Please, thank you & polite words in Hindi
How Hindi politeness actually works — कृपया, धन्यवाद, माफ़ कीजिए, the respect particle जी, and the all-important choice between आप and तुम.
Politeness in Hindi works a little differently from English, and understanding the system is worth more than memorising a dozen phrases. Much of the courtesy is carried not by separate words like "please" but by verb endings and the pronoun you choose. Get those right and you'll sound respectful even with a small vocabulary; get them wrong and even the right words can land oddly.
That said, there are real courtesy words to know — कृपया (please), धन्यवाद and शुक्रिया (thanks), and माफ़ कीजिए (sorry / excuse me). Layered on top is the small but mighty particle जी (ji), which sprinkles respect almost anywhere. This page explains each one and, just as importantly, when to reach for it.
Please & the polite request
The literal word for "please" is कृपया, but spoken Hindi often signals it through the -इए verb ending instead — बैठिए already means "please sit."
| English | Hindi | Pronunciation |
|---|---|---|
| Please | कृपया | kripya |
| Please sit | बैठिए | baithiye |
| Please come | आइए | aaiye |
| Please listen | सुनिए | suniye |
| Please help me | कृपया मेरी मदद कीजिए | kripya meri madad keejiye |
Thank you — धन्यवाद & शुक्रिया
Two common words, two flavours: धन्यवाद is formal and Sanskritic, शुक्रिया warmer and casual (from Urdu). Both are widely understood.
| English | Hindi | Pronunciation |
|---|---|---|
| Thank you (formal) | धन्यवाद | dhanyavaad |
| Thanks (casual) | शुक्रिया | shukriya |
| Thank you very much | बहुत बहुत धन्यवाद | bahut bahut dhanyavaad |
| You're welcome | कोई बात नहीं | koi baat nahin |
| It's my pleasure | आपका स्वागत है | aapka swaagat hai |
Sorry & excuse me
माफ़ कीजिए covers both "sorry" and "excuse me" — use it to apologise or to get someone's attention politely.
| English | Hindi | Pronunciation |
|---|---|---|
| Sorry / Excuse me | माफ़ कीजिए | maaf keejiye |
| I'm sorry | मुझे माफ़ करें | mujhe maaf karen |
| It's all right / no problem | कोई बात नहीं | koi baat nahin |
| Excuse me, may I ask? (get attention) | सुनिए, ज़रा … | suniye, zara … |
जी and the respectful yes/no
जी is the magic word of Hindi courtesy. Alone it's a respectful "yes"; after a name it adds honour; before हाँ/नहीं it makes a polite yes or no.
| English | Hindi | Pronunciation |
|---|---|---|
| Yes (respectful) | जी हाँ | ji haan |
| No (respectful) | जी नहीं | ji nahin |
| Yes? / Pardon? (responding) | जी? | ji? |
| Mr Sharma (respectful) | शर्मा जी | Sharma ji |
| Yes, sir / madam | जी सर / जी मैडम | ji sir / ji madam |
आप, तुम & तू — the three "yous"
The single biggest politeness choice in Hindi is which "you" to use. Pick the wrong one and even kind words can sound off.
| When to use | Hindi | Pronunciation |
|---|---|---|
| Formal — strangers, elders, work | आप | aap |
| Informal — friends, family, peers | तुम | tum |
| Intimate — close partners, children, God (or rude if misused) | तू | tu |
Putting it together. Real Hindi politeness is a stack: the right pronoun (आप), the polite verb ending (-इए), a जी for warmth, and a धन्यवाद to close. You rarely need कृपया in every sentence — over-using it can sound stilted, the way constant "kindly" does in English. Aim for the natural blend: जी, बैठिए ("yes, please sit") already conveys plenty of courtesy in just two words.
Translate your own polite phrase
Want a courteous request or thank-you tailored to your situation? Type your English below and get a polite Hindi version.