The Hindi (Devanagari) alphabet
Hindi is written in देवनागरी (devanaagari), a script shared with Sanskrit, Marathi and Nepali. This guide explains how it works — and why it is one of the most logical alphabets a beginner can learn.
If you are coming from English, the first surprise is that Devanagari is not an alphabet in the strict sense at all — it is an abugida. In an alphabet like the Latin one, vowels and consonants are equal, separate letters. In an abugida, every consonant already carries a built-in vowel, and you modify or remove that vowel with small marks. Once this single idea clicks, the rest of the script falls into place quickly.
Two facts will reassure you straight away. First, Devanagari is written left to right, exactly like English, with letters hanging from a horizontal top line called the shirorekha (शिरोरेखा). Second, there are no capital letters — each letter has one fixed shape whether it starts a sentence or sits in the middle of a word. There is nothing like the upper-and-lower-case juggling of English.
The inherent vowel: why क is "ka"
The single most important concept is the inherent vowel. Every base consonant is pronounced with a built-in short "a" (the sound in "about"). So the letter क is not "k" but "ka"; म is "ma"; न is "na". To write a different vowel after the consonant, you attach a vowel sign called a matra. To strip the vowel away entirely — leaving a bare consonant — you add a small stroke underneath called a halant or virama (क् = a bare "k").
Vowels (स्वर) — the 11 independent sounds
Hindi counts 11 vowels, called स्वर (svar). Each vowel has two forms: an independent letter, used when the vowel starts a word or stands alone, and a matra, the dependent sign attached to a consonant. Here is a small taster — the full set, with every matra and example, is on the Hindi vowels page.
| Letter | Romanization | Sound like |
|---|---|---|
| अ | a | the "a" in about |
| आ | aa | the "a" in father |
| इ | i | the "i" in sit |
| ई | ee | the "ee" in feet |
| उ | u | the "u" in put |
| ए | e | the "e" in they |
Two extra signs travel with the vowels: अं (anusvara, a nasal hum) and अः (visarga, a soft breath). The full account — including the matras and how they perch above, below, before or after a consonant — lives on the vowels page.
Consonants (व्यंजन) — about 33 letters
The consonants, व्यंजन (vyanjan), number around 33 and are arranged with beautiful logic: by where in the mouth the sound is made, moving from the throat forward to the lips. Within each group you also find pairs that English does not distinguish — aspirated versus unaspirated (a puff of air or not), and retroflex versus dental (tongue curled back versus touching the teeth).
| Letter | Romanization | Note |
|---|---|---|
| क | ka | velar, unaspirated |
| ख | kha | velar, aspirated (puff of air) |
| च | cha | palatal |
| ट | ṭa | retroflex t (tongue curled back) |
| त | ta | dental t (tongue on teeth) |
| प | pa | labial (lips) |
The complete chart, ordered by place of articulation with romanization for every letter, is on the Hindi consonants page — including the all-important contrast between क and ख, and between retroflex ट and dental त.
Matras and conjuncts
Putting it together involves two more pieces. Matras are the vowel signs we met above: attach the "ee" matra ी to क and you get की (kee). Conjuncts (संयुक्त अक्षर, sanyukt akshar) are what happens when two consonants meet with no vowel between them — they fuse into a single ligature. For example क + ष become क्ष (ksha), the cluster in शिक्षा (shiksha, "education"). Conjuncts look intimidating at first but follow predictable patterns.
Why Devanagari is phonetic
Here is the payoff for all that structure: Devanagari is highly phonetic. It was organised by ancient grammarians who mapped each distinct sound to one symbol and each symbol to one sound. Unlike English, where "ough" can be read five different ways, Hindi words are nearly always spelled the way they sound. This means that once you have learned the vowels, consonants and matras, you can read almost any Hindi word aloud correctly — even before you know what it means. That is a remarkable head start, and it is exactly why mastering the script first pays off so handsomely. From here, build a foundation with Hindi for beginners, or practise reading real words like numbers and greetings.
Translate your own text
Want to see how a familiar English word is spelled out in Devanagari letter by letter? Type it below and watch the script appear.