Added: 2 years ago
From: itwasnoteasy
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  • That was hard!

  • WOW HINDI IS KINDA HARD BUT I GOT THE HANG OF IT

  • i like your style of teaching. i am from kerala ,name is geetha, i learnt hindi in degree. but speaking very difficilut for me. i am in Dubai for 30 years.working as a subject teacher. but i am scared of speak hindi still. friends making me shame. can you please help me to give some more tips to speak hindi very easily. my mail id. geetha501@yahoo.com i will wait for your reply. geetha

  • In the conversation of the two guys I think there is something wrong.

    It should be "No, I don't have!" instead of "Yes, I don't have"

    For "I want" I've been told it's "mujhe chaiye" instead of "main chahta hun"

    So, what is right then?

    Thank You so much!

  • if but is pur what does magaar mean?

  • @alexxx1836

    kintu, parantu, pur, magar is all same. all are used just like but in english.

  • Hello,

    First of all thank you for your wonderfull work. It is clear; light and easy.

    would you help me with the words of my Kabir songs. I would need to hear clearly the words and to have the phonetics.

    I would of course pay you as a teacher. We can do that through skype and I can mail you text of the song or possibily send them by skaning them.

    Thank you to answer me on my email tapasia7@hotmail.com

    My native langage is french.

    Oum Hani

  • @itwasnoteasy hi i have a question if aap is you then what is tum ? because i always thought it was you ?

    your lessons are great btw i really enjoy them A.

  • @rozemanderijntje tum means like you as a friend, and aap, you as a more formal way..this happens in other languages to, but not so much in english

  • @alexxx1836 thank you so much ! i know what you mean we also have it in my language

  • thankes sir

  • you said but means Pur, but at the end you said Par ???

  • is it Maim cahata hum or Main chahta hun?

  • @Gutsyndicate

    it is main chahta hun

  • @hammad4239

    yes, Hammad I totally agree with you. Its not pure hindi. Its the colloquial language spoken in most parts of India. It is definitely Hindi+Urdu in India. I am putting up these lessons just so that a stranger can speak/converse like a native when they visit to countries where Hindi/Urdu is commonly spoken. I personally like Urdu a lot but here I am just teaching something which is commonly spoken in most parts of India.

  • sorry link doesn't seems to be working this way ....

    write in youtube search bar below text and play the first video come as a result

    watch?v=8y-qd70Jy7­4 (for hindi link)

    watch?v=EWMX5CzIhT­E (for Urdu Link)

  • I have to questions!

    How exacally is the Hindi sentece structure set up?

    And how do you know when to replace the word "Aap" for "Aapke"?

  • hey you are amazing teacher,i will make you my personal teacher,i can listen your lessons all the day,you have perfect voice and lessons are much more easier.i know it's not easy but with you when you talk everything is so simple and understandable.i love hindi language and i want to learn even a little bit. thank you for your videos you are perfect and explaine everything so good.

  • i am just wondering about the changes, from feminine to masculine, since in this you are only using the masculine, for jaana and not jaanti hai.. fortunately that someone has pointed this out for me as there is two words for same things

  • tere liye!!!

  • Comment removed

  • i have a question , ok i know hindu has alot of languages so what language does salman khan speaks?? i see alot of salman and pryanka movies and i would like to know what they r saying with out putting the sub titles so what is the language that they both speak ..thanxs

  • @26HBIC

    Salman khan priyanka etc. These are bollywood actors/actresses and the language spoken in bollywood movies is Hindi. :-)

    Hope that answers your question :-)

  • Very nice lesson :)

  • sometimes you are using jaana and jaanta for the word "know"

    whats the difference?can you explain?

  • @yasodha340

    both are different words yasodha, jaana means "to go"

    jaanta is related to "know"

    main jaana chahata hun - i want to go.

    main jaanta hun - i know.

  • @yasodha340

    I think you wanted to ask difference between jaanana and jaanata.

    so they are closely related.

    main jaanata hun - i know

    main jaanana chahta hun - i want to know.

    so when you want to know you use jaanana and not jaanata

  • @itwasnoteasy but the pronunciation of jaana and jaanana seems the same. is it?

  • @yasodha340

    the more commonly used ways of translating these two are

    janna - to go

    janta - to know

    and chahna - to want

    the "na" is dropped and replaced with "ta" for men and "ti" for women to make the present tense. Hopes this explains a bit more thoroughly.

  • i lov that music.

    WEERSARA......

  • that's awesome!!! whatever way you learnt to teach hindi to beginners.. this works! better than staring at a book any day!!! look forward to learning more. thanks teach!

    the difference between hun and hain, i dont understand yet, but im suyre with patience, ill get it

  • Hej great videos I learn a lot. :)

  • Great videos.

    Is the letter n at the end of a word like hun or hain silent?  Does the i and the n in hain get pronounced?

  • @eneckchalk

    yes sir, they are silent like the way it sounds in the audio of the video.

    its always good to find interests which are more towards achieving perfection.

    keep it up :)

  • The song in the background from veer zaara makes me cry .. :(

    But you're doing great! I'm going to try and follow your lessons ..

  • This lesson was fantastic. Very useful conversation training !This is exactly what I was looking for. Please do post similar lessons in future. Aap bahut achche hain !! :) Thank you - Bahut dhayawad

  • thanks a lot for your lessons, getting ready to go back to India and would love to be able to speak with people who dont understand english...love your videos..hugs

  • Tere liye, ham hain jiye, honton ko siye ..<3

  • Thanks a lot, the perfect way to explain the things.

