Dialogue

Vocabulary (Review)

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Lesson Transcript

INTRODUCTION
Namaste! Hello and welcome to Hindi Survival Phrases brought to you by HindiPod101.com. This course is designed to equip you with the language skills and knowledge to enable you to get the most out of your visit to India. You’ll be surprised at how far a little Hindi will go.
Now, before we jump in, remember to stop by HindiPod101.com and there, you will find the accompanying PDF and additional info in the post. If you stop by, be sure to leave us a comment.

Lesson focus

Survival Phrases lesson 18, Counting 40 to 70.
In Hindi, counting from 41-70 won't be too difficult now that you can count from 1 to 40, so let's jump right in and start with numbers from 41 to 50.
41 - ikTaaliis
ikTaaliis
ikTaaliis
42 - bayaaliis
bayaaliis
bayaaliis
43 - TainTaaliis
TainTaaliis
TainTaaliis
44 - CHauvaaliis
CHauvaaliis
CHauvaaliis
45 - painTaaliis
painTaaliis
painTaaliis
46 - CHiyaaliis
CHiyaaliis
CHiyaaliis
47 - sainTaaliis
sainTaaliis
sainTaaliis
48 - arTaaliis
arTaaliis
arTaaliis
49 - unCHaas
unCHaas
unCHaas
50 - paCHaas
paCHaas
paCHaas
The following set is a little irregular, so let's be careful. Now, let's see the numbers from 51 to 60.
51 - ikyaavan
ikyaavan
ikyaavan
52 - baavan
baavan
baavan
53 - Tirpan
Tirpan
Tirpan
54 - CHauvan
CHauvan
CHauvan
55 - paCHpan
paCHpan
paCHpan
56 - CHHiyaavan
CHHiyaavan
CHHiyaavan
57 - saTTaavan
saTTaavan
saTTaavan
58 - aTTHaavan
aTTHaavan
aTTHaavan
59 - unsaTH
unsaTH
unsaTH
60 - saaTH
saaTH
saaTH
Finally, let's learn the numbers from 61 to 70.
61 - iksaTH
iksaTH
iksaTH
62 - baasaTH
baasaTH
baasaTH
63 - TirsaTH
TirsaTH
TirsaTH
64 - CHaunsaTH
CHaunsaTH
CHaunsaTH
65 - painsaTH
painsaTH
painsaTH
66 - CHHiyaasaTH
CHHiyaasaTH
CHHiyaasaTH
67 - sarsaTH
sarsaTH
sarsaTH
68 - arsaTH
arsaTH
arsaTH
69 - unhaTTar
unhaTTar
unhaTTar
70 - saTTar
saTTar
saTTar
These numbers can be very useful when you’re counting things in bigger quantities.
Let’s say you’re telling one of your Indian acquiantances about your trip.
You might say “"43 people are traveling with me," which in Hindi is mere saaTH TainTaaliis log yaaTraa kar rahe hain
mere saaTH TainTaaliis log yaaTraa kar rahe hain
mere saaTH TainTaaliis log yaaTraa kar rahe hain
In this sentence, mere saaTH means “with me.”
mere saaTH
mere saaTH
TainTaaliis, as we’ve learned, is “43.”
log is “people.”
So, TainTaaliis log means “43 people.”
TainTaaliis log
TainTaaliis log
And yaaTraa means “travel.”
yaaTraa
yaaTraa
And kar rahe hain literally means “are doing.”
kar rahe hain
kar rahe hain
So, mere saaTH TainTaaliis log yaaTraa kar rahe hain means “43 people are traveling with me.”
And if you’re staying in room 55 in your hotel, you might tell your friend, “I’m staying in room 55” which in Hindi is main kamaraa nambar paCHpan mein THahraa hoon.
main kamaraa nambar paCHpan mein THahraa hoon
main kamaraa nambar paCHpan mein THahraa hoon
main means “I” in English.
And kamaraa nambar paCHpan means “room number 55.”
paCHpan, as