मतलब
Expressing uncertainty about tomorrow
सांस्कृतिक पृष्ठभूमि
Directly saying 'No' to an elder or a host is often considered rude. 'Kadaachit Udya' serves as a social lubricant to decline without causing offense. In many Indian workplaces, 'Kadaachit Udya' might be used by subordinates to avoid delivering bad news about a missed deadline. It requires reading between the lines. In farming communities, 'Kadaachit Udya' is often used when discussing nature and crops, showing a respect for the unpredictability of the monsoon. The phrase is a staple in romantic dialogues where a character is shy to commit to a date or a meeting.
The 'Soft No'
If you want to say no to an invitation but feel bad, 'Kadaachit Udya' followed by a smile is your best friend.
Future Tense Only
Always pair this with future tense verbs. Using present tense makes the sentence sound grammatically broken to native ears.
मतलब
Expressing uncertainty about tomorrow
The 'Soft No'
If you want to say no to an invitation but feel bad, 'Kadaachit Udya' followed by a smile is your best friend.
Future Tense Only
Always pair this with future tense verbs. Using present tense makes the sentence sound grammatically broken to native ears.
Adding 'Tar'
Add 'तर' (tar) at the end—'कदाचित उद्या तर'—to sound like you are really considering it but still unsure.
Head Bobble
When saying 'Kadaachit Udya', a slight side-to-side head bobble enhances the meaning of uncertainty.
खुद को परखो
Fill in the blank to say 'Maybe it will rain tomorrow'.
कदाचित उद्या ______ पडेल.
'पाऊस पडणे' (Rain falling) is the standard collocation for raining.
Which sentence means 'I might come tomorrow'?
Choose the correct Marathi translation:
'Kadaachit' adds the 'might' and 'yein' is the future tense for 'come'.
Complete the dialogue with the most polite response.
A: तुम्ही उद्या आमच्या घरी जेवायला येणार का? B: ________, मला थोडे काम आहे.
'Kadaachit Udya' is the most polite way to express uncertainty in a social invitation.
Match the phrase to the situation.
Situation: You are looking at dark clouds and thinking about tomorrow's weather.
The context of dark clouds relates to rain.
🎉 स्कोर: /4
विज़ुअल लर्निंग टूल्स
Common Contexts
Weather
- • Rain
- • Sun
- • Cold
Social
- • Dinner
- • Coffee
- • Meeting
Work
- • Report
- • Call
अभ्यास बैंक
4 अभ्यासकदाचित उद्या ______ पडेल.
'पाऊस पडणे' (Rain falling) is the standard collocation for raining.
Choose the correct Marathi translation:
'Kadaachit' adds the 'might' and 'yein' is the future tense for 'come'.
A: तुम्ही उद्या आमच्या घरी जेवायला येणार का? B: ________, मला थोडे काम आहे.
'Kadaachit Udya' is the most polite way to express uncertainty in a social invitation.
Situation: You are looking at dark clouds and thinking about tomorrow's weather.
The context of dark clouds relates to rain.
🎉 स्कोर: /4
अक्सर पूछे जाने वाले सवाल
10 सवालYes, in informal speech you can say 'मी येईन कदाचित' (I will come, maybe). It sounds very natural.
It is neutral. It is used in both formal news reports and casual conversations.
'Kadaachit' is an adverb (maybe), while 'Shakyata' is a noun (possibility). You say 'Shakyata aahe' (There is a possibility).
You say 'कदाचित उद्या नाही' (Kadaachit udya naahi).
Yes, it is perfectly polite for a student to use with a teacher.
Yes, unlike some other languages, 'Udya' specifically means the day after today.
No. For the past, you would use 'Kadaachit' with 'Kaal' (Yesterday), but the verb would change to past tense.
Usually 'Theek aahe' (Okay) or 'Nक्की कळवा' (Do let me know for sure).
Just 'कदाचित' (Kadaachit) works if the context of 'tomorrow' is already established.
Not necessarily. It sounds like you are genuinely unsure or trying to be polite.
संबंधित मुहावरे
बहुधा उद्या
similarProbably tomorrow
कदाचित नंतर
similarMaybe later
उद्या नक्की
contrastTomorrow for sure
कदाचितच
specialized formVery unlikely / Hardly
शक्यतो उद्या
similarPreferably tomorrow / If possible tomorrow