perfectly represented as क,ख,ग,घ,च,छ,ज,झ KAA, khaa, gaa, ghaa Are perfectly written as का,खा,गा,घा Now, whats difference between kA and kAA, see the pronounciation 1.(A) karma is pronounced as "KArma" 1. (AA) Car is pronounced as "KAAr" Now, once you get this difference between (k(क्), ka(क), kaa(का)), we can start. Vowels have independent existence and are used in words both as "mantra"/diacritics and also independently(i'll tell u later) as अ,आ,इ,ई,उ,ऊ A, AA, I, EE/II, U, UU eg , 1.(A) karma is pronounced as "KArma" 1. (AA) Car is pronounced as "KAAr" Did you see the difference Now, lets start "varn vicched" क्+अ=क ख्+अ=ख क्+आ=का ग्+आ=गा क्+इ=कि घ्+इ=घि क+ई=की क्+ई=की These diacritics will remain constant throughout all the consonants although there are some other variants in few consonants(like ri) Now, lets do varna vicched of few words Car/KAAR will be written as क्+आ+र्+= कार्(many indian people many wrongly pronounce it as kaara, therefore they'll omitt halant) Karma will be written as क्+अ+र्+म्+अ= कर्म( rm of karma is a consonant cluster and it's rules are different) Lets say we want to write the word "Kite" ,its pronounced as "kaaiit" So, it will be written as क्+आ+ई+ट= काईट, notice how ii/ई vowel appears independently, its because it doesn't follow any consonant but it follows another vowel. Varna vicched is different from sandhi vicched(word combination used in mainly sanskrit) After doing vowels , one must learn how to combine two consonants as sanskrit/hindi are full of consonant clusters. There are hell lot of work needed here because this combination is not consistent across all consonants like the vowel is क्(k)+र्(r)+अ(a)= क्र(kra) क्(k)+त्(t)+अ(a)=क्त(kta) क्(k)+म्(m)+अ(a)=क्म(kma) There are some very wierd consonant combinations as single phenome र्द,क्ष,श्र,द्द etc. Note---->TRY TO IMAGINE DEVNAGRI IN TERMS OF PHONEMES ENDING IN A VOWEL. EACH CHARACTER DENOTES A PHONEME.
Hi Andrew, Thanks for your question. The "ri" maatra is right below the "ka" in "kripayaa" (कृ). It looks like this ृ I hope that helps! Roohi Team HindiPod101.com
ATTENTION HINDI LEARNERS, for anybody finding it hard how to join consonants and vowels, let me tell you, this teacher isn't good enough. Joining vowels and consonants is pretty easy, its taught through a process called "varna vicheda"- वर्ण विच्छेद Before that, the teacher here makes fundamental problem of representing consonants without "halant" ् K, kh, g, gh, ch, chh, j ,jh Are perfectly represented as क्,ख्,ग्,घ्,च्,छ्,ज्,झ् KA, kha, ga, gha, cha, chha, ja, jha Are perfectly represented as क,ख,ग,घ,च,छ,ज,झ KAA, khaa, gaa, ghaa Are perfectly written as का,खा,गा,घा Now, whats difference between kA and kAA, see the pronounciation 1.(A) karma is pronounced as "KArma" 1. (AA) Car is pronounced as "KAAr" Now, once you get this difference between (k(क्), ka(क), kaa(का)), we can start. Vowels have independent existence and are used in words both as "mantra"/diacritics and also independently(i'll tell u later) as अ,आ,इ,ई,उ,ऊ A, AA, I, EE/II, U, UU eg , 1.(A) karma is pronounced as "KArma" 1. (AA) Car is pronounced as "KAAr" Did you see the difference Now, lets start "varn vicched" क्+अ=क ख्+अ=ख क्+आ=का ग्+आ=गा क्+इ=कि घ्+इ=घि क+ई=की क्+ई=की These diacritics will remain constant throughout all the consonants although there are some other variants in few consonants(like ri) Now, lets do varna vicched of few words Car/KAAR will be written as क्+आ+र्+= कार्(many indian people many wrongly pronounce it as kaara, therefore they'll omitt halant) Karma will be written as क्+अ+र्+म्+अ= कर्म( rm of karma is a consonant cluster and it's rules are different) Lets say we want to write the word "Kite" ,its pronounced as "kaaiit" So, it will be written as क्+आ+ई+ट= काईट, notice how ii/ई vowel appears independently, its because it doesn't follow any consonant but it follows another vowel. Varna vicched is different from sandhi vicched(word combination used in mainly sanskrit) After doing vowels , one must learn how to combine two consonants as sanskrit/hindi are full of consonant clusters. There are hell lot of work needed here because this combination is not consistent across all consonants like the vowel is क्(k)+र्(r)+अ(a)= क्र(kra) क्(k)+त्(t)+अ(a)=क्त(kta) क्(k)+म्(m)+अ(a)=क्म(kma) There are some very wierd consonant combinations as single phenome र्द,क्ष,श्र,द्द etc. Note---->TRY TO IMAGINE DEVNAGRI IN TERMS OF PHONEMES ENDING IN A VOWEL. EACH CHARACTER DENOTES A PHONEME.
Mam plz suggest . I am studying in final year. I speak hindi very well but not able to write in hindi . I am beginner .I jus only know a aa e. Hope you suggest me how I learn hindi
Hi Notime,I know im late ATTENTION HINDI LEARNERS, for anybody finding it hard how to join consonants and vowels, let me tell you, this teacher isn't good enough. Joining vowels and consonants is pretty easy, its taught through a process called "varna vicheda"- वर्ण विच्छेद Before that, the teacher here makes fundamental problem of representing consonants without "halant" ् K, kh, g, gh, ch, chh, j ,jh Are perfectly represented as क्,ख्,ग्,घ्,च्,छ्,ज्,झ् KA, kha, ga, gha, cha, chha, ja, jha Are perfectly represented as क,ख,ग,घ,च,छ,ज,झ KAA, khaa, gaa, ghaa Are perfectly written as का,खा,गा,घा Now, whats difference between kA and kAA, see the pronounciation 1.(A) karma is pronounced as "KArma" 1. (AA) Car is pronounced as "KAAr" Now, once you get this difference between (k(क्), ka(क), kaa(का)), we can start. Vowels have independent existence and are used in words both as "mantra"/diacritics and also independently(i'll tell u later) as अ,आ,इ,ई,उ,ऊ A, AA, I, EE/II, U, UU eg , 1.(A) karma is pronounced as "KArma" 1. (AA) Car is pronounced as "KAAr" Did you see the difference Now, lets start "varn vicched" क्+अ=क ख्+अ=ख क्+आ=का ग्+आ=गा क्+इ=कि घ्+इ=घि क+ई=की क्+ई=की These diacritics will remain constant throughout all the consonants although there are some other variants in few consonants(like ri) Now, lets do varna vicched of few words Car/KAAR will be written as क्+आ+र्+= कार्(many indian people many wrongly pronounce it as kaara, therefore they'll omitt halant) Karma will be written as क्+अ+र्+म्+अ= कर्म( rm of karma is a consonant cluster and it's rules are different) Lets say we want to write the word "Kite" ,its pronounced as "kaaiit" So, it will be written as क्+आ+ई+ट= काईट, notice how ii/ई vowel appears independently, its because it doesn't follow any consonant but it follows another vowel. Varna vicched is different from sandhi vicched(word combination used in mainly sanskrit) After doing vowels , one must learn how to combine two consonants as sanskrit/hindi are full of consonant clusters. There are hell lot of work needed here because this combination is not consistent across all consonants like the vowel is क्(k)+र्(r)+अ(a)= क्र(kra) क्(k)+त्(t)+अ(a)=क्त(kta) क्(k)+म्(m)+अ(a)=क्म(kma) There are some very wierd consonant combinations as single phenome र्द,क्ष,श्र,द्द etc. Note---->TRY TO IMAGINE DEVNAGRI IN TERMS OF PHENOMES ENDING IN A VOWEL. EACH CHARACTER DENOTES A PHENOME.
This is not a very good way to teach a script. You need to slow down and use multiple examples, insert pages of practice words, clarify the pronunciation of each sound by explaining the mouth positions and distinguishing clearly between different sounds, and the last bit used technical vocabulary from linguistics without even bothering to explain it to listeners.
I never learned Hindi because I could never get passed this script and all the apparently different sounds that seem exactly the same to me. tas and das..
ATTENTION HINDI LEARNERS, for anybody finding it hard how to join consonants and vowels, let me tell you, this teacher isn't good enough. Joining vowels and consonants is pretty easy, its taught through a process called "varna vicheda"- वर्ण विच्छेद Before that, the teacher here makes fundamental problem of representing consonants without "halant" ् K, kh, g, gh, ch, chh, j ,jh Are perfectly represented as क्,ख्,ग्,घ्,च्,छ्,ज्,झ् KA, kha, ga, gha, cha, chha, ja, jha Are perfectly represented as क,ख,ग,घ,च,छ,ज,झ KAA, khaa, gaa, ghaa Are perfectly written as का,खा,गा,घा Now, whats difference between kA and kAA, see the pronounciation 1.(A) karma is pronounced as "KArma" 1. (AA) Car is pronounced as "KAAr" Now, once you get this difference between (k(क्), ka(क), kaa(का)), we can start. Vowels have independent existence and are used in words both as "mantra"/diacritics and also independently(i'll tell u later) as अ,आ,इ,ई,उ,ऊ A, AA, I, EE/II, U, UU eg , 1.(A) karma is pronounced as "KArma" 1. (AA) Car is pronounced as "KAAr" Did you see the difference Now, lets start "varn vicched" क्+अ=क ख्+अ=ख क्+आ=का ग्+आ=गा क्+इ=कि घ्+इ=घि क+ई=की क्+ई=की These diacritics will remain constant throughout all the consonants although there are some other variants in few consonants(like ri) Now, lets do varna vicched of few words Car/KAAR will be written as क्+आ+र्+= कार्(many indian people many wrongly pronounce it as kaara, therefore they'll omitt halant) Karma will be written as क्+अ+र्+म्+अ= कर्म( rm of karma is a consonant cluster and it's rules are different) Lets say we want to write the word "Kite" ,its pronounced as "kaaiit" So, it will be written as क्+आ+ई+ट= काईट, notice how ii/ई vowel appears independently, its because it doesn't follow any consonant but it follows another vowel. Varna vicched is different from sandhi vicched(word combination used in mainly sanskrit) After doing vowels , one must learn how to combine two consonants as sanskrit/hindi are full of consonant clusters. There are hell lot of work needed here because this combination is not consistent across all consonants like the vowel is क्(k)+र्(r)+अ(a)= क्र(kra) क्(k)+त्(t)+अ(a)=क्त(kta) क्(k)+म्(m)+अ(a)=क्म(kma) There are some very wierd consonant combinations as single phenome र्द,क्ष,श्र,द्द etc. Note---->TRY TO IMAGINE DEVNAGRI IN TERMS OF PHONEMES ENDING IN A VOWEL. EACH CHARACTER DENOTES A PHONEME.
ATTENTION HINDI LEARNERS, for anybody finding it hard how to join consonants and vowels, let me tell you, this teacher isn't good enough. Joining vowels and consonants is pretty easy, its taught through a process called "varna vicheda"- वर्ण विच्छेद Before that, the teacher here makes fundamental problem of representing consonants without "halant" ् K, kh, g, gh, ch, chh, j ,jh Are perfectly represented as क्,ख्,ग्,घ्,च्,छ्,ज्,झ् KA, kha, ga, gha, cha, chha, ja, jha Are perfectly represented as क,ख,ग,घ,च,छ,ज,झ KAA, khaa, gaa, ghaa Are perfectly written as का,खा,गा,घा Now, whats difference between kA and kAA, see the pronounciation 1.(A) karma is pronounced as "KArma" 1. (AA) Car is pronounced as "KAAr" Now, once you get this difference between (k(क्), ka(क), kaa(का)), we can start. Vowels have independent existence and are used in words both as "mantra"/diacritics and also independently(i'll tell u later) as अ,आ,इ,ई,उ,ऊ A, AA, I, EE/II, U, UU eg , 1.(A) karma is pronounced as "KArma" 1. (AA) Car is pronounced as "KAAr" Did you see the difference Now, lets start "varn vicched" क्+अ=क ख्+अ=ख क्+आ=का ग्+आ=गा क्+इ=कि घ्+इ=घि क+ई=की क्+ई=की These diacritics will remain constant throughout all the consonants although there are some other variants in few consonants(like ri) Now, lets do varna vicched of few words Car/KAAR will be written as क्+आ+र्+= कार्(many indian people many wrongly pronounce it as kaara, therefore they'll omitt halant) Karma will be written as क्+अ+र्+म्+अ= कर्म( rm of karma is a consonant cluster and it's rules are different) Lets say we want to write the word "Kite" ,its pronounced as "kaaiit" So, it will be written as क्+आ+ई+ट= काईट, notice how ii/ई vowel appears independently, its because it doesn't follow any consonant but it follows another vowel. Varna vicched is different from sandhi vicched(word combination used in mainly sanskrit) After doing vowels , one must learn how to combine two consonants as sanskrit/hindi are full of consonant clusters. There are hell lot of work needed here because this combination is not consistent across all consonants like the vowel is क्(k)+र्(r)+अ(a)= क्र(kra) क्(k)+त्(t)+अ(a)=क्त(kta) क्(k)+म्(m)+अ(a)=क्म(kma) There are some very wierd consonant combinations as single phenome र्द,क्ष,श्र,द्द etc. Note---->TRY TO IMAGINE DEVNAGRI IN TERMS OF PHONEMES ENDING IN A VOWEL. EACH CHARACTER DENOTES A PHONEME.
