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Hindi - Grammar | A Wisdom Archive on Hindi - Grammar |  | Hindi - Grammar A selection of articles related to Hindi - Grammar |  |
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More material related to Hindi can be found here:
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Hindi, Hindi - Area, Hindi - Borrowed sounds, Hindi - Case, Hindi - Common difficulties faced in learning Hindi, Hindi - Common tenses and aspect, Hindi - Consonants, Hindi - Dialects, Hindi - Grammar, Hindi - History, Hindi - Literature, Hindi - Number of Speakers, Hindi - Sounds, Hindi - Vocabulary, Hindi - Vowels, Hindi - Word order, Hindi - Writing system, Hindi literature, Origin of some common Hindi words, Complex Text Layout languages, Where is Hindi on the Internet?, Languages of India, List of national languages of India, List of Indian languages by total speakers, History of Hindi: a detailed chronology
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ARTICLES RELATED TO Hindi - Grammar | |
 |  |  | Hindi - Grammar: Encyclopedia II - Hindi - GrammarHindi grammar can be very complex and is different in many ways from what English speakers are used to. A simple and obvious difference is that for expressing relationship of nouns, Hindi uses postpositions where English would use a preposition. Other differences include gender, honorifics, interrogatives, word order, use of cases, and different tenses. While being complicated, Hindi grammar is fairly regular, with irregularities being relatively limited. Despite differences in vocabulary and writing, Hindi grammar is nearly identical with U ...
See also:Hindi, Hindi - Area, Hindi - Number of Speakers, Hindi - History, Hindi - Standard Hindi, Hindi - Vocabulary, Hindi - Dialects, Hindi - Sounds, Hindi - Vowels, Hindi - Consonants, Hindi - Borrowed sounds, Hindi - Writing system, Hindi - Grammar, Hindi - Word order, Hindi - Common tenses and aspect, Hindi - Case, Hindi - Literature, Hindi - Common difficulties faced in learning Hindi Read more here: » Hindi: Encyclopedia II - Hindi - Grammar |
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 |  |  | Hindi - Grammar: Encyclopedia II - Hindi - DialectsHindi in the broad sense is a dialect continuum without clear boundaries. For example, both Nepali and Panjabi are sometimes considered to be Hindi (based on the high level of mutual intelligibility for Panjabi and Hindi especially), though they are more often considered to be separate languages. Hindi is often divided into Western Hindi and Eastern Hindi, and these are further divided. Following is a list of principal Hindi dialects; boldface indicates an idiom that often classified as a separate language.
Hindustani, in ...
See also:Hindi, Hindi - Area, Hindi - Number of Speakers, Hindi - History, Hindi - Standard Hindi, Hindi - Vocabulary, Hindi - Dialects, Hindi - Sounds, Hindi - Vowels, Hindi - Consonants, Hindi - Borrowed sounds, Hindi - Writing system, Hindi - Grammar, Hindi - Word order, Hindi - Common tenses and aspect, Hindi - Case, Hindi - Literature, Hindi - Common difficulties faced in learning Hindi Read more here: » Hindi: Encyclopedia II - Hindi - Dialects |
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 |  |  | Hindi - Grammar: Encyclopedia II - Hindi - LiteratureMain article: Hindi literature
The beginnings of Hindi literature can be traced to the Prakrits of classical Sanskrit plays. Tulasidas's Ramacharitamanas attained wide popularity. Modern litterateurs include Jaishankar Prasad, Sumitranandan Pant, Maithili Sharan Gupta, Suryakant Tripathi 'Nirala', Mahadevi Varma, Sachchidananda Hirananda Vatsyayana 'Ajneya' and Munshi Premchand.
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See also:Hindi, Hindi - Area, Hindi - Number of Speakers, Hindi - History, Hindi - Standard Hindi, Hindi - Vocabulary, Hindi - Dialects, Hindi - Sounds, Hindi - Vowels, Hindi - Consonants, Hindi - Borrowed sounds, Hindi - Writing system, Hindi - Grammar, Hindi - Word order, Hindi - Common tenses and aspect, Hindi - Case, Hindi - Literature, Hindi - Common difficulties faced in learning Hindi Read more here: » Hindi: Encyclopedia II - Hindi - Literature |
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 |  |  | Hindi - Grammar: Encyclopedia II - Hindi - SoundsThere are 11 vowels and 35 consonants in Standard Hindī. They are shown below:
Hindi - Vowels.
The vowel /æ/ occurs in English loans and is represented by ऐ, which was originally used in Sanskrit for the 'ai' or 'əi' diphthong. But today in Khariboli, the Standard dialect, the vowel stands for /æ/ in almost all Hindi words. The other ten vowels have phonemic nasal counterparts. The vowel sequen ...
