Grammar Rule in 30 Seconds
Use 'Jithe' (where) to start the clause and 'Tithe' (there) to start the main clause to link locations.
- Start the dependent clause with 'Jithe' (where). Example: Jithe tu rahtos...
- Start the main clause with 'Tithe' (there). Example: ...tithe mi pan rahto.
- The order is flexible, but the 'Jithe-Tithe' pair must always be present.
Meanings
This structure creates a correlative relationship between a location and an event happening there.
Spatial Correlation
Linking an action to a specific physical location.
“Jithe सूर्य उगवतो, तिथे प्रकाश असतो.”
“Jithe तू बसला आहेस, तिथे जागा रिकामी आहे.”
Jithe-Tithe Pattern
| Clause 1 (Jithe) | Comma | Clause 2 (Tithe) | Meaning |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jithe tu ahes | , | tithe mi ahe | Where you are, I am. |
| Jithe paus padto | , | tithe chaha pito | Where it rains, we drink tea. |
| Jithe rasta jato | , | tithe mi jato | Where the road goes, I go. |
Reference Table
| Form | Structure | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Affirmative | Jithe + S + V, Tithe + S + V | Jithe mi rahto, tithe shala ahe. |
| Negative | Jithe + S + V(neg), Tithe + S + V(neg) | Jithe paus nahi, tithe garmi ahe. |
| Question | Jithe + S + V, Tithe + S + V + ka? | Jithe tu rahtos, tithe ka tu ahes? |
| Past | Jithe + S + V(past), Tithe + S + V(past) | Jithe raja hota, tithe killa hota. |
격식 수준 스펙트럼
Jithe aap jaat ahat, tithe mi jaat ahe. (Relationship/Commitment)
Jithe tu jato, tithe mi jato. (Relationship/Commitment)
Jithe tu gela, tithe mi gela. (Relationship/Commitment)
Jithe tu, tithe mi. (Relationship/Commitment)
The Jithe-Tithe Link
Usage
- Location Place
- Direction Path
Examples by Level
Jithe ghar ahe, tithe mi ahe.
Where the house is, there I am.
Jithe tu kam kartos, tithe mi yeto.
Where you work, there I come.
Jithe rasta sampato, tithe ek motha bagicha ahe.
Where the road ends, there is a big garden.
Jithe lokanmadhe prem aste, tithech shanti naste.
Where there is love among people, there is peace.
Jithe kadhich suryaprakash pohchat nahi, tithe he jeev jagtat.
Where sunlight never reaches, there these creatures live.
Jithe smrutinche padar ugadtat, tithech itihas jivant hoto.
Where the layers of memory unfold, there history comes alive.
Easily Confused
Both mean 'where'.
자주 하는 실수
Jithe mi rahto, mi khush ahe.
Jithe mi rahto, tithe mi khush ahe.
Kuthe mi rahto, tithe mi khush ahe.
Jithe mi rahto, tithe mi khush ahe.
Jithe mi rahto, tithech mi rahto.
Jithe mi rahto, tithe mi rahto.
Tithe mi rahto, jithe mi khush ahe.
Jithe mi rahto, tithe mi khush ahe.
Jithe paus padla, tithe paus padel.
Jithe paus padla, tithe paus padla.
Jithe tu, tithe mi.
Jithe tu ahes, tithe mi ahe.
Jithe-tithe rasta ahe.
Jithe rasta ahe, tithe mi ahe.
Jithe ki tu rahtos...
Jithe tu rahtos...
Jithe-tithe, tithe-jithe.
Jithe... tithe...
Jithe mi gelo, tithe mi pahila.
Jithe mi gelo, tithe mi pahile.
Jithe-tithe, tithe-jithe.
Jithe... tithe...
Sentence Patterns
Jithe ___, tithe ___.
Real World Usage
Jithe ahes, tithech thamb.
The Comma Rule
Smart Tips
Use Jithe-Tithe.
발음
Jithe/Tithe
The 'jh' in Jithe is a voiced aspirate. The 'th' is a dental stop.
Rising-Falling
Jithe... (rise) tithe... (fall)
Indicates a dependent clause followed by a main clause.
Memorize It
Mnemonic
Jithe is the 'Where', Tithe is the 'There'. They are a pair, like a chair and a bear.
Visual Association
Imagine a map. You put a pin on 'Jithe' (the starting point) and a flag on 'Tithe' (the destination).
Rhyme
Jithe you go, Tithe you know.
Story
Once, a traveler walked. 'Jithe' he stepped, he left a mark. 'Tithe' he looked, he saw a star. He followed the Jithe-Tithe path all night.
Word Web
챌린지
Write 3 sentences about your favorite places using Jithe-Tithe in 5 minutes.
문화 노트
This structure is often used in proverbs to convey wisdom.
Derived from Sanskrit 'yatra-tatra'.
Conversation Starters
Jithe tu rahtos, tithe kaay vishesh ahe?
Journal Prompts
Test Yourself
Jithe ___ , tithe ___.
Score: /1
연습 문제
1 exercisesJithe ___ , tithe ___.
Score: /1
자주 묻는 질문 (1)
No, it makes the sentence incomplete.
In Other Languages
Donde... allí...
Spanish uses 'donde' for both questions and clauses.
Où... là...
French requires more complex prepositions.
Wo... da...
German word order changes in the second clause.
Doko... soko...
Japanese uses particles like 'ni' or 'de' after the location.
Haythu... huna...
Arabic is more formal in this usage.
Na li... na li...
Chinese does not have a distinct correlative pair like Marathi.