Don't feel de motivated, this teacher is too bad ATTENTION HINDI LEARNERS, for anybody finding it hard how to join consonants and vowels, let me tell you, this teacher isn't good enough. Joining vowels and consonants is pretty easy, its taught through a process called "varna vicheda"- वर्ण विच्छेद Before that, the teacher here makes fundamental problem of representing consonants without "halant" ् K, kh, g, gh, ch, chh, j ,jh Are perfectly represented as क्,ख्,ग्,घ्,च्,छ्,ज्,झ् KA, kha, ga, gha, cha, chha, ja, jha Are perfectly represented as क,ख,ग,घ,च,छ,ज,झ KAA, khaa, gaa, ghaa Are perfectly written as का,खा,गा,घा Now, whats difference between kA and kAA, see the pronounciation 1.(A) karma is pronounced as "KArma" 1. (AA) Car is pronounced as "KAAr" Now, once you get this difference between (k(क्), ka(क), kaa(का)), we can start. Vowels have independent existence and are used in words both as "mantra"/diacritics and also independently(i'll tell u later) as अ,आ,इ,ई,उ,ऊ A, AA, I, EE/II, U, UU eg , 1.(A) karma is pronounced as "KArma" 1. (AA) Car is pronounced as "KAAr" Did you see the difference Now, lets start "varn vicched" क्+अ=क ख्+अ=ख क्+आ=का ग्+आ=गा क्+इ=कि घ्+इ=घि क+ई=की क्+ई=की These diacritics will remain constant throughout all the consonants although there are some other variants in few consonants(like ri) Now, lets do varna vicched of few words Car/KAAR will be written as क्+आ+र्+= कार्(many indian people many wrongly pronounce it as kaara, therefore they'll omitt halant) Karma will be written as क्+अ+र्+म्+अ= कर्म( rm of karma is a consonant cluster and it's rules are different) Lets say we want to write the word "Kite" ,its pronounced as "kaaiit" So, it will be written as क्+आ+ई+ट= काईट, notice how ii/ई vowel appears independently, its because it doesn't follow any consonant but it follows another vowel. Varna vicched is different from sandhi vicched(word combination used in mainly sanskrit) After doing vowels , one must learn how to combine two consonants as sanskrit/hindi are full of consonant clusters. There are hell lot of work needed here because this combination is not consistent across all consonants like the vowel is क्(k)+र्(r)+अ(a)= क्र(kra) क्(k)+त्(t)+अ(a)=क्त(kta) क्(k)+म्(m)+अ(a)=क्म(kma) There are some very wierd consonant combinations as single phenome र्द,क्ष,श्र,द्द etc. Note---->TRY TO IMAGINE DEVNAGRI IN TERMS OF PHONEMES ENDING IN A VOWEL. EACH CHARACTER DENOTES A PHONEME.
❤☀️💚I am originally Kurdish i learned hindi from movies♡ and can also speak urdu since it's similar to Kurdish and Persian which i can speak. I think writing urdu would be much easier for me since it's similar to Kurdish and Persian. But hindi is really hard😿
ATTENTION HINDI LEARNERS, for anybody finding it hard how to join consonants and vowels, let me tell you, this teacher isn't good enough. Joining vowels and consonants is pretty easy, its taught through a process called "varna vicheda"- वर्ण विच्छेद Before that, the teacher here makes fundamental problem of representing consonants without "halant" ् K, kh, g, gh, ch, chh, j ,jh Are perfectly represented as क्,ख्,ग्,घ्,च्,छ्,ज्,झ् KA, kha, ga, gha, cha, chha, ja, jha Are perfectly represented as क,ख,ग,घ,च,छ,ज,झ KAA, khaa, gaa, ghaa Are perfectly written as का,खा,गा,घा Now, whats difference between kA and kAA, see the pronounciation 1.(A) karma is pronounced as "KArma" 1. (AA) Car is pronounced as "KAAr" Now, once you get this difference between (k(क्), ka(क), kaa(का)), we can start. Vowels have independent existence and are used in words both as "mantra"/diacritics and also independently(i'll tell u later) as अ,आ,इ,ई,उ,ऊ A, AA, I, EE/II, U, UU eg , 1.(A) karma is pronounced as "KArma" 1. (AA) Car is pronounced as "KAAr" Did you see the difference Now, lets start "varn vicched" क्+अ=क ख्+अ=ख क्+आ=का ग्+आ=गा क्+इ=कि घ्+इ=घि क+ई=की क्+ई=की These diacritics will remain constant throughout all the consonants although there are some other variants in few consonants(like ri) Now, lets do varna vicched of few words Car/KAAR will be written as क्+आ+र्+= कार्(many indian people many wrongly pronounce it as kaara, therefore they'll omitt halant) Karma will be written as क्+अ+र्+म्+अ= कर्म( rm of karma is a consonant cluster and it's rules are different) Lets say we want to write the word "Kite" ,its pronounced as "kaaiit" So, it will be written as क्+आ+ई+ट= काईट, notice how ii/ई vowel appears independently, its because it doesn't follow any consonant but it follows another vowel. Varna vicched is different from sandhi vicched(word combination used in mainly sanskrit) After doing vowels , one must learn how to combine two consonants as sanskrit/hindi are full of consonant clusters. There are hell lot of work needed here because this combination is not consistent across all consonants like the vowel is क्(k)+र्(r)+अ(a)= क्र(kra) क्(k)+त्(t)+अ(a)=क्त(kta) क्(k)+म्(m)+अ(a)=क्म(kma) There are some very wierd consonant combinations as single phenome र्द,क्ष,श्र,द्द etc. Note---->TRY TO IMAGINE DEVNAGRI IN TERMS OF PHONEMES ENDING IN A VOWEL. EACH CHARACTER DENOTES A PHONEME.
yeah i would say that. they pretty much use the same letters. it's not like we use hindi letters, since both hindi and nepali came from sanskrit. so u can say that nepali uses sanskrit letters bt less complicated then sanskrit.
As a native Hindi speaker, let me warn the learners to learn from this video with a pinch of salt. There are several flaws in the video, including in the pronunciation of various sounds, such as of ङ, ञ, ष, ऋ. Even many pronunciations made in this video by the HIndi teacher are so wrong. For example, she speaks "Anusvaar" as "Anusvar". Also, her enunciation can be better. She makes several distinct pronunciations sound the same.
Mujhe hindi ati hai..khaas taur par listening aur speaking..Lekin honestly hindi script bahut hi mushkil hai..Understanding the writing basically asambhav hai..Hindi ki writing system bahut jyada complicated hai
ATTENTION HINDI LEARNERS, for anybody finding it hard how to join consonants and vowels, let me tell you, this teacher isn't good enough. Joining vowels and consonants is pretty easy, its taught through a process called "varna vicheda"- वर्ण विच्छेद Before that, the teacher here makes fundamental problem of representing consonants without "halant" ् K, kh, g, gh, ch, chh, j ,jh Are perfectly represented as क्,ख्,ग्,घ्,च्,छ्,ज्,झ् KA, kha, ga, gha, cha, chha, ja, jha Are perfectly represented as क,ख,ग,घ,च,छ,ज,झ KAA, khaa, gaa, ghaa Are perfectly written as का,खा,गा,घा Now, whats difference between kA and kAA, see the pronounciation 1.(A) karma is pronounced as "KArma" 1. (AA) Car is pronounced as "KAAr" Now, once you get this difference between (k(क्), ka(क), kaa(का)), we can start. Vowels have independent existence and are used in words both as "mantra"/diacritics and also independently(i'll tell u later) as अ,आ,इ,ई,उ,ऊ A, AA, I, EE/II, U, UU eg , 1.(A) karma is pronounced as "KArma" 1. (AA) Car is pronounced as "KAAr" Did you see the difference Now, lets start "varn vicched" क्+अ=क ख्+अ=ख क्+आ=का ग्+आ=गा क्+इ=कि घ्+इ=घि क+ई=की क्+ई=की These diacritics will remain constant throughout all the consonants although there are some other variants in few consonants(like ri) Now, lets do varna vicched of few words Car/KAAR will be written as क्+आ+र्+= कार्(many indian people many wrongly pronounce it as kaara, therefore they'll omitt halant) Karma will be written as क्+अ+र्+म्+अ= कर्म( rm of karma is a consonant cluster and it's rules are different) Lets say we want to write the word "Kite" ,its pronounced as "kaaiit" So, it will be written as क्+आ+ई+ट= काईट, notice how ii/ई vowel appears independently, its because it doesn't follow any consonant but it follows another vowel. Varna vicched is different from sandhi vicched(word combination used in mainly sanskrit) After doing vowels , one must learn how to combine two consonants as sanskrit/hindi are full of consonant clusters. There are hell lot of work needed here because this combination is not consistent across all consonants like the vowel is क्(k)+र्(r)+अ(a)= क्र(kra) क्(k)+त्(t)+अ(a)=क्त(kta) क्(k)+म्(m)+अ(a)=क्म(kma) There are some very wierd consonant combinations as single phenome र्द,क्ष,श्र,द्द etc. Note---->TRY TO IMAGINE DEVNAGRI IN TERMS OF PHONEMES ENDING IN A VOWEL. EACH CHARACTER DENOTES A PHONEME.
You need to learn first hindi full alphabets and meanings of verbs like run = Dodana (दौड़ना) . Slowly slowly you start understand how the hindi word becoming.
If a word star from vowel it written like as it as .example- Come = Aana(आना). You see first letter 'aa' it written as you see in hindi alphabates but after 'n' one 'aa' but this time it is not written as in alphabate now it join to consonant as a sign of vertical line. I hope you understand .. keep writing.. keep understanding...😊
I'm sure that you make Khmer Language 101 will be a lot easier to learn [hahahaha] Our language stands top is the largest number of letters with 74 letter but easy to learn and read
ATTENTION HINDI LEARNERS, for anybody finding it hard how to join consonants and vowels, let me tell you, this teacher isn't good enough. Joining vowels and consonants is pretty easy, its taught through a process called "varna vicheda"- वर्ण विच्छेद Before that, the teacher here makes fundamental problem of representing consonants without "halant" ् K, kh, g, gh, ch, chh, j ,jh Are perfectly represented as क्,ख्,ग्,घ्,च्,छ्,ज्,झ् KA, kha, ga, gha, cha, chha, ja, jha Are perfectly represented as क,ख,ग,घ,च,छ,ज,झ KAA, khaa, gaa, ghaa Are perfectly written as का,खा,गा,घा Now, whats difference between kA and kAA, see the pronounciation 1.(A) karma is pronounced as "KArma" 1. (AA) Car is pronounced as "KAAr" Now, once you get this difference between (k(क्), ka(क), kaa(का)), we can start. Vowels have independent existence and are used in words both as "mantra"/diacritics and also independently(i'll tell u later) as अ,आ,इ,ई,उ,ऊ A, AA, I, EE/II, U, UU eg , 1.(A) karma is pronounced as "KArma" 1. (AA) Car is pronounced as "KAAr" Did you see the difference Now, lets start "varn vicched" क्+अ=क ख्+अ=ख क्+आ=का ग्+आ=गा क्+इ=कि घ्+इ=घि क+ई=की क्+ई=की These diacritics will remain constant throughout all the consonants although there are some other variants in few consonants(like ri) Now, lets do varna vicched of few words Car/KAAR will be written as क्+आ+र्+= कार्(many indian people many wrongly pronounce it as kaara, therefore they'll omitt halant) Karma will be written as क्+अ+र्+म्+अ= कर्म( rm of karma is a consonant cluster and it's rules are different) Lets say we want to write the word "Kite" ,its pronounced as "kaaiit" So, it will be written as क्+आ+ई+ट्= काईट्, notice how ii/ई vowel appears independently, its because it doesn't follow any consonant but it follows another vowel. Varna vicched is different from sandhi vicched(word combination used in mainly sanskrit) After doing vowels , one must learn how to combine two consonants as sanskrit/hindi are full of consonant clusters. There are hell lot of work needed here because this combination is not consistent across all consonants like the vowel is क्(k)+र्(r)+अ(a)= क्र(kra) क्(k)+त्(t)+अ(a)=क्त(kta) क्(k)+म्(m)+अ(a)=क्म(kma) There are some very wierd consonant combinations as single syllable र्द,क्ष,श्र,द्द etc. Note---->TRY TO IMAGINE DEVNAGRI IN TERMS OF SYLLABLES ENDING IN A VOWEL. EACH CHARACTER DENOTES A SYLLABLE.