See also:Hindi, Hindi - Area, Hindi - Number of Speakers, Hindi - History, Hindi - Standard Hindi, Hindi - Vocabulary, Hindi - Dialects, Hindi - Sounds, Hindi - Vowels, Hindi - Consonants, Hindi - Borrowed sounds, Hindi - Writing system, Hindi - Grammar, Hindi - Word order, Hindi - Common tenses and aspect, Hindi - Case, Hindi - Literature, Hindi - Common difficulties faced in learning Hindi Read more here: » Hindi: Encyclopedia II - Hindi - Sounds |
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 |  |  | Hindi - Grammar: Encyclopedia II - Hindi - VocabularyStandard Hindi derives much of its formal and technical vocabulary from Sanskrit. Standard or shuddha ("pure") Hindi is used only in public addresses and radio or TV news, while the everyday spoken language in most areas is one of several varieties of Hindustani, whose vocabulary contains words drawn from Persian. In addition, spoken Hindi uses words from English and other languages as well.
Vernacular Urdu and Hindi are practically indistinguishable. However, the literary registers differ substantially; in highly formal situat ...
See also:Hindi, Hindi - Area, Hindi - Number of Speakers, Hindi - History, Hindi - Standard Hindi, Hindi - Vocabulary, Hindi - Dialects, Hindi - Sounds, Hindi - Vowels, Hindi - Consonants, Hindi - Borrowed sounds, Hindi - Writing system, Hindi - Grammar, Hindi - Word order, Hindi - Common tenses and aspect, Hindi - Case, Hindi - Literature, Hindi - Common difficulties faced in learning Hindi Read more here: » Hindi: Encyclopedia II - Hindi - Vocabulary |
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 |  |  | Hindi - Grammar: Encyclopedia II - Hindi - AreaHindi is the predominant language in the states and territories of Himachal Pradesh, Delhi, Haryana, Chandigarh, Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh, Bihar, Uttaranchal, Jharkhand, and Chattisgarh. It is spoken and understood in Gujarat, Punjab and Kashmir, states that otherwise have their own native languages. It is also widely spoken in the cities of Mumbai, Delhi, Chandigarh, Ahmedabad and Kolkata, all of which are cosmopolitan cities harbouring large communities of people from various parts of India.
Local variations of Hindi are counted as minority languages in several countries, including Fiji, Mauritius, Guyana, Suri ...
See also:Hindi, Hindi - Area, Hindi - Number of Speakers, Hindi - History, Hindi - Standard Hindi, Hindi - Vocabulary, Hindi - Dialects, Hindi - Sounds, Hindi - Vowels, Hindi - Consonants, Hindi - Borrowed sounds, Hindi - Writing system, Hindi - Grammar, Hindi - Word order, Hindi - Common tenses and aspect, Hindi - Case, Hindi - Literature, Hindi - Common difficulties faced in learning Hindi Read more here: » Hindi: Encyclopedia II - Hindi - Area |
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 |  |  | Hindi - Grammar: Encyclopedia II - Hindi - Number of SpeakersHindi is among the more widely spoken languages in the world. According to some estimates, about 500 million people in India and abroad are native speakers of Hindi and the total number of people who understand the language may be as high as 800 million. According to 1991 census[2] 40.22% of the Indian population can speak Hindi.
More than 180 million people in India regard Standard Hindi as their mother tongue, making it the fourth-most spoken language in the world. Another 300 million use it as second language. Outside In ...
See also:Hindi, Hindi - Area, Hindi - Number of Speakers, Hindi - History, Hindi - Standard Hindi, Hindi - Vocabulary, Hindi - Dialects, Hindi - Sounds, Hindi - Vowels, Hindi - Consonants, Hindi - Borrowed sounds, Hindi - Writing system, Hindi - Grammar, Hindi - Word order, Hindi - Common tenses and aspect, Hindi - Case, Hindi - Literature, Hindi - Common difficulties faced in learning Hindi Read more here: » Hindi: Encyclopedia II - Hindi - Number of Speakers |
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 |  |  | Hindi - Grammar: Encyclopedia II - Hindi - HistoryHindi evolved from Sanskrit, by way of the Middle Indo-Aryan prakrit languages and Apabhramsha of the Middle Ages.
As a standardised register of India, Hindi became the official language[4] of India on January 26, 1950, although English and 21 other languages are recognised as official languages by the Constitution of India.
Hindi - Standard Hindi.
After independence of India, the Government of India worked on standardizing Hindi, and the following changes took place:
standar ...
See also:Hindi, Hindi - Area, Hindi - Number of Speakers, Hindi - History, Hindi - Standard Hindi, Hindi - Vocabulary, Hindi - Dialects, Hindi - Sounds, Hindi - Vowels, Hindi - Consonants, Hindi - Borrowed sounds, Hindi - Writing system, Hindi - Grammar, Hindi - Word order, Hindi - Common tenses and aspect, Hindi - Case, Hindi - Literature, Hindi - Common difficulties faced in learning Hindi Read more here: » Hindi: Encyclopedia II - Hindi - History |
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