  • Hi! I have a question please for "I want" I don't understand when you use "Muje chahiye" and when you use "Me chahta hun". They both mean "I want" don't they? Whats the difference?

  • @sharkcrow4

    Thanks for raising such a nice question.

    When you say mujhe chahiye you mean I want something in respect to some object which want to posses. say for ex: I want car = mujhe car chahiye. but if you want to say something. I want all of you to vote for me. so you would say. "main chahta hun aap sab mere liye vote karein" but even if you say "main car chahta hun" that's also okay.. probably once you get into a conversation and hear different things you get better idea of what to use.

  • Okay. I get it now. Thanks! ^_^

  • thanks so much for this!

  • OMG thnx now i understand a bit of what my boyfriend is saying to me :D I LOVE YOU for teaching me hindu <3

  • I test myself ! Its hard,but not impossible ! lol :)) .. My mother language is romanian,but i will try more and more Hitesh ji ! Thank you again ! Have a good day you too !

  • I love that soft, beautiful music you are playing in the background. It is SO relaxing. Would you tell me the name of the song?

  • hey i'm like wanting to learn hindi soo much...tis thing really help me a lot thank you..

  • so i'll learn2 at the same time;)?bueno,es cierto,mejor destacar diferencias entre idiomas,sin embargo esto es cosa de linguistas.Gente habla para comunicarse,expresarse y cada lenguaje vivo cambia y mezcla palabras.Todas las clasificaciones linguisticas no sirven si intentan diferenciar idiomas que naturalmente se encuentran en una tierra. por eso mismo.. the point is to use one which express what we want... that's like in poetry hehe. to tyle narazie,czesc;)

  • Urdu: main chahta hun

    Hindi: hamri iksha hay

    Urdu is a language that was mainly out of Arabic, Persian, Turkish and some local indian subcontinental words. It was created for better communication between the Mughal army & official work. Labeling it Hindi is wrong.

  • Sir, with all due respect. I understand In India both hindi and urdu words are spoken commonly. I myself love Urdu. In this series of lessons I am trying to teach colloquial hindi which is spoken and understood by common people and I understand it may contain Urdu words But, if we dwelve into examples then the argument may go on and on. This is just for fun please don't make it a subject of controversy. I sincerely don't mean any offense.

  • @itwasnoteasy ..hi sir...i am findin ur tutorials so easy to learn...thnaks for posting...i hve got a small doubt...wats the diff betwn ho and hai? where/how to use ho and hai? plz explain...

  • Lessons are quite accurate to colloquial Hindi. I've lived in India for a year-trying to learn to speak with my fiance in his own language. You'll have real trouble trying to speak "shuddh" Hindi to most Indians.

    Thank you for the great lessons..keep it up please. My only complaint is all examples given in masculine form. Shukriya bhai sahab-ji.

  • Just because Indian films used Urdu language for marketing purposes, it does not mean you label Urdu as Hindi, you are using hindi script with Urdu.

    Nice Urdu teaching video, keep it up but do not label it Hindi please.

  • very veryyy useful videos... thank u very much!..

    i have bought many books for learning spoken hindi... but the way u tech is the one really what i

    wanted... i am so happy that i found this!

  • Yes iskaa and uskaa are very common words. uskaa is used in statements like. This pens belongs to him. (ye pen uskaa hai)

    What's the color of this? (iskaa color kya hai?) similarly you'd also here (iskee , uskee) used in case of feminine words.

  • thanks for your reply gee.. bahut achcha explanation....

  • shukriya! when Some hindiwala talks.. They r using.. like usska,isska, words and all. what does it mean.. and I hope tht u will be using these kind of words in your comming lesson..

  • Shukriya! Aapke videos bahut aacha hai... idk if i said that correctly :)... Im still trying to get the hang of it cause its written backwards... so that confuses me... but your lessons are really good!

  • It would be aapke videos bahut achche hain :) (Lesson 7) Yes yes that's true if you'll just keep using it you'll get a hang of all those small things. Hard work is always the key to success :-)

  • This is good I am studying Hindi and this is a great adjunct to my lessions

  • hey man this lesson has helped me out alot! does jai ho mean u r my destiny?

  • No it means "May victory be on you"

  • i love these videos! They help me learn hindi so much better! thank you

  • Wow!! you are following it so closely. That's very nice. Both are correct in case of what do you want. :-). Because we are referring other person as "Aap" so ho and hain both are correct. This can also be used if you are asking this to a group of people.

  • What do you want? is - Aap kya chaahate ho? or Aap kya chaahate hain?

  • shukriya! your lessons have helped me learn so mcuh! :)

  • a big thank you: THANK YOU

  • sure i'd take care of this from next point, nice observation very BIG point i must say dumb me. aah how did i forget that.

  • thanks for uploading this new video

    hope to see another one soon.

    GOOD JOB!!! bahut shukriya.

  • bahut shukriya...i love ur lessons.. one suggestion..plz indicate when it would change to feminine if a girl was speaking... eg. main jaanthi hoon (girl) and jaantha hoon(man) and when its ok to use male for both cases!!!! :))

  • Dhanyavaad!!!! Plz keep posting, I am using every avenue for learning Hindi that is available....I like that I can hear pronunciation from you and I am learning devanagari script so I like that it is included!

  • Please, please keep posting lessons....these are great!

    Bahut bahut dhanyavaaad!

  • OMG, Thank u i'm soooooooooooooo happy u made another video Much <3 to U!!!

  • thank you soooooooooo much :)

  • thank you so much 4 teaching us , it helps a lot :)

  • thank you :-)

  • I almost fell off my chair. I can't believe it, you have a lesson.

  • :-) I read this comment and fell of my chair too :-).

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