Thank you. Very helpful Question: in these videos the word for expensive is written as mehenga & in Hindi महंगा I would have read this as “mahangAA” where a would be like the sound of a in “bad” and A would be like the sound of u in “bud”. Now if e is the sound of e in “bed” how would you write the following sounds: 1- mehenga 2- mehanga 3- mahanga 4- mAhAngA Thanks
@@SiyavoshM Hi Simo, महंगा should ideally be pronounced as mahangaa where 'a' would always be pronounced like 'u' in bud. Its descended from sanskrit महार्घ /'mahaargha' so there's no need of pronouncing it as mehengAA. However, Its unfortunate that many in the urban areas have accent that distorts the original language and also its the urban population which uses a lot of code switching by incorporating english words so its not surprising that some may pronounce it as mehengaa. If e= ए, A=अ, a= ऐ 1. mehenga = मेहेंगै 2. mehanga= मेहैगै 3.mahanga = मैहैंगै 4.mAhAngA= महंग However, all of the above are wrong words. You should stick to mahangaa where a is like u in bud. Thank you
@@Aman-qr6wi Thank you so much for your reply. and yes, i do understand that all the 4 variations are wrong pronounciation for the hindi word that means expensive. I am trying to see how one can write different vowels in hindi. 1- it seems that the accents on top of the letters change. ैे 2- i thought two a's just lengthen the "a" sound in bad, as in the word baad in hindi meaning "later or after"(?) 3- You mentioned that the initial vowels in mahangã should be a short ah sound as u in the english word "bud" 4- so perhaps muhungã ? where "ã" is a long "ah" sound as in the english words arm=ãrm and far=fãr phonetically 5- if e=ए the transliteration of "red" would be रएत ? but wouldn't that make it "raid" ?
@@SiyavoshM using english letters for pronounciation may create problems since english itself is not phonetic. I wrote my comment assuming the premise that A= अ as 'u' in bud. a= ऐ as 'a' in bad. e= ए as 'e' in bed. I think this creates confusion so i'll use another set of letters for pronunciation A/a= अ AA/aa= आ as 'a' in Bar, Car, Far Ah = अ: AAh= आ: E =ए as e in bed, red, fed Ai =ऐ as 'a' in bad, sad, cat, sat '= ऽ (avagraha) 1. Its not accents, its just correct vowels. For example, 'bad'/(not good) would be बैड् 'bed'/(sleeping bed) would be बेड् 2.Yes, two AA means longer a as in car/(cAAr), far/(fAAr) etc. 3. Yes, but not 'ah' , rather just 'A', here in mAhAngAA , the h sound is separate consonant, but we do have Ah and AAh as distinct vowels in hindi in different words especially in sanskrit eg 'baalakAh' बालक: means singular nominative masculine boy, 'baalakAAh' बालका: means plural nominative masculine boy. There are 3x8 case system in sanskrit which makes slight changes in each words. 4.yes, according to old premise, you're correct. AA in fAAr is not long 'ah' sound but long 'a' sound. Long 'Ah' sound is AAh/आ: , I don't think that sound in english language but surely used in sanskrit and sometimes in hindi. 5. If 'e' is ए, then red would be रेड् = र्+ए+ड् and raid would be re'd as रेऽड्= र्+ए+ऽ+ड् ऽ(avagraha)is heavily used in sanskrit, it corresponds to " ' " stop kind of. Its rarely used in hindi, almost never. Thank you, If any confusion, please ask.
The vowels become matras here. Matras are like addendums. You stick a matra on a consonant to get the desired sound of the consonant+vowel. You use the vowels in their original form only when they need to represent themselves.
@@95shivanand can u give me any youtube link that teach this process.. I'm interested and excited but I can't find a youtube teacher that explain this process😢. Thanks by the way..
@@yatzuriki95 well m not an indian. i m a nepali bt since nepali and hindi share the same letters they are similar. its not really a process, u just transform the vowels into matras when u write. at least it was how i was taught when i was little. for example ki(कि) = ka(क)+e(इ) see how adding the e sound adds the matra. but let's see what happens when we write without changing the vowels letter as matras, that is we just write कइ , then it is no longer pronounced as ki but as ka-e(which makes no sense) . i hope this helps
@@aryanbhattarai6188 thanks aaryan.. i can understand a bit.. now, i need plenty time to read more hindi words so that i get to used the changig matras.. Thanks again!
Hello Aichu, Thanks for your question. The pronunciation of "phir" is not exactly like "fear", but it is definitely close to it. While "fear" is pronounced like "fiiar", "phir" is pronounced exactly like "phir". I hope that helps! Roohi Team HindiPod101.com
bit.ly/3yJeXhU Click here and get the best resources online to master Hindi grammar and improve your vocabulary with tons of content for FREE!
Oki
I’m first reply lol
And like
Devanagari is such an elegant script. Probably the most beautiful one that I know of. I love the idea of the matras, though I'm still learning them all.
Check out Georgian script, it's also very beautiful, but even easier to learn
ATTENTION HINDI LEARNERS,
for anybody finding it hard how to join consonants and vowels, let me tell you, this teacher isn't good enough.
Joining vowels and consonants is pretty easy, its taught through a process called "varna vicheda"- वर्ण विच्छेद
Before that, the teacher here makes fundamental problem of representing consonants without "halant" ्
K, kh, g, gh, ch, chh, j ,jh
Are perfectly represented as
क्,ख्,ग्,घ्,च्,छ्,ज्,झ्
KA, kha, ga, gha, cha, chha, ja, jha
Are perfectly represented as
क,ख,ग,घ,च,छ,ज,झ
KAA, khaa, gaa, ghaa
Are perfectly written as
का,खा,गा,घा
Now, whats difference between kA and kAA, see the pronounciation
1.(A) karma is pronounced as "KArma"
1. (AA) Car is pronounced as "KAAr"
Now, once you get this difference between (k(क्), ka(क), kaa(का)), we can start.
Vowels have independent existence and are used in words both as "mantra"/diacritics and also independently(i'll tell u later) as
अ,आ,इ,ई,उ,ऊ
A, AA, I, EE/II, U, UU
eg ,
1.(A) karma is pronounced as "KArma"
1. (AA) Car is pronounced as "KAAr"
Did you see the difference
Now, lets start "varn vicched"
क्+अ=क ख्+अ=ख
क्+आ=का ग्+आ=गा
क्+इ=कि घ्+इ=घि
क+ई=की क्+ई=की
These diacritics will remain constant throughout all the consonants although there are some other variants in few consonants(like ri)
Now, lets do varna vicched of few words
Car/KAAR will be written as
क्+आ+र्+= कार्(many indian people many wrongly pronounce it as kaara, therefore they'll omitt halant)
Karma will be written as क्+अ+र्+म्+अ= कर्म( rm of karma is a consonant cluster and it's rules are different)
Lets say we want to write the word "Kite" ,its pronounced as "kaaiit"
So, it will be written as
क्+आ+ई+ट= काईट, notice how ii/ई vowel appears independently, its because it doesn't follow any consonant but it follows another vowel.
Varna vicched is different from sandhi vicched(word combination used in mainly sanskrit)
After doing vowels , one must learn how to combine two consonants as sanskrit/hindi are full of consonant clusters.
There are hell lot of work needed here because this combination is not consistent across all consonants like the vowel is
क्(k)+र्(r)+अ(a)= क्र(kra)
क्(k)+त्(t)+अ(a)=क्त(kta)
क्(k)+म्(m)+अ(a)=क्म(kma)
There are some very wierd consonant combinations as single phenome
र्द,क्ष,श्र,द्द etc.
Note---->TRY TO IMAGINE DEVNAGRI IN TERMS OF PHONEMES ENDING IN A VOWEL. EACH CHARACTER DENOTES A PHONEME.
As an Indian, I was freaking out while learning Spanish. But this video tells me that Hindi is definitely way more difficult than Spanish, if one wants to learn all the rules. When I did my research, I found that Hindi and German are considered to be almost at par in terms of difficulty! 🤔
Oh my God more than Japanese and Chinese?Id never expect so wow, but ok
As an Indian in Germany (born and brought up there), I disagree, it's just like any other language, it has it's difficult parts and easy parts to learn. In German it's the articles and sentence structure, in Hindi it's mostly the pronunciation. For different people the different parts of the language are more diffucult / different to learn.
@@matttube9369 I had a way easier time with the Japanese alphabet than Hindi. And Japanese has 3 Alphabets. Kanji sure has more signs but its pretty easy to memorise. Hindi just looked and sounded the same to me... k, kh, c ch, g, gh... I mean, thef*ck. 🤣
Makes sense, but I dont know, Hindi at least its a lot repeated the letters, Kanji is for a whole life basically
But since I didnt go beyobd basic level yet in neither I cant speak much for sure
@@matttube9369 hindi grammer is pretty similar to Japanese hiragana and katakana are easy too, and indians can easily pronounce japanese words as hindi has more sounds than japanese , but kanji bought Letters from chinese, in written japanese only few characters are used here and there in sentences but just think whole of chinese uses these characters , so much much to memorize the characters and their pronunciation, what an inefficient system!
Hindi is such a beautiful language. I have always been mesmorized by it though I am south Indian and wanted to learn it.
I am English trying to learn Hindi, thanks for this helpful video!
i m learning English if you help me i can help you i am native hindi speaker come on my face book or just email me on the link brother i am waiting for you
Good learn!
@@mohitpborkar7745 wow, thanks ☺❤
Hey friend David Allsopp, I am an Indian , learning English would you to be my friend I am native hindi speaker
Rajneeah Yadav sure brother
I'm here when I can speak hindi I just wanted to see how they teach it lol
Me too lol
Me too
So bro can you teach me hindi ? I'm from pakistan and I love hindi, it is been my wish to learn hindi science childhood
@leedee22 y Yes I can speak hindi but I want to learn written hindi
😂😂😂 me too
I can speak Hindi perfectly because we speak it at home but i never learnt to write :(
@Saumya Houji. Same, my native language was Telugu though I learnt how to speak English but never how to write it sadly :/
same
Sameee
Blue Fire I am a telugu person too
Same here too
Half Indian here👋🏽 learning Hindi.
And half?
Jai Shree Ram
Half indian 😊
I found your video via Presto Speaker Shortcut - there are lots great videos there that may help you
I’m Afro-Indian meaning my dad is fully Indian (family speaking Hindi and Gujarati) mom is African American💖💖✊🏾
I’m actually learning Sanskrit but needed help reading it lol, will learn Hindi at a later date
I can help you with Sanskrit I learned some basics and also a native
I selected Sanskrit in school as additional subject as it was optional and learned for 4 years👍
@V k bhai yeh lrdka simp hai bhot bda
@Levi Ackerman my interest is in ancient languages lol, how will learning Sanskrit not help with my goal of knowing Sanskrit?
@@FaerytaleMalice watch the IIT lectures for sanskrit
As an indian i am bad at sanskrit but good luck
I'm just a Mexican girl trying to learn Hindi coz I love Bollywood songs and Armaan Malik 😁😍
How's it going?
Good luck
All the best. ❤️❤️❤️
Try watching Hindi Cartoon. Kids rhymes. ❤️❤️❤️
That is not pure hindi sister that you see in bollywood movies they speak mix of hindi and urdu..you can call that hindustani language but not hindi
Hindi is a language and 'Devnagri' is the Script.
Every one knows it
@@दीपकनागर-ज6द ok we don't need your recommendations
Woah it's a language? I had no idea. 🙀
Warning!
You're going to hate the contraction characters...
Lol it's easy when you master it, very easy than Chinese or Japanese, haha
@@parmeshsharma9058 app b aj 2020 ma sekh rahay hai
@@katoonbabu Nahi, Hindi is my first language
@@parmeshsharma9058 bhie phir Mujh kou b sekhou. Plz apna number dou
@@katoonbabu I can't give you mine, but you can have many online resources, they can teach you better than me :) don't forget to check play store, and also Bollywood movies can help!! :) Happy learning :) Achche se padhna
What about mentioning "Visarga"? It's used in words like अंततः, अतः. Visarga resembles the colon symbol of English.
The writing is beautiful, but what makes it difficult is the fact that each letter is completely different from the other and all of them have many lines, differently from arabic, for example, still i believe the hindi writing is the most beautiful one, i hope i master it some day. 😱
Yes u will, for sure👍 best of luck 🤗
Indian languages are beautiful but there aren't much resources on internet.
