Hindi Grammar Hub

Understand Hindi Grammar Faster

Browse the grammar system by level and category, then open clear explanations with practical examples.

344 Total Rules
55 Chapters
6 CEFR level
Understand Hindi Grammar Faster

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Active filters: CEFR level: A1
A1 Adjectives & Adverbs

Adjective Agreement (-ā, -e, -ī)

Match the adjective ending (-ā, -e, -ī) to the gender and number of the noun you are describing.

  • Adjectives ending in -ā change form.
  • Masculine Singular ends in -ā.
11 examples 8 exercises 8 FAQ
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A1 Noun Gender Verified

The Unchanging 'Man' (आदमी): Hindi Noun Stability

The noun आदमी is grammatically stable, remaining unchanged in the singular oblique and direct plural cases.

  • आदमी stays आदमी in singular, plural, and singular...
  • It is a masculine noun ending in long 'i' (ई).
10 examples 8 exercises 8 FAQ
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A1 Noun Gender

Noun Gender: Is it a 'He' or a 'She'? (-aa vs -ii)

Every noun has a gender that dictates the ending of describing words (`-aa` for male, `-ii` for female).

  • No 'it' in Hindi; only Masculine or Feminine nouns...
  • Words ending in `-aa` are usually Masculine.
10 examples 8 exercises 8 FAQ
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A1 Noun Gender

Hindi Noun Genders: Boys vs Girls (ladkā/ladkī)

Nouns ending in -ā usually change to -ī for feminine forms, affecting the entire sentence's agreement.

  • Hindi nouns are either masculine or feminine; ever...
  • Masculine nouns often end in -ā (लड़का), while fem...
10 examples 8 exercises 8 FAQ
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A1 Adjectives & Adverbs

Hindi Numbers 1-10: Counting for Beginners (Ek, Do, Teen)

Hindi numbers 1-10 are invariant adjectives that provide a simple, rhythmic foundation for all daily interactions.

  • Numbers 1-10 in Hindi are adjectives that never ch...
  • They are placed directly before the noun they desc...
12 examples 8 exercises 8 FAQ
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A1 Pronouns

Plural Pronouns: We, These, Those (Hum, Ye, Ve)

Plural pronouns indicate quantity, physical distance, and social respect; always pair them with nasalized plural verbs like हैं (hain).

  • हम (Hum) is always "We".
  • ये (Ye) is "They/These" for nearby people/objects.
12 examples 8 exercises 8 FAQ
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A1 Pronouns

My, Your, and Yours: Hindi Possessives

Possessive pronouns must match the gender and number of the thing being possessed, not the person speaking.

  • Pronouns agree with the OBJECT owned, not the owne...
  • Endings: -aa (Masc Sing), -e (Masc Plural/Respect)...
10 examples 8 exercises 8 FAQ
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A1 Postpositions

Hindi Ownership: The 'Ka, Ke, Ki' Rule

The possessive marker (ka/ke/ki) is a mirror reflecting the gender and number of the thing being owned.

  • ka (का) = Masculine Singular object
  • ke (के) = Masculine Plural (or Respect)
10 examples 8 exercises 8 FAQ
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A1 Basic Verbs Verified

Hindi Verbs: The Dictionary Form (-na)

The infinitive `nā` form is the dictionary name of the verb and acts like a masculine noun.

  • Verb Stem + nā (ना)
  • Equivalent to English "to [verb]"
10 examples 8 exercises 8 FAQ
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A1 Basic Verbs

The Verb 'To Be' (होना - hona)

Hona is the essential sentence-ending verb used to describe identity, location, and states of being in Hindi.

  • Hona means 'to be' or 'to become' in Hindi.
  • The verb always comes at the end of the sentence.
12 examples 8 exercises 8 FAQ
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Why Learn Hindi Grammar?

Grammar is the foundation of language fluency. Without understanding grammar patterns, you can memorize vocabulary but struggle to form correct sentences. Here's why structured grammar study matters:

Build Accurate Sentences

Move beyond memorized phrases. Understand the rules so you can create original, correct sentences in any situation.

Pass Language Exams

Grammar is tested in every major language exam — IELTS, DELE, DELF, JLPT, HSK, TOPIK, and more. Our CEFR-aligned curriculum maps directly to exam requirements.

Understand Native Speakers

Knowing grammar helps you parse complex sentences, understand nuance, and follow conversations even when speakers use advanced constructions.

Progress Faster

Students who study grammar systematically reach fluency faster than those who rely on immersion alone. Structure accelerates learning.

How Our Hindi Grammar Course Works

1

Choose Your Level

Start with your CEFR level — from A0 Zero Point to C2 Mastery. Not sure? Begin at A0 and progress at your own pace.

2

Study Structured Chapters

Each chapter covers a grammar topic with clear explanations, pattern tables, and real-world example sentences.

3

Practice with Exercises

Test your understanding with interactive exercises — fill-in-the-blank, multiple choice, sentence building, and translation practice.

4

Track & Progress

Your progress is saved automatically. Complete chapters, unlock new levels, and watch your grammar mastery grow.

Frequently Asked Questions About Hindi Grammar

SubLearn covers 344 Hindi grammar rules organized across 6 CEFR proficiency levels (from A1 to C2), spanning 55 structured chapters. Each rule includes clear explanations, real-world examples, and interactive practice exercises.

Our Hindi grammar curriculum covers CEFR levels from A1 to C2. Each level is designed to match your current proficiency — beginners start with basic sentence patterns at A1, while advanced learners tackle nuanced structures at C1-C2.

Yes! All Hindi grammar rules, explanations, and examples are completely free to access. You can browse the full curriculum, read detailed explanations, and practice with exercises at no cost.

Grammar is organized into 55 thematic chapters following the CEFR framework. Each chapter groups related rules together — for example, verb tenses, sentence structure, or particles — so you can learn related concepts in a logical sequence.

Yes! Create a free account to track which grammar rules you've studied, see your progress across all CEFR levels, and pick up exactly where you left off. Your learning progress syncs across devices.