Aunty Ji, I can't find the words of gratitude for this video! You have literally saved my life, I don't know how else it would be possible to study these Hindi sounds without your explanation. Thank you a lot from the bottom of my heart! God bless you
Thank you, behn. Your teaching style (and patience) is perfect for westerners like me! So far, all I've found are kids videos which are fun but I had the same questions your student asked so this was perfect. Bahut achchha aur Shukraya.
Thank you so much for this very helpful explanation of sounds that have been confusing me for a while now. This is so much clearer than just being told to try to imitate a sound without knowing how the sound is actually made. My oldest son is on the autism spectrum and had childhood apraxia and has had to be taught things that others are expected to pick up naturally, so this is of special interest to me. :) (Childhood apraxia of speech (CAS) is a speech disorder in which a child's brain has difficulty coordinating the complex oral movements needed to create sounds into syllables, syllables into words, and words into phrases.)
I am so confused right now, I started learning hindi a week ago in duolingo and some characters are different in the app, now I don´t know which one is correct.
I stopped learning Hindi on Duolingo as it's poorly done. This amazing woman has advanced me along in one video than working on condensed Duolingo lessons for 15 minutes ❤️ I hope this helps
Hindi k shabd ajeeb tarah se bante hayn, similar sounding words different shapes mei hote jo k mujh jese roman letters mein likhne walon k liye boht mushkil hay urdu se bhi mushkil.
I think for non native speakers it’s difficult to pick up on or differentiate between the sounds but I’m pretty sure all native speakers can hear it. I think if you really focus on the different sounds it makes based on the placement of your tongue you can hear a slight difference
Trust me, it’s difficult, but fluent speakers can tell whether you used the dental or retroflexive. For example, to say, “moti samendar par” “pearls on the sea” you have to use the soft t in moti. Fluent speakers will hear if you accidentally used the hard t as that would then mean fat, “fat on the sea”
Aunty Ji, I can't find the words of gratitude for this video! You have literally saved my life, I don't know how else it would be possible to study these Hindi sounds without your explanation. Thank you a lot from the bottom of my heart! God bless you
Thank you, behn. Your teaching style (and patience) is perfect for westerners like me! So far, all I've found are kids videos which are fun but I had the same questions your student asked so this was perfect. Bahut achchha aur Shukraya.
You are a greeeeeeeaaaaattt
Teacher.
You are sooo unique. I love your teaching. I am also helpfull
Thank you so much for this very helpful explanation of sounds that have been confusing me for a while now. This is so much clearer than just being told to try to imitate a sound without knowing how the sound is actually made.
My oldest son is on the autism spectrum and had childhood apraxia and has had to be taught things that others are expected to pick up naturally, so this is of special interest to me. :)
(Childhood apraxia of speech (CAS) is a speech disorder in which a child's brain has difficulty coordinating the complex oral movements needed to create sounds into syllables, syllables into words, and words into phrases.)
Mam Your attitude 👍🏻
Thanks for your best teaching
Thank you so much cheekbone
Thank you ma'am 🥴saalo ka confusion aaj durr hua
If you know hindi why are you seeing this
@@naveenk2192 hahaha i thought the same
@@naveenk2192 lol I also know but still I am watching 🤣🤣
When you say ठ , could you explain the way of its pronounciation, please?
I can share some details, please contact hello@hindihour.com
@@shachichotia2795 Okk thanks
Hi. Do you have live classes for intermediate level conversation.
I hope you can make video about matras it will be a big help. Thanks madam Ji
ruclips.net/video/76ES63_L-HQ/видео.html
Thank you...
i like it
Thank you so much mam ..🙏🏻
10:21
Na - it should be-
Nu
I am so confused right now, I started learning hindi a week ago in duolingo and some characters are different in the app, now I don´t know which one is correct.
please send your query to hello@hindihour.com
This is.
I stopped learning Hindi on Duolingo as it's poorly done. This amazing woman has advanced me along in one video than working on condensed Duolingo lessons for 15 minutes ❤️ I hope this helps
Adyāpīkā jī āp retrofexo me āp t, d , s ,n me āp uske nīce ek bindī lagā sakte hæ.
omg , i didnt see any difference between these sounds.
Hindi k shabd ajeeb tarah se bante hayn, similar sounding words different shapes mei hote jo k mujh jese roman letters mein likhne walon k liye boht mushkil hay urdu se bhi mushkil.
I meant che-echi
❤️
Great teaching! The British lady seems to be a bit arrogant sadly.
what made you feel like that?
shes not even british lol
It's very difficult to distinguish these... How can you hear it in normal conversation? lol
even worse, the lousy acoustics of the room + low-quality speaker of the video
I think for non native speakers it’s difficult to pick up on or differentiate between the sounds but I’m pretty sure all native speakers can hear it. I think if you really focus on the different sounds it makes based on the placement of your tongue you can hear a slight difference
Trust me, it’s difficult, but fluent speakers can tell whether you used the dental or retroflexive. For example, to say, “moti samendar par” “pearls on the sea” you have to use the soft t in moti. Fluent speakers will hear if you accidentally used the hard t as that would then mean fat, “fat on the sea”