ATTENTION HINDI LEARNERS,
for anybody finding it hard how to join consonants and vowels, let me tell you, this teacher isn't good enough.
Joining vowels and consonants is pretty easy, its taught through a process called "varna vicheda"- वर्ण विच्छेद
Before that, the teacher here makes fundamental problem of representing consonants without "halant" ्
K, kh, g, gh, ch, chh, j ,jh
Are perfectly represented as
क्,ख्,ग्,घ्,च्,छ्,ज्,झ्
KA, kha, ga, gha, cha, chha, ja, jha
Are perfectly represented as
क,ख,ग,घ,च,छ,ज,झ
KAA, khaa, gaa, ghaa
Are perfectly written as
का,खा,गा,घा
Now, whats difference between kA and kAA, see the pronounciation
1.(A) karma is pronounced as "KArma"
1. (AA) Car is pronounced as "KAAr"
Now, once you get this difference between (k(क्), ka(क), kaa(का)), we can start.
Vowels have independent existence and are used in words both as "mantra"/diacritics and also independently(i'll tell u later) as
अ,आ,इ,ई,उ,ऊ
A, AA, I, EE/II, U, UU
eg ,
1.(A) karma is pronounced as "KArma"
1. (AA) Car is pronounced as "KAAr"
Did you see the difference
Now, lets start "varn vicched"
क्+अ=क ख्+अ=ख
क्+आ=का ग्+आ=गा
क्+इ=कि घ्+इ=घि
क+ई=की क्+ई=की
These diacritics will remain constant throughout all the consonants although there are some other variants in few consonants(like ri)
Now, lets do varna vicched of few words
Car/KAAR will be written as
क्+आ+र्+= कार्(many indian people many wrongly pronounce it as kaara, therefore they'll omitt halant)
Karma will be written as क्+अ+र्+म्+अ= कर्म( rm of karma is a consonant cluster and it's rules are different)
Lets say we want to write the word "Kite" ,its pronounced as "kaaiit"
So, it will be written as
क्+आ+ई+ट= काईट, notice how ii/ई vowel appears independently, its because it doesn't follow any consonant but it follows another vowel.
Varna vicched is different from sandhi vicched(word combination used in mainly sanskrit)
After doing vowels , one must learn how to combine two consonants as sanskrit/hindi are full of consonant clusters.
There are hell lot of work needed here because this combination is not consistent across all consonants like the vowel is
क्(k)+र्(r)+अ(a)= क्र(kra)
क्(k)+त्(t)+अ(a)=क्त(kta)
क्(k)+म्(m)+अ(a)=क्म(kma)
There are some very wierd consonant combinations as single phenome
र्द,क्ष,श्र,द्द etc.
Note---->TRY TO IMAGINE DEVNAGRI IN TERMS OF PHONEMES ENDING IN A VOWEL. EACH CHARACTER DENOTES A PHONEME.
Gaaliyon se shuru kar, jaldi seekh paaega be*****od. Teri bauni karaa di hai, aish kar.
Spanish sounds like hindi i the way we both have strong R and strong consonants, also in spanish words sounds exactly like you write like in hindi
Sanskrit and Latin have the same ansister.
Urdu is kinda like hindi but with different alphabets
@@cosmiczayan2559 Urdu use Arabic script and 20% Iranian and Arabic words and 80% words from Sanskrit and grammar is from hindi
Correction at 1:30
"If the pronounciation is 'ka' you write क"
She pronounced ka (क) as kaa(का). While it should be pronounced as only ka (क).
Something I have difficulty with when it comes to learning Hindi is that native Indians have such crisp speech, as opposed to English-speakers. It makes it difficult to see the nuances in the short and long sounds of some of the vowels and consonants. This is something native Hindi speakers take for granted and need to know about teaching Hindi to native Angrezi speakers. I think this is where learning the alphabet (and the grammar along with it) will make a huge difference in my learning Hindi.
@@nealwright5630 ATTENTION HINDI LEARNERS,
for anybody finding it hard how to join consonants and vowels, let me tell you, this teacher isn't good enough.
Joining vowels and consonants is pretty easy, its taught through a process called "varna vicheda"- वर्ण विच्छेद
Before that, the teacher here makes fundamental problem of representing consonants without "halant" ्
K, kh, g, gh, ch, chh, j ,jh
Are perfectly represented as
क्,ख्,ग्,घ्,च्,छ्,ज्,झ्
KA, kha, ga, gha, cha, chha, ja, jha
Are perfectly represented as
क,ख,ग,घ,च,छ,ज,झ
KAA, khaa, gaa, ghaa
Are perfectly written as
का,खा,गा,घा
Now, whats difference between kA and kAA, see the pronounciation
1.(A) karma is pronounced as "KArma"
1. (AA) Car is pronounced as "KAAr"
Now, once you get this difference between (k(क्), ka(क), kaa(का)), we can start.
Vowels have independent existence and are used in words both as "mantra"/diacritics and also independently(i'll tell u later) as
अ,आ,इ,ई,उ,ऊ
A, AA, I, EE/II, U, UU
eg ,
1.(A) karma is pronounced as "KArma"
1. (AA) Car is pronounced as "KAAr"
Did you see the difference
Now, lets start "varn vicched"
क्+अ=क ख्+अ=ख
क्+आ=का ग्+आ=गा
क्+इ=कि घ्+इ=घि
क+ई=की क्+ई=की
These diacritics will remain constant throughout all the consonants although there are some other variants in few consonants(like ri)
Now, lets do varna vicched of few words
Car/KAAR will be written as
क्+आ+र्+= कार्(many indian people many wrongly pronounce it as kaara, therefore they'll omitt halant)
Karma will be written as क्+अ+र्+म्+अ= कर्म( rm of karma is a consonant cluster and it's rules are different)
Lets say we want to write the word "Kite" ,its pronounced as "kaaiit"
So, it will be written as
क्+आ+ई+ट= काईट, notice how ii/ई vowel appears independently, its because it doesn't follow any consonant but it follows another vowel.
Varna vicched is different from sandhi vicched(word combination used in mainly sanskrit)
After doing vowels , one must learn how to combine two consonants as sanskrit/hindi are full of consonant clusters.
There are hell lot of work needed here because this combination is not consistent across all consonants like the vowel is
क्(k)+र्(r)+अ(a)= क्र(kra)
क्(k)+त्(t)+अ(a)=क्त(kta)
क्(k)+म्(m)+अ(a)=क्म(kma)
There are some very wierd consonant combinations as single phenome
र्द,क्ष,श्र,द्द etc.
Note---->TRY TO IMAGINE DEVNAGRI IN TERMS OF PHONEMES ENDING IN A VOWEL. EACH CHARACTER DENOTES A PHONEME.
A phonetic language would technically denote each vowel sound with a character, while Hindi does have vowel characters, all consonants come with an implicit vowel, like in "वह" thus doing away with the need for "अ" in the middle of a word. There are two vowels in "वह" that aren't shown, one who can read devangari just knows that the vowels are implicit, only changed by matras. A phonetic writing system is one that denotes each and every vowel sound with a character, as it denotes each and every consonant with a character. Hindi can be largely predicted, but not completely, once someone has a grasp of the consonant-implicit vowel combination found in its abugida system. For example, English is not a phonetic language, but uses a phonetic writing system. Hindi is largely phonetic, as in it doesn't use split diagraphs like English does like in the word "line" or "sire". But techincally, it is not.
A person who knows any Indian language can pronounce Hindi with almost no problem !!!
Dhanyavaad!! Gracias!
Susmita Majumdar i was talking about what constitutes as a phonetic language. Hindi is derived from Brahmi script. Phonetic languages are all derived from Greek writing. Sanskrit and Greek developed completely independently in regards to writing, despite both being indo European. Hindi therefore cannot possibly being phonetic. It does not come from ancient phonetican.
@@ChelseaHartIsMe hindi is language
Brahmi is script devanagri is script
shiro kun do you mean to say Hindi is in Devanagari? Main jaanti hoon. Brahmi script is what it is derived from, like a great grand father. Brahmi script paved the way for the adaptation of non-Sanskrit derived languages into script.
I know how to talk in Hindi, but never learnt to write it ;-; (since I’m Bangladesh, my native language and Hindi are kinda similar)
I taught myself to read Bengali just out of curiosity and I can read the script fluently though I can't speak the language XD
Bengladesh wapas jao!
@@vatsalj7535 what did u use to learn bengali script?
@@Ahn-mu3db tried to memorize the chart off the internet, installed a Bengali keyboard (this really helps) to practice and I was familiar with each letter by a week ,well except the conjucts which I slowly memorized later on Aswell
I learned all pronouncing of sounds by listening to Hindi word list
ATTENTION HINDI LEARNERS,
for anybody finding it hard how to join consonants and vowels, let me tell you, this teacher isn't good enough.
Joining vowels and consonants is pretty easy, its taught through a process called "varna vicheda"- वर्ण विच्छेद
Before that, the teacher here makes fundamental problem of representing consonants without "halant" ्
K, kh, g, gh, ch, chh, j ,jh
Are perfectly represented as
क्,ख्,ग्,घ्,च्,छ्,ज्,झ्
KA, kha, ga, gha, cha, chha, ja, jha
Are perfectly represented as
क,ख,ग,घ,च,छ,ज,झ
KAA, khaa, gaa, ghaa
Are perfectly written as
का,खा,गा,घा
Now, whats difference between kA and kAA, see the pronounciation
1.(A) karma is pronounced as "KArma"
1. (AA) Car is pronounced as "KAAr"
Now, once you get this difference between (k(क्), ka(क), kaa(का)), we can start.
Vowels have independent existence and are used in words both as "mantra"/diacritics and also independently(i'll tell u later) as
अ,आ,इ,ई,उ,ऊ
A, AA, I, EE/II, U, UU
eg ,
1.(A) karma is pronounced as "KArma"
1. (AA) Car is pronounced as "KAAr"
Did you see the difference
Now, lets start "varn vicched"
क्+अ=क ख्+अ=ख
क्+आ=का ग्+आ=गा
क्+इ=कि घ्+इ=घि
क+ई=की क्+ई=की
These diacritics will remain constant throughout all the consonants although there are some other variants in few consonants(like ri)
Now, lets do varna vicched of few words
Car/KAAR will be written as
क्+आ+र्+= कार्(many indian people many wrongly pronounce it as kaara, therefore they'll omitt halant)
Karma will be written as क्+अ+र्+म्+अ= कर्म( rm of karma is a consonant cluster and it's rules are different)
Lets say we want to write the word "Kite" ,its pronounced as "kaaiit"
So, it will be written as
क्+आ+ई+ट= काईट, notice how ii/ई vowel appears independently, its because it doesn't follow any consonant but it follows another vowel.
Varna vicched is different from sandhi vicched(word combination used in mainly sanskrit)
After doing vowels , one must learn how to combine two consonants as sanskrit/hindi are full of consonant clusters.
There are hell lot of work needed here because this combination is not consistent across all consonants like the vowel is
क्(k)+र्(r)+अ(a)= क्र(kra)
क्(k)+त्(t)+अ(a)=क्त(kta)
क्(k)+म्(m)+अ(a)=क्म(kma)
There are some very wierd consonant combinations as single phenome
र्द,क्ष,श्र,द्द etc.
Note---->TRY TO IMAGINE DEVNAGRI IN TERMS OF PHONEMES ENDING IN A VOWEL. EACH CHARACTER DENOTES A PHONEME.
Devanagari is a beautiful script but i have to say the squiggly letters can be quite intricate.
for vowels, I am pretty sure there Is an "aum" and an "ahaa"
Yeah but many skip them till later
Exactly!
Those are not vowel they are called
अं = anusvaar( अनुसवार)
अः =visarga(विसर्ग)
although they are typically written along with vowels just for the 'completness' of it. There are many way in which varnmaalaa( वर्णमाला) can be arranged , the one we see in our text book is the most common way to arrange वर्ण.
Hope it helps ☺️
I do know that hindi is related to my native language, Bengali, but the "e", "ai" , "o", "ao" and "ri" is written differently in Bengali. Most of the consonants seem similar. The only difference is the extra "v" which is usually "b" in Bengali. Now I understood more about why the "om" is pronounced like that.
I dont even know what am doing here when I can both, write and speak Hindi lol
S ....
same 🤣
If you want to learn perfect Hindi 1st of learn vowels and consonants after that go for barakhadi(vowel + consonant) it's very important for learning perfect Hindi
Good
ATTENTION HINDI LEARNERS,
for anybody finding it hard how to join consonants and vowels, let me tell you, this teacher isn't good enough.
