EngToHindi

Hindi grammar basics

Five ideas unlock most of everyday Hindi: the verb goes last, nouns have gender, "prepositions" come after the noun, the verb होना ("to be") is everywhere, and there are three words for "you". Here is each, with clear examples.

Hindi grammar looks daunting from a distance, but the structure is remarkably regular once you see the pattern. The biggest adjustment for English speakers is simply where things go in a sentence — and once that flips into place, the rest follows. This page assumes you can read a little Devanagari; if not, start with the alphabet and vowels first. Every example below pairs Hindi with romanization and a word-for-word English gloss.

1. Word order: Subject–Object–Verb

English is SVO — Subject, Verb, Object: "I eat an apple." Hindi is SOV — the verb lands at the end. So the same sentence is literally "I apple eat am":

The verb comes last — read the gloss left to right.
HindiRomanLiteral / meaning
मैं सेब खाता हूँ।main seb khaata hoon"I apple eat am" → I eat an apple
वह हिंदी सीखती है।vah hindi seekhti hai"She Hindi learns is" → She learns Hindi
हम चाय पीते हैं।ham chaai peete hain"We tea drink are" → We drink tea

2. Gender: masculine and feminine

Every Hindi noun has a gender — masculine or feminine — and this is true even of lifeless objects. A useful rule of thumb: many masculine nouns end in (-aa) and many feminine ones end in (-ee), though there are plenty of exceptions to memorise. What matters is agreement: adjectives and verbs change their endings to match the noun's gender.

The adjective अच्छा ("good") changes to agree with the noun.
HindiRomanEnglish
अच्छा लड़काachchha ladkaa good boy (masculine)
अच्छी लड़कीachchhi ladkia good girl (feminine)
बड़ा घरbada ghara big house (masculine)
बड़ी किताबbadi kitaaba big book (feminine)

Notice अच्छाअच्छी and बड़ाबड़ी. The verb agrees too: a man says मैं जाता हूँ (main jaata hoon) and a woman says मैं जाती हूँ (main jaati hoon) for the same "I go".

3. Postpositions, not prepositions

English puts little words like "in", "on" and "from" before the noun. Hindi puts them after — they are postpositions. "In the house" is घर में (ghar mein), literally "house in".

The most common Hindi postpositions.
PostpositionRomanMeaning / example
मेंmeinin → घर में (in the house)
परparon / at → मेज़ पर (on the table)
सेsefrom / with / by → दिल्ली से (from Delhi)
कोkoto / marks the object → मुझको (to me)
नेnemarks the subject of a past transitive verb

The last two need a word of warning. को (ko) marks a definite or animate object — "I saw the boy" uses it. ने (ne) is the famous "ergative" marker, attached to the subject when the verb is past and transitive: मैंने खाया (maine khaaya, "I ate"). Both are advanced points — for now, just know that these little words follow the noun.

4. The verb होना ("to be")

The single most useful verb is होना (hona, "to be"). Its present-tense forms change with the subject:

Present tense of होना — pair each with its pronoun.
PronounFormRomanEnglish
मैं mainहूँhoonI am
तू tuहैhaiyou (intimate) are
तुम tumहोhoyou (informal) are
यह / वह yah / vahहैhaithis/that, he/she/it is
आप aapहैंhainyou (formal) are
हम / वे ham / veहैंhainwe / they are

So मैं ठीक हूँ (main theek hoon) is "I am fine", and आप कैसे हैं? (aap kaise hain?) is "How are you?" — a phrase you will use daily. See it in context on the greetings page.

5. Pronouns and the three "you"s

The core pronouns are मैं (main, I), हम (ham, we), यह (yah, this / he-she nearby), वह (vah, that / he-she at a distance), and the plural वे (ve, they). The point that needs care is "you", which comes in three registers:

Choosing the right "you" is a social decision.
WordRomanWhen to use it
आपaapFormal, respectful — elders, strangers, anyone you would address politely
तुमtumInformal — friends, peers, younger people you know
तूtuIntimate — very close friends, children, or in prayer; can sound rude if misused
Safe default. When in doubt, use आप (aap). It is never rude to be too polite, but using तू with the wrong person can give offence. As you get comfortable with someone, they will often invite the shift to तुम.

Putting it together

With these five pieces you can already form simple, correct sentences: subject first, object next, verb last; adjectives agreeing in gender; postpositions trailing their nouns; होना doing the work of "is/am/are"; and the right level of "you". Build your vocabulary alongside the grammar with the numbers page and a structured start in Hindi for beginners.

Translate your own text

Write a short English sentence below and see how Hindi reorders it, with the verb dropping to the end.

Frequently asked

What is the word order in Hindi?
Hindi is Subject–Object–Verb (SOV), so the verb comes last. "I eat an apple" becomes मैं सेब खाता हूँ, literally "I apple eat am". English by contrast is Subject–Verb–Object.
Do Hindi nouns have gender?
Yes — every noun is masculine or feminine, even objects. लड़का (boy) is masculine, लड़की (girl) feminine, and adjectives and verbs change endings to agree: अच्छा लड़का but अच्छी लड़की.
What are postpositions in Hindi?
They are like English prepositions but come after the noun. Common ones are ने, को, में (in), से (from/with) and पर (on). "In the house" is घर में — "house in".
How does the verb "to be" work in Hindi?
होना (to be) has present forms by person: हूँ (I am), है (he/she/it is), हैं (they/you formal are) and हो (you informal are). मैं ठीक हूँ means "I am fine".
What are the Hindi words for "you"?
Three levels: आप is formal and respectful, तुम is informal for friends and peers, and तू is intimate or for very close people and children. When unsure, default to आप.