Joining vowels and consonants is pretty easy, its taught through a process called "varna vicheda"- वर्ण विच्छेद
Before that, the teacher here makes fundamental problem of representing consonants without "halant" ्
K, kh, g, gh, ch, chh, j ,jh
Are perfectly represented as
क्,ख्,ग्,घ्,च्,छ्,ज्,झ्
KA, kha, ga, gha, cha, chha, ja, jha
Are perfectly represented as
क,ख,ग,घ,च,छ,ज,झ
KAA, khaa, gaa, ghaa
Are perfectly written as
का,खा,गा,घा
Now, whats difference between kA and kAA, see the pronounciation
1.(A) karma is pronounced as "KArma"
1. (AA) Car is pronounced as "KAAr"
Now, once you get this difference between (k(क्), ka(क), kaa(का)), we can start.
Vowels have independent existence and are used in words both as "mantra"/diacritics and also independently(i'll tell u later) as
अ,आ,इ,ई,उ,ऊ
A, AA, I, EE/II, U, UU
eg ,
1.(A) karma is pronounced as "KArma"
1. (AA) Car is pronounced as "KAAr"
Did you see the difference
Now, lets start "varn vicched"
क्+अ=क ख्+अ=ख
क्+आ=का ग्+आ=गा
क्+इ=कि घ्+इ=घि
क+ई=की क्+ई=की
These diacritics will remain constant throughout all the consonants although there are some other variants in few consonants(like ri)
Now, lets do varna vicched of few words
Car/KAAR will be written as
क्+आ+र्+= कार्(many indian people many wrongly pronounce it as kaara, therefore they'll omitt halant)
Karma will be written as क्+अ+र्+म्+अ= कर्म( rm of karma is a consonant cluster and it's rules are different)
Lets say we want to write the word "Kite" ,its pronounced as "kaaiit"
So, it will be written as
क्+आ+ई+ट= काईट, notice how ii/ई vowel appears independently, its because it doesn't follow any consonant but it follows another vowel.
Varna vicched is different from sandhi vicched(word combination used in mainly sanskrit)
After doing vowels , one must learn how to combine two consonants as sanskrit/hindi are full of consonant clusters.
There are hell lot of work needed here because this combination is not consistent across all consonants like the vowel is
क्(k)+र्(r)+अ(a)= क्र(kra)
क्(k)+त्(t)+अ(a)=क्त(kta)
क्(k)+म्(m)+अ(a)=क्म(kma)
There are some very wierd consonant combinations as single phenome
र्द,क्ष,श्र,द्द etc.
Note---->TRY TO IMAGINE DEVNAGRI IN TERMS OF PHONEMES ENDING IN A VOWEL. EACH CHARACTER DENOTES A PHONEME.
Writing in hindi became easier after i watched this video, thanks :)
ATTENTION HINDI LEARNERS,
for anybody finding it hard how to join consonants and vowels, let me tell you, this teacher isn't good enough.
Joining vowels and consonants is pretty easy, its taught through a process called "varna vicheda"- वर्ण विच्छेद
Before that, the teacher here makes fundamental problem of representing consonants without "halant" ्
K, kh, g, gh, ch, chh, j ,jh
Are perfectly represented as
क्,ख्,ग्,घ्,च्,छ्,ज्,झ्
KA, kha, ga, gha, cha, chha, ja, jha
Are perfectly represented as
क,ख,ग,घ,च,छ,ज,झ
KAA, khaa, gaa, ghaa
Are perfectly written as
का,खा,गा,घा
Now, whats difference between kA and kAA, see the pronounciation
1.(A) karma is pronounced as "KArma"
1. (AA) Car is pronounced as "KAAr"
Now, once you get this difference between (k(क्), ka(क), kaa(का)), we can start.
Vowels have independent existence and are used in words both as "mantra"/diacritics and also independently(i'll tell u later) as
अ,आ,इ,ई,उ,ऊ
A, AA, I, EE/II, U, UU
eg ,
1.(A) karma is pronounced as "KArma"
1. (AA) Car is pronounced as "KAAr"
Did you see the difference
Now, lets start "varn vicched"
क्+अ=क ख्+अ=ख
क्+आ=का ग्+आ=गा
क्+इ=कि घ्+इ=घि
क+ई=की क्+ई=की
These diacritics will remain constant throughout all the consonants although there are some other variants in few consonants(like ri)
Now, lets do varna vicched of few words
Car/KAAR will be written as
क्+आ+र्+= कार्(many indian people many wrongly pronounce it as kaara, therefore they'll omitt halant)
Karma will be written as क्+अ+र्+म्+अ= कर्म( rm of karma is a consonant cluster and it's rules are different)
Lets say we want to write the word "Kite" ,its pronounced as "kaaiit"
So, it will be written as
क्+आ+ई+ट= काईट, notice how ii/ई vowel appears independently, its because it doesn't follow any consonant but it follows another vowel.
Varna vicched is different from sandhi vicched(word combination used in mainly sanskrit)
After doing vowels , one must learn how to combine two consonants as sanskrit/hindi are full of consonant clusters.
There are hell lot of work needed here because this combination is not consistent across all consonants like the vowel is
क्(k)+र्(r)+अ(a)= क्र(kra)
क्(k)+त्(t)+अ(a)=क्त(kta)
क्(k)+म्(m)+अ(a)=क्म(kma)
There are some very wierd consonant combinations as single phenome
र्द,क्ष,श्र,द्द etc.
Note---->TRY TO IMAGINE DEVNAGRI IN TERMS OF PHONEMES ENDING IN A VOWEL. EACH CHARACTER DENOTES A PHONEME.
A person who knows any Indian language can pronounce Hindi with almost no problem !!!
Tell me in the comments !!
I'm from Afghanistan 🇦🇫 i love ❤️ hindi basaha 🇮🇳 main koshesh karte ho ke hindi basha ke lek na or badh na seek sa ko I am good at speaking but not writing and reading 📖 hope my hindi was good with respect Nida Shaiq tnx
@@nidashaiq3772 So, you speak Pashto , right ?
@@nidashaiq3772 Badiya hai bhai. Sikh loge chinta na karo.
Thank you soo much Love 🇮🇳 India ❤️
Yes its my mother language but more than my own language I love ❤️ Hindi 🇮🇳 🇦🇫
Why is she speaking like a robot? (I am native hindi speaker)
Maybe bc it's easier to understand for people who don't really speak Hindi
I forgot Hindi, this really helped. THANKS!!! Or Shukria😉🇮🇳
Dhanyawaad is hindi, shukriya isn't hindi. 👍
@@rohanroynameless why is it not hindi?
@@HarrisTheHypnotist b'coz 'shukriya' is Arabic word bro.
@@rohanroynameless oh ok
@@HarrisTheHypnotist shukriya is urdu
But hindi and urdu are same language
Hindustani or hindvi
Now that's what I was looking for.
ok.. this writing system is really confusing..
To be honest Indian people also make mistake
True, its a little bit tricky
क ख ग घ ङ च छ ज झ ट ठ ड ढ ण त थ द ध न प फ ब भ म य र ल श ष स ह
@@kutushrfurut6310 ??? I think consonants are easy but vowels are difficult cuz if vowel comes after a consonant , the initial vowel is not used rather "maatra" Is used like,we dont write कइ rather कि
It's very easy, these guys are not giving full information
Seems like they combine 2 letters to make new letters. 52 letters becomes sort of 100 or so?
Only 52 letters
52 letters and a few Mattras which are often interchangable and easy to memorise... associating Mattras with pronunciation is a bigger problem for me. 😆
ATTENTION HINDI LEARNERS,
for anybody finding it hard how to join consonants and vowels, let me tell you, this teacher isn't good enough.
Joining vowels and consonants is pretty easy, its taught through a process called "varna vicheda"- वर्ण विच्छेद
Before that, the teacher here makes fundamental problem of representing consonants without "halant" ्
K, kh, g, gh, ch, chh, j ,jh
Are perfectly represented as
क्,ख्,ग्,घ्,च्,छ्,ज्,झ्
KA, kha, ga, gha, cha, chha, ja, jha
Are perfectly represented as
क,ख,ग,घ,च,छ,ज,झ
KAA, khaa, gaa, ghaa
Are perfectly written as
का,खा,गा,घा
Now, whats difference between kA and kAA, see the pronounciation
1.(A) karma is pronounced as "KArma"
1. (AA) Car is pronounced as "KAAr"
Now, once you get this difference between (k(क्), ka(क), kaa(का)), we can start.
Vowels have independent existence and are used in words both as "mantra"/diacritics and also independently(i'll tell u later) as
अ,आ,इ,ई,उ,ऊ
A, AA, I, EE/II, U, UU
eg ,
1.(A) karma is pronounced as "KArma"
1. (AA) Car is pronounced as "KAAr"
Did you see the difference
Now, lets start "varn vicched"
क्+अ=क ख्+अ=ख
क्+आ=का ग्+आ=गा
क्+इ=कि घ्+इ=घि
क+ई=की क्+ई=की
These diacritics will remain constant throughout all the consonants although there are some other variants in few consonants(like ri)
Now, lets do varna vicched of few words
Car/KAAR will be written as
क्+आ+र्+= कार्(many indian people many wrongly pronounce it as kaara, therefore they'll omitt halant)
Karma will be written as क्+अ+र्+म्+अ= कर्म( rm of karma is a consonant cluster and it's rules are different)
Lets say we want to write the word "Kite" ,its pronounced as "kaaiit"
So, it will be written as
क्+आ+ई+ट= काईट, notice how ii/ई vowel appears independently, its because it doesn't follow any consonant but it follows another vowel.
Varna vicched is different from sandhi vicched(word combination used in mainly sanskrit)
After doing vowels , one must learn how to combine two consonants as sanskrit/hindi are full of consonant clusters.
There are hell lot of work needed here because this combination is not consistent across all consonants like the vowel is
क्(k)+र्(r)+अ(a)= क्र(kra)
क्(k)+त्(t)+अ(a)=क्त(kta)
क्(k)+म्(m)+अ(a)=क्म(kma)
There are some very wierd consonant combinations as single phenome
र्द,क्ष,श्र,द्द etc.
Note---->TRY TO IMAGINE DEVNAGRI IN TERMS OF PHONEMES ENDING IN A VOWEL. EACH CHARACTER DENOTES A PHONEME.
There's 200+ letter combos from what I know. The large number is nothing most of them are very obvious to make and even the exceptions become intuitive after a while.
Thanks for the video! Any lesson vids with the actual stroke order of writing each letter?
I had a mild stroke trying to understand where the vowels changed when attached to consonants
I needed a strong drink to recover
@@sineadnibhriain4445 lousey way of teaching LOL. As a hindi speaker I need a drink after this.
Lol
@@sineadnibhriain4445 lmao
@@sineadnibhriain4445 lmfao, this is kinda funny hehe
correction: devanagari is not an alphabet but an abugida (alphasyllabary)
*Script
Script
❤ omg I love your videos. You guys are amazing. No matter the language. Always so well done.
Reading from the reviews, I feel that I am the only one who can’t speak Hindi and consider learning it. Who else seriously learning Hindi here?
I just want to know why r u learning Hindi
dont worry bud , Im trying to learn hindi here too.
@@renegade_0886 why r u learning Hindi
@@renegade_0886 I'm curious to know
@@triptisingh6218 wow you sure are an inquisitive person. CBSE 10th boards are coming up and im screwed because hindi is my weakest subject so I gotta do something about that. Also im from down south where we dont speak hindi generally so I'm not a native speaker either.
I can across a good collection of videos that should help on Presto speaker shortcut
Abhut danhyvaad ❤
i speak hindi and telugu but i don`t how to write hindi or telugu but i can write and speak in english and koran and thai and etc and learned thail because lisa from blackpink is from thailand and love u lisa
Wired people are everywhere
💀💀 K-pop fans are on another lvl
Idk why am I here because I speak Hindi fluently because im an Indian! Proud to br an Indian!
M from Pakistan i just waned to learn Hindi alphabets
i'm just an indian tryna learn how to write hindi again after 6 years
yepp i'm 12 :P
DO you already know?
@@MP-cv6if i used to but since i study in an english board with international students i forgot most of it and I'm just trying to re-learn it
@@happytentacles4276 oh! Best of luck then!
Same but I am 14
Good! Nice work re-learning! :-)
आपको धन्यवाद, अब मई हिंदी लिखसक्ता हूं!
आपका धन्यवाद, अब मै हिन्दी सीख सकता हूं |
मैं not मइ
लिख सकता not सक्ता even though it's indeed pronounced more like सक्ता
May I know where you from brother
@@vatsalj7535 I'm from Bihar, India. It's fine if can't write it well. I really appreciate your effort to learn hindi.
@@abhishekdas2940 no, I was asking Umar actually .
btw I happen to hail from bihar as well and yeah it's nice to see people making an effort to learn our native tounge : ))
Oh wait, I get it .
You are mistaking my reply for umar's haha
That was not me who made the original comment, have a look again bro xD
you teach very good lessons in details thanks for helping me
Written as it is spoken, that makes it quite easy. Sure, and pigs can fly.
Pigs can fly?
She is a bad teacher.
Actually hindi is very phonetic.
ATTENTION HINDI LEARNERS,
for anybody finding it hard how to join consonants and vowels, let me tell you, this teacher isn't good enough.
Joining vowels and consonants is pretty easy, its taught through a process called "varna vicheda"- वर्ण विच्छेद
Before that, the teacher here makes fundamental problem of representing consonants without "halant" ्
K, kh, g, gh, ch, chh, j ,jh
Are perfectly represented as
क्,ख्,ग्,घ्,च्,छ्,ज्,झ्
KA, kha, ga, gha, cha, chha, ja, jha
Are perfectly represented as
क,ख,ग,घ,च,छ,ज,झ
KAA, khaa, gaa, ghaa
Are perfectly written as
का,खा,गा,घा
Now, whats difference between kA and kAA, see the pronounciation
1.(A) karma is pronounced as "KArma"
1. (AA) Car is pronounced as "KAAr"
Now, once you get this difference between (k(क्), ka(क), kaa(का)), we can start.
Vowels have independent existence and are used in words both as "mantra"/diacritics and also independently(i'll tell u later) as
अ,आ,इ,ई,उ,ऊ
A, AA, I, EE/II, U, UU
eg ,
1.(A) karma is pronounced as "KArma"
1. (AA) Car is pronounced as "KAAr"
Did you see the difference
Now, lets start "varn vicched"
क्+अ=क ख्+अ=ख
क्+आ=का ग्+आ=गा
क्+इ=कि घ्+इ=घि
क+ई=की क्+ई=की
These diacritics will remain constant throughout all the consonants although there are some other variants in few consonants(like ri)
Now, lets do varna vicched of few words
Car/KAAR will be written as
क्+आ+र्+= कार्(many indian people many wrongly pronounce it as kaara, therefore they'll omitt halant)
Karma will be written as क्+अ+र्+म्+अ= कर्म( rm of karma is a consonant cluster and it's rules are different)
Lets say we want to write the word "Kite" ,its pronounced as "kaaiit"
So, it will be written as
क्+आ+ई+ट= काईट, notice how ii/ई vowel appears independently, its because it doesn't follow any consonant but it follows another vowel.
Varna vicched is different from sandhi vicched(word combination used in mainly sanskrit)
After doing vowels , one must learn how to combine two consonants as sanskrit/hindi are full of consonant clusters.
There are hell lot of work needed here because this combination is not consistent across all consonants like the vowel is
क्(k)+र्(r)+अ(a)= क्र(kra)
क्(k)+त्(t)+अ(a)=क्त(kta)
क्(k)+म्(m)+अ(a)=क्म(kma)
There are some very wierd consonant combinations as single phenome
र्द,क्ष,श्र,द्द etc.
Note---->TRY TO IMAGINE DEVNAGRI IN TERMS OF PHONEMES ENDING IN A VOWEL. EACH CHARACTER DENOTES A PHONEME.
thanks
Cool but where is the ri maatra in kripyia in ur example?
Under letter क.
If it is used individually as complete letter it is written as ऋषि (Rishi) which means a sage, seer.
Got it 👍👍👍
Hi Andrew,
Thanks for your question.
The "ri" maatra is right below the "ka" in "kripayaa" (कृ). It looks like this ृ
I hope that helps!
Roohi
Team HindiPod101.com
AMO❤ EDTUDIAR😄🖐😄.CON TAN good teachers.👏👏👏😘
Thank you SO much. Very good teachers😄👏👍
ATTENTION HINDI LEARNERS,
for anybody finding it hard how to join consonants and vowels, let me tell you, this teacher isn't good enough.
Joining vowels and consonants is pretty easy, its taught through a process called "varna vicheda"- वर्ण विच्छेद
Before that, the teacher here makes fundamental problem of representing consonants without "halant" ्
K, kh, g, gh, ch, chh, j ,jh
Are perfectly represented as
क्,ख्,ग्,घ्,च्,छ्,ज्,झ्
KA, kha, ga, gha, cha, chha, ja, jha
Are perfectly represented as
क,ख,ग,घ,च,छ,ज,झ
KAA, khaa, gaa, ghaa
Are perfectly written as
का,खा,गा,घा
Now, whats difference between kA and kAA, see the pronounciation
1.(A) karma is pronounced as "KArma"
1. (AA) Car is pronounced as "KAAr"
Now, once you get this difference between (k(क्), ka(क), kaa(का)), we can start.
Vowels have independent existence and are used in words both as "mantra"/diacritics and also independently(i'll tell u later) as
अ,आ,इ,ई,उ,ऊ
A, AA, I, EE/II, U, UU
eg ,
1.(A) karma is pronounced as "KArma"
1. (AA) Car is pronounced as "KAAr"
Did you see the difference
Now, lets start "varn vicched"
क्+अ=क ख्+अ=ख
क्+आ=का ग्+आ=गा
क्+इ=कि घ्+इ=घि
क+ई=की क्+ई=की
These diacritics will remain constant throughout all the consonants although there are some other variants in few consonants(like ri)
Now, lets do varna vicched of few words
Car/KAAR will be written as
क्+आ+र्+= कार्(many indian people many wrongly pronounce it as kaara, therefore they'll omitt halant)
Karma will be written as क्+अ+र्+म्+अ= कर्म( rm of karma is a consonant cluster and it's rules are different)
Lets say we want to write the word "Kite" ,its pronounced as "kaaiit"
So, it will be written as
क्+आ+ई+ट= काईट, notice how ii/ई vowel appears independently, its because it doesn't follow any consonant but it follows another vowel.
Varna vicched is different from sandhi vicched(word combination used in mainly sanskrit)
After doing vowels , one must learn how to combine two consonants as sanskrit/hindi are full of consonant clusters.
There are hell lot of work needed here because this combination is not consistent across all consonants like the vowel is
क्(k)+र्(r)+अ(a)= क्र(kra)
क्(k)+त्(t)+अ(a)=क्त(kta)
क्(k)+म्(m)+अ(a)=क्म(kma)
There are some very wierd consonant combinations as single phenome
र्द,क्ष,श्र,द्द etc.
Note---->TRY TO IMAGINE DEVNAGRI IN TERMS OF PHONEMES ENDING IN A VOWEL. EACH CHARACTER DENOTES A PHONEME.
For those who don't know full-stop is period in British English;)
yay lets go for india
Mam plz suggest .
I am studying in final year. I speak hindi very well but not able to write in hindi .
I am beginner .I jus only know a aa e.
Hope you suggest me how I learn hindi
Learn hindi varnmaala... Search this in google or youtube.. it is right way...
Hi Notime,I know im late
ATTENTION HINDI LEARNERS,
for anybody finding it hard how to join consonants and vowels, let me tell you, this teacher isn't good enough.
Joining vowels and consonants is pretty easy, its taught through a process called "varna vicheda"- वर्ण विच्छेद
Before that, the teacher here makes fundamental problem of representing consonants without "halant" ्
K, kh, g, gh, ch, chh, j ,jh
Are perfectly represented as
क्,ख्,ग्,घ्,च्,छ्,ज्,झ्
KA, kha, ga, gha, cha, chha, ja, jha
Are perfectly represented as
क,ख,ग,घ,च,छ,ज,झ
KAA, khaa, gaa, ghaa
Are perfectly written as
का,खा,गा,घा
Now, whats difference between kA and kAA, see the pronounciation
1.(A) karma is pronounced as "KArma"
1. (AA) Car is pronounced as "KAAr"
Now, once you get this difference between (k(क्), ka(क), kaa(का)), we can start.
Vowels have independent existence and are used in words both as "mantra"/diacritics and also independently(i'll tell u later) as
अ,आ,इ,ई,उ,ऊ
A, AA, I, EE/II, U, UU
eg ,
1.(A) karma is pronounced as "KArma"
1. (AA) Car is pronounced as "KAAr"
Did you see the difference
Now, lets start "varn vicched"
क्+अ=क ख्+अ=ख
क्+आ=का ग्+आ=गा
क्+इ=कि घ्+इ=घि
क+ई=की क्+ई=की
These diacritics will remain constant throughout all the consonants although there are some other variants in few consonants(like ri)
Now, lets do varna vicched of few words
Car/KAAR will be written as
क्+आ+र्+= कार्(many indian people many wrongly pronounce it as kaara, therefore they'll omitt halant)
Karma will be written as क्+अ+र्+म्+अ= कर्म( rm of karma is a consonant cluster and it's rules are different)
Lets say we want to write the word "Kite" ,its pronounced as "kaaiit"
So, it will be written as
क्+आ+ई+ट= काईट, notice how ii/ई vowel appears independently, its because it doesn't follow any consonant but it follows another vowel.
Varna vicched is different from sandhi vicched(word combination used in mainly sanskrit)
After doing vowels , one must learn how to combine two consonants as sanskrit/hindi are full of consonant clusters.
There are hell lot of work needed here because this combination is not consistent across all consonants like the vowel is
क्(k)+र्(r)+अ(a)= क्र(kra)
क्(k)+त्(t)+अ(a)=क्त(kta)
क्(k)+म्(m)+अ(a)=क्म(kma)
There are some very wierd consonant combinations as single phenome
र्द,क्ष,श्र,द्द etc.
Note---->TRY TO IMAGINE DEVNAGRI IN TERMS OF PHENOMES ENDING IN A VOWEL. EACH CHARACTER DENOTES A PHENOME.
you make it easy
How much language you know? I have seen you on Japanese series too. This amazing you know many languages
This is not a very good way to teach a script. You need to slow down and use multiple examples, insert pages of practice words, clarify the pronunciation of each sound by explaining the mouth positions and distinguishing clearly between different sounds, and the last bit used technical vocabulary from linguistics without even bothering to explain it to listeners.
Even I am here to see how they teach otherwise I’m a native Hindi speaker
2:42 no it's not an alphabet... that's not what alphabets are...
So how is hindi alphabate
I never learned Hindi because I could never get passed this script and all the apparently different sounds that seem exactly the same to me. tas and das..
LOL
How tas and das sounds same to you🤔
ATTENTION HINDI LEARNERS,
for anybody finding it hard how to join consonants and vowels, let me tell you, this teacher isn't good enough.
Joining vowels and consonants is pretty easy, its taught through a process called "varna vicheda"- वर्ण विच्छेद
Before that, the teacher here makes fundamental problem of representing consonants without "halant" ्
K, kh, g, gh, ch, chh, j ,jh
Are perfectly represented as
क्,ख्,ग्,घ्,च्,छ्,ज्,झ्
KA, kha, ga, gha, cha, chha, ja, jha
Are perfectly represented as
क,ख,ग,घ,च,छ,ज,झ
KAA, khaa, gaa, ghaa
Are perfectly written as
का,खा,गा,घा
Now, whats difference between kA and kAA, see the pronounciation
1.(A) karma is pronounced as "KArma"
1. (AA) Car is pronounced as "KAAr"
Now, once you get this difference between (k(क्), ka(क), kaa(का)), we can start.
Vowels have independent existence and are used in words both as "mantra"/diacritics and also independently(i'll tell u later) as
अ,आ,इ,ई,उ,ऊ
A, AA, I, EE/II, U, UU
eg ,
1.(A) karma is pronounced as "KArma"
1. (AA) Car is pronounced as "KAAr"
Did you see the difference
Now, lets start "varn vicched"
क्+अ=क ख्+अ=ख
क्+आ=का ग्+आ=गा
क्+इ=कि घ्+इ=घि
क+ई=की क्+ई=की
These diacritics will remain constant throughout all the consonants although there are some other variants in few consonants(like ri)
Now, lets do varna vicched of few words
Car/KAAR will be written as
क्+आ+र्+= कार्(many indian people many wrongly pronounce it as kaara, therefore they'll omitt halant)
Karma will be written as क्+अ+र्+म्+अ= कर्म( rm of karma is a consonant cluster and it's rules are different)
Lets say we want to write the word "Kite" ,its pronounced as "kaaiit"
So, it will be written as
क्+आ+ई+ट= काईट, notice how ii/ई vowel appears independently, its because it doesn't follow any consonant but it follows another vowel.
Varna vicched is different from sandhi vicched(word combination used in mainly sanskrit)
After doing vowels , one must learn how to combine two consonants as sanskrit/hindi are full of consonant clusters.
There are hell lot of work needed here because this combination is not consistent across all consonants like the vowel is
क्(k)+र्(r)+अ(a)= क्र(kra)
क्(k)+त्(t)+अ(a)=क्त(kta)
क्(k)+म्(m)+अ(a)=क्म(kma)
There are some very wierd consonant combinations as single phenome
र्द,क्ष,श्र,द्द etc.
Note---->TRY TO IMAGINE DEVNAGRI IN TERMS OF PHONEMES ENDING IN A VOWEL. EACH CHARACTER DENOTES A PHONEME.
If anybody ,you want to lean Hindi , I am an Indian & native Hindi speaker
Learn with me
This is the best
I speak Punjabi so now Hindi this should be easy because they look almost the same
Enj na sochin punjabi te hindi vakhri bhasha ne par Tusi sikh lo ge chetti hi.
Its just 20 % different else everything is same..as a naive hindi speaker even i can speak 60 to 70% punjabi no problem at all
Excellent intro lesson!
ATTENTION HINDI LEARNERS,
for anybody finding it hard how to join consonants and vowels, let me tell you, this teacher isn't good enough.
Joining vowels and consonants is pretty easy, its taught through a process called "varna vicheda"- वर्ण विच्छेद
Before that, the teacher here makes fundamental problem of representing consonants without "halant" ्
K, kh, g, gh, ch, chh, j ,jh
Are perfectly represented as
क्,ख्,ग्,घ्,च्,छ्,ज्,झ्
KA, kha, ga, gha, cha, chha, ja, jha
Are perfectly represented as
क,ख,ग,घ,च,छ,ज,झ
KAA, khaa, gaa, ghaa
Are perfectly written as
का,खा,गा,घा
Now, whats difference between kA and kAA, see the pronounciation
1.(A) karma is pronounced as "KArma"
1. (AA) Car is pronounced as "KAAr"
Now, once you get this difference between (k(क्), ka(क), kaa(का)), we can start.
Vowels have independent existence and are used in words both as "mantra"/diacritics and also independently(i'll tell u later) as
अ,आ,इ,ई,उ,ऊ
A, AA, I, EE/II, U, UU
eg ,
1.(A) karma is pronounced as "KArma"
1. (AA) Car is pronounced as "KAAr"
Did you see the difference
Now, lets start "varn vicched"
क्+अ=क ख्+अ=ख
क्+आ=का ग्+आ=गा
क्+इ=कि घ्+इ=घि
क+ई=की क्+ई=की
These diacritics will remain constant throughout all the consonants although there are some other variants in few consonants(like ri)
Now, lets do varna vicched of few words
Car/KAAR will be written as
क्+आ+र्+= कार्(many indian people many wrongly pronounce it as kaara, therefore they'll omitt halant)
Karma will be written as क्+अ+र्+म्+अ= कर्म( rm of karma is a consonant cluster and it's rules are different)
Lets say we want to write the word "Kite" ,its pronounced as "kaaiit"
So, it will be written as
क्+आ+ई+ट= काईट, notice how ii/ई vowel appears independently, its because it doesn't follow any consonant but it follows another vowel.
Varna vicched is different from sandhi vicched(word combination used in mainly sanskrit)
After doing vowels , one must learn how to combine two consonants as sanskrit/hindi are full of consonant clusters.
There are hell lot of work needed here because this combination is not consistent across all consonants like the vowel is
क्(k)+र्(r)+अ(a)= क्र(kra)
क्(k)+त्(t)+अ(a)=क्त(kta)
क्(k)+म्(m)+अ(a)=क्म(kma)
There are some very wierd consonant combinations as single phenome
र्द,क्ष,श्र,द्द etc.
Note---->TRY TO IMAGINE DEVNAGRI IN TERMS OF PHONEMES ENDING IN A VOWEL. EACH CHARACTER DENOTES A PHONEME.
Wow the writing is pretty hard, it's almost as hard as Japanese writing, I suddenly feel demotivated to learn it
Don't feel de motivated, this teacher is too bad
ATTENTION HINDI LEARNERS,
for anybody finding it hard how to join consonants and vowels, let me tell you, this teacher isn't good enough.
Joining vowels and consonants is pretty easy, its taught through a process called "varna vicheda"- वर्ण विच्छेद
Before that, the teacher here makes fundamental problem of representing consonants without "halant" ्
K, kh, g, gh, ch, chh, j ,jh
Are perfectly represented as
क्,ख्,ग्,घ्,च्,छ्,ज्,झ्
KA, kha, ga, gha, cha, chha, ja, jha
Are perfectly represented as
क,ख,ग,घ,च,छ,ज,झ
KAA, khaa, gaa, ghaa
Are perfectly written as
का,खा,गा,घा
Now, whats difference between kA and kAA, see the pronounciation
1.(A) karma is pronounced as "KArma"
1. (AA) Car is pronounced as "KAAr"
Now, once you get this difference between (k(क्), ka(क), kaa(का)), we can start.
Vowels have independent existence and are used in words both as "mantra"/diacritics and also independently(i'll tell u later) as
अ,आ,इ,ई,उ,ऊ
A, AA, I, EE/II, U, UU
eg ,
1.(A) karma is pronounced as "KArma"
1. (AA) Car is pronounced as "KAAr"
Did you see the difference
Now, lets start "varn vicched"
क्+अ=क ख्+अ=ख
क्+आ=का ग्+आ=गा
क्+इ=कि घ्+इ=घि
क+ई=की क्+ई=की
These diacritics will remain constant throughout all the consonants although there are some other variants in few consonants(like ri)
Now, lets do varna vicched of few words
Car/KAAR will be written as
क्+आ+र्+= कार्(many indian people many wrongly pronounce it as kaara, therefore they'll omitt halant)
Karma will be written as क्+अ+र्+म्+अ= कर्म( rm of karma is a consonant cluster and it's rules are different)
Lets say we want to write the word "Kite" ,its pronounced as "kaaiit"
So, it will be written as
क्+आ+ई+ट= काईट, notice how ii/ई vowel appears independently, its because it doesn't follow any consonant but it follows another vowel.
Varna vicched is different from sandhi vicched(word combination used in mainly sanskrit)
After doing vowels , one must learn how to combine two consonants as sanskrit/hindi are full of consonant clusters.
There are hell lot of work needed here because this combination is not consistent across all consonants like the vowel is
क्(k)+र्(r)+अ(a)= क्र(kra)
क्(k)+त्(t)+अ(a)=क्त(kta)
क्(k)+म्(m)+अ(a)=क्म(kma)
There are some very wierd consonant combinations as single phenome
र्द,क्ष,श्र,द्द etc.
Note---->TRY TO IMAGINE DEVNAGRI IN TERMS OF PHONEMES ENDING IN A VOWEL. EACH CHARACTER DENOTES A PHONEME.
What is the meaning of "man sukh" in english and what does mean "varhee" and how to write
Man - Heart.
Sukh- happiness.
@@akshaymasane3018 thanx akshay, n what does verhee or warhee means ." r" is read here as in "larki" ( means girl) .
@@saba1551 yes friend larki means girl, but it's pronounce as ladki!
Varhee/warhee this word is not exist!
@@saba1551 closest word for 'varhee' which i can think of is वड़ी which is a thing made of dals and spices...
@@saba1551 there is some closest word to the wareeh..
Var(वर) = groom(दूल्हा)
Wareeyata(वरीयता) = Preference
Kareeh(कढ़ी or करिह) = an Indian food name
I know hindi properly l😂😂but still watching
3:11 in gujarati we called it barakhadi ;)
I'm learning Hindi.
❤☀️💚I am originally Kurdish i learned hindi from movies♡ and can also speak urdu since it's similar to Kurdish and Persian which i can speak. I think writing urdu would be much easier for me since it's similar to Kurdish and Persian. But hindi is really hard😿
I wrote a lot of things on script but my comment got deleted. 😬
ATTENTION HINDI LEARNERS,
for anybody finding it hard how to join consonants and vowels, let me tell you, this teacher isn't good enough.
Joining vowels and consonants is pretty easy, its taught through a process called "varna vicheda"- वर्ण विच्छेद
Before that, the teacher here makes fundamental problem of representing consonants without "halant" ्
K, kh, g, gh, ch, chh, j ,jh
Are perfectly represented as
क्,ख्,ग्,घ्,च्,छ्,ज्,झ्
KA, kha, ga, gha, cha, chha, ja, jha
Are perfectly represented as
क,ख,ग,घ,च,छ,ज,झ
KAA, khaa, gaa, ghaa
Are perfectly written as
का,खा,गा,घा
Now, whats difference between kA and kAA, see the pronounciation
1.(A) karma is pronounced as "KArma"
1. (AA) Car is pronounced as "KAAr"
Now, once you get this difference between (k(क्), ka(क), kaa(का)), we can start.
Vowels have independent existence and are used in words both as "mantra"/diacritics and also independently(i'll tell u later) as
अ,आ,इ,ई,उ,ऊ
A, AA, I, EE/II, U, UU
eg ,
1.(A) karma is pronounced as "KArma"
1. (AA) Car is pronounced as "KAAr"
Did you see the difference
Now, lets start "varn vicched"
क्+अ=क ख्+अ=ख
क्+आ=का ग्+आ=गा
क्+इ=कि घ्+इ=घि
क+ई=की क्+ई=की
These diacritics will remain constant throughout all the consonants although there are some other variants in few consonants(like ri)
Now, lets do varna vicched of few words
Car/KAAR will be written as
क्+आ+र्+= कार्(many indian people many wrongly pronounce it as kaara, therefore they'll omitt halant)
Karma will be written as क्+अ+र्+म्+अ= कर्म( rm of karma is a consonant cluster and it's rules are different)
Lets say we want to write the word "Kite" ,its pronounced as "kaaiit"
So, it will be written as
क्+आ+ई+ट= काईट, notice how ii/ई vowel appears independently, its because it doesn't follow any consonant but it follows another vowel.
Varna vicched is different from sandhi vicched(word combination used in mainly sanskrit)
After doing vowels , one must learn how to combine two consonants as sanskrit/hindi are full of consonant clusters.
There are hell lot of work needed here because this combination is not consistent across all consonants like the vowel is
क्(k)+र्(r)+अ(a)= क्र(kra)
क्(k)+त्(t)+अ(a)=क्त(kta)
क्(k)+म्(m)+अ(a)=क्म(kma)
There are some very wierd consonant combinations as single phenome
र्द,क्ष,श्र,द्द etc.
Note---->TRY TO IMAGINE DEVNAGRI IN TERMS OF PHONEMES ENDING IN A VOWEL. EACH CHARACTER DENOTES A PHONEME.
3:44 r comes after uu not after au also there is 2 other vowels at the end am and. Aha
Please like
Spoken hindi is easy but hindi script is something else
No it is quite easy. You have to just learn 52 letters. Then you will be able to write and read hindi.
@@krishnapalsinghsisodiya9678 no dude... The matras.. you think it's easy cuz you already know it
@@okaytoo3878 you just gotta rote memorize it
Once u have the matras, consonants and the vowels tattooed in your head, its easy
@@okaytoo3878 It's easy for him bcoz this is his native language or native script.
@@okaytoo3878 this teacher is stupid
She ommitted the halant.
Also you can write it in Roman Alphabets , Aise bhi likh sakte ho aap log ye bhi ek indian ko chal jayega
Guys are Hindi and Nepali the same letters? As in do people in Nepal use Hindi letters?
yeah i would say that. they pretty much use the same letters.
it's not like we use hindi letters, since both hindi and nepali came from sanskrit. so u can say that nepali uses sanskrit letters bt less complicated then sanskrit.
Ahh I understand now, thank you!
@@aryanbhattarai6188 n still we indians dont speak pure hindi..
Yes both languages use devanagari script
@@parmodthakur9675
What is pure hindi?🙄
We just add Sanskrit words
Hindi never a pure
Sindhi baraj avdhi..... Indians use many word for same think
nice
As a native Hindi speaker, let me warn the learners to learn from this video with a pinch of salt. There are several flaws in the video, including in the pronunciation of various sounds, such as of ङ, ञ, ष, ऋ. Even many pronunciations made in this video by the HIndi teacher are so wrong. For example, she speaks "Anusvaar" as "Anusvar". Also, her enunciation can be better. She makes several distinct pronunciations sound the same.
Mujhe hindi ati hai..khaas taur par listening aur speaking..Lekin honestly hindi script bahut hi mushkil hai..Understanding the writing basically asambhav hai..Hindi ki writing system bahut jyada complicated hai
शिक जाओगे लिखना भी, बस कोसिस जारी रखो।🙂
Yes even I am an native. Devnagri script is really hard and confusing for everyone
@@ngokampoma3267 actually, its
सीख = seekh and
कोशिश = koshish
S=स
Sh=श
इ=i
ई=ee/ii
ATTENTION HINDI LEARNERS,
for anybody finding it hard how to join consonants and vowels, let me tell you, this teacher isn't good enough.
Joining vowels and consonants is pretty easy, its taught through a process called "varna vicheda"- वर्ण विच्छेद
Before that, the teacher here makes fundamental problem of representing consonants without "halant" ्
K, kh, g, gh, ch, chh, j ,jh
Are perfectly represented as
क्,ख्,ग्,घ्,च्,छ्,ज्,झ्
KA, kha, ga, gha, cha, chha, ja, jha
Are perfectly represented as
क,ख,ग,घ,च,छ,ज,झ
KAA, khaa, gaa, ghaa
Are perfectly written as
का,खा,गा,घा
Now, whats difference between kA and kAA, see the pronounciation
1.(A) karma is pronounced as "KArma"
1. (AA) Car is pronounced as "KAAr"
Now, once you get this difference between (k(क्), ka(क), kaa(का)), we can start.
Vowels have independent existence and are used in words both as "mantra"/diacritics and also independently(i'll tell u later) as
अ,आ,इ,ई,उ,ऊ
A, AA, I, EE/II, U, UU
eg ,
1.(A) karma is pronounced as "KArma"
1. (AA) Car is pronounced as "KAAr"
Did you see the difference
Now, lets start "varn vicched"
क्+अ=क ख्+अ=ख
क्+आ=का ग्+आ=गा
क्+इ=कि घ्+इ=घि
क+ई=की क्+ई=की
These diacritics will remain constant throughout all the consonants although there are some other variants in few consonants(like ri)
Now, lets do varna vicched of few words
Car/KAAR will be written as
क्+आ+र्+= कार्(many indian people many wrongly pronounce it as kaara, therefore they'll omitt halant)
Karma will be written as क्+अ+र्+म्+अ= कर्म( rm of karma is a consonant cluster and it's rules are different)
Lets say we want to write the word "Kite" ,its pronounced as "kaaiit"
So, it will be written as
क्+आ+ई+ट= काईट, notice how ii/ई vowel appears independently, its because it doesn't follow any consonant but it follows another vowel.
Varna vicched is different from sandhi vicched(word combination used in mainly sanskrit)
After doing vowels , one must learn how to combine two consonants as sanskrit/hindi are full of consonant clusters.
There are hell lot of work needed here because this combination is not consistent across all consonants like the vowel is
क्(k)+र्(r)+अ(a)= क्र(kra)
क्(k)+त्(t)+अ(a)=क्त(kta)
क्(k)+म्(m)+अ(a)=क्म(kma)
There are some very wierd consonant combinations as single phenome
र्द,क्ष,श्र,द्द etc.
Note---->TRY TO IMAGINE DEVNAGRI IN TERMS OF PHONEMES ENDING IN A VOWEL. EACH CHARACTER DENOTES A PHONEME.
@@Aman-qr6wi I was using google translator lol..
Who thinks 2020 Saks
👇👍👍👍
Who said that it's an easy language
Okay if you have learnt hindi
But sanskrit will make you mad
The Hindi writing system is not an alphabet
@@ashwanisamyak It's actually an abugida. The only modern alphabets are the Latin, Greek, and Cyrillic.
@@ashwanisamyak it's not an alphabet
The correct term is abugida
Wika sempai is learning Hindi 😌😌😌😌🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰
Me an Indian already knowing hindi but still watching instead of studying: *interesting*
Same here. Lol. I'm a Nepali though! Its the same, devanagari script.
@@kathmandunepal9547 but atleast the vocabulary is different lol
I don't get how they combine the vowel and consonants
You need to learn first hindi full alphabets and meanings of verbs like run = Dodana (दौड़ना) .
Slowly slowly you start understand how the hindi word becoming.
If a word star from vowel it written like as it as .example- Come = Aana(आना). You see first letter 'aa' it written as you see in hindi alphabates but after 'n' one 'aa' but this time it is not written as in alphabate now it join to consonant as a sign of vertical line. I hope you understand .. keep writing.. keep understanding...😊
@@anshurang thanks
@@anshurang
Wouldn't the romanization be daudna? Or are you adding 'o' teach them?
She omitted the halant. She didn't teach it using halant
very noice
for Forigeners its best way to lean
Love from pakistan
Writing in hindi is so difficult bro 🙂
I'm sure that you make Khmer Language 101 will be a lot easier to learn [hahahaha]
Our language stands top is the largest number of letters with 74 letter but easy to learn and read
I don't feel this video will be easy to understand for many people. You have to simplify it a lot.
This is for reading not for writing
you pretty much summed up devanagari
@@theidioticbgilson1466 not really. Writing takes a sequence of strokes not just recognizing a shape.
@@margedtrumper9325 i was joking about how devanagari takes ages to write compared to other scripts
@@theidioticbgilson1466 actually, this teacher is stupid.
She committed halant
ATTENTION HINDI LEARNERS,
for anybody finding it hard how to join consonants and vowels, let me tell you, this teacher isn't good enough.
Joining vowels and consonants is pretty easy, its taught through a process called "varna vicheda"- वर्ण विच्छेद
Before that, the teacher here makes fundamental problem of representing consonants without "halant" ्
K, kh, g, gh, ch, chh, j ,jh
Are perfectly represented as
क्,ख्,ग्,घ्,च्,छ्,ज्,झ्
KA, kha, ga, gha, cha, chha, ja, jha
Are perfectly represented as
क,ख,ग,घ,च,छ,ज,झ
KAA, khaa, gaa, ghaa
Are perfectly written as
का,खा,गा,घा
Now, whats difference between kA and kAA, see the pronounciation
1.(A) karma is pronounced as "KArma"
1. (AA) Car is pronounced as "KAAr"
Now, once you get this difference between (k(क्), ka(क), kaa(का)), we can start.
Vowels have independent existence and are used in words both as "mantra"/diacritics and also independently(i'll tell u later) as
अ,आ,इ,ई,उ,ऊ
A, AA, I, EE/II, U, UU
eg ,
1.(A) karma is pronounced as "KArma"
1. (AA) Car is pronounced as "KAAr"
Did you see the difference
Now, lets start "varn vicched"
क्+अ=क ख्+अ=ख
क्+आ=का ग्+आ=गा
क्+इ=कि घ्+इ=घि
क+ई=की क्+ई=की
These diacritics will remain constant throughout all the consonants although there are some other variants in few consonants(like ri)
Now, lets do varna vicched of few words
Car/KAAR will be written as
क्+आ+र्+= कार्(many indian people many wrongly pronounce it as kaara, therefore they'll omitt halant)
Karma will be written as क्+अ+र्+म्+अ= कर्म( rm of karma is a consonant cluster and it's rules are different)
Lets say we want to write the word "Kite" ,its pronounced as "kaaiit"
So, it will be written as
क्+आ+ई+ट्= काईट्, notice how ii/ई vowel appears independently, its because it doesn't follow any consonant but it follows another vowel.
Varna vicched is different from sandhi vicched(word combination used in mainly sanskrit)
After doing vowels , one must learn how to combine two consonants as sanskrit/hindi are full of consonant clusters.
There are hell lot of work needed here because this combination is not consistent across all consonants like the vowel is
क्(k)+र्(r)+अ(a)= क्र(kra)
क्(k)+त्(t)+अ(a)=क्त(kta)
क्(k)+म्(m)+अ(a)=क्म(kma)
There are some very wierd consonant combinations as single syllable
र्द,क्ष,श्र,द्द etc.
Note---->TRY TO IMAGINE DEVNAGRI IN TERMS OF SYLLABLES ENDING IN A VOWEL. EACH CHARACTER DENOTES A SYLLABLE.
Thank you. Very helpful
Question: in these videos the word for expensive is written as mehenga & in Hindi महंगा I would have read this as “mahangAA” where a would be like the sound of a in “bad” and A would be like the sound of u in “bud”.
Now if e is the sound of e in “bed” how would you write the following sounds:
1- mehenga
2- mehanga
3- mahanga
4- mAhAngA
Thanks
@@SiyavoshM Hi Simo,
महंगा should ideally be pronounced as mahangaa where 'a' would always be pronounced like 'u' in bud.
Its descended from sanskrit महार्घ /'mahaargha' so there's no need of pronouncing it as mehengAA.
However, Its unfortunate that many in the urban areas have accent that distorts the original language and also its the urban population which uses a lot of code switching by incorporating english words so its not surprising that some may pronounce it as mehengaa.
If e= ए, A=अ, a= ऐ
1. mehenga = मेहेंगै
2. mehanga= मेहैगै
3.mahanga = मैहैंगै
4.mAhAngA= महंग
However, all of the above are wrong words. You should stick to mahangaa where a is like u in bud.
Thank you
@@Aman-qr6wi Thank you so much for your reply.
and yes, i do understand that all the 4 variations are wrong pronounciation for the hindi word that means expensive. I am trying to see how one can write different vowels in hindi.
1- it seems that the accents on top of the letters change. ैे
2- i thought two a's just lengthen the "a" sound in bad, as in the word baad in hindi meaning "later or after"(?)
3- You mentioned that the initial vowels in mahangã should be a short ah sound as u in the english word "bud"
4- so perhaps muhungã ? where "ã" is a long "ah" sound as in the english words arm=ãrm and far=fãr phonetically
5- if e=ए the transliteration of "red" would be रएत ? but wouldn't that make it "raid" ?
@@SiyavoshM using english letters for pronounciation may create problems since english itself is not phonetic. I wrote my comment assuming the premise that
A= अ as 'u' in bud.
a= ऐ as 'a' in bad.
e= ए as 'e' in bed.
I think this creates confusion so i'll use another set of letters for pronunciation
A/a= अ
AA/aa= आ as 'a' in Bar, Car, Far
Ah = अ:
AAh= आ:
E =ए as e in bed, red, fed
Ai =ऐ as 'a' in bad, sad, cat, sat
'= ऽ (avagraha)
1. Its not accents, its just correct vowels.
For example, 'bad'/(not good) would be बैड्
'bed'/(sleeping bed) would be बेड्
2.Yes, two AA means longer a as in car/(cAAr), far/(fAAr) etc.
3. Yes, but not 'ah' , rather just 'A', here in mAhAngAA , the h sound is separate consonant, but we do have Ah and AAh as distinct vowels in hindi in different words especially in sanskrit eg 'baalakAh' बालक:
means singular nominative masculine boy, 'baalakAAh' बालका: means plural nominative masculine boy.
There are 3x8 case system in sanskrit which makes slight changes in each words.
4.yes, according to old premise, you're correct.
AA in fAAr is not long 'ah' sound but long 'a' sound.
Long 'Ah' sound is AAh/आ: , I don't think that sound in english language but surely used in sanskrit and sometimes in hindi.
5. If 'e' is ए, then red would be रेड् = र्+ए+ड्
and raid would be re'd as रेऽड्= र्+ए+ऽ+ड्
ऽ(avagraha)is heavily used in sanskrit, it corresponds to " ' " stop kind of. Its rarely used in hindi, almost never.
Thank you,
If any confusion, please ask.
@@Aman-qr6wi आप बहुत अच्छा समझाते हैं। बहुत - बहुत धन्यवाद।
How do I unlearn hindi?
Watch chinese movie
Romanization to Hindi really is confusing.
Is small or capital letters you impart?
But in hindi we don't have small and capital letters
no capital or small letters. there's no need
consonants 3:11
😊
Can someone explain to me, why the vowel letter changed after it attached with the consonants? I'm lost 😭
The vowels become matras here. Matras are like addendums. You stick a matra on a consonant to get the desired sound of the consonant+vowel. You use the vowels in their original form only when they need to represent themselves.
@@95shivanand can u give me any youtube link that teach this process.. I'm interested and excited but I can't find a youtube teacher that explain this process😢.
Thanks by the way..
@@yatzuriki95 well m not an indian. i m a nepali bt since nepali and hindi share the same letters they are similar. its not really a process, u just transform the vowels into matras when u write. at least it was how i was taught when i was little. for example ki(कि) = ka(क)+e(इ) see how adding the e sound adds the matra. but let's see what happens when we write without changing the vowels letter as matras, that is we just write कइ , then it is no longer pronounced as ki but as ka-e(which makes no sense) . i hope this helps
@@aryanbhattarai6188 thanks aaryan.. i can understand a bit.. now, i need plenty time to read more hindi words so that i get to used the changig matras..
Thanks again!
@@aryanbhattarai6188 Kai in itself is a different word and has sense viz" kai din se mujhe koi sapanon me, aawaz deta tha.."
Isn't the word "phir" pronounced as "fear"?
Nope. It's pronounced simply as "fir"
Hello Aichu,
Thanks for your question. The pronunciation of "phir" is not exactly like "fear", but it is definitely close to it. While "fear" is pronounced like "fiiar", "phir" is pronounced exactly like "phir".
I hope that helps!
Roohi
Team HindiPod101.com
@@hindipod101 hello rooni mam....are you an Indian
@@अजिङ्क्यगोखले Technically, it should be pronounced as phir not fir. It lacks nuqta hence, the pronunciation is ph instead of f.
@@justrandomhuman3781 what's nuqta
The punctuation marks are used by english when they came to india . Only some were taken by english
Like ? ; " * @ # ()=
I saw RRR and now Im here.
That's a Telugu film
Thank goodness the ancient romans invented the latin alphabet. 😊
Hindi is difficult
Bangla is more flourish than Hindi, it has 11 vowles and 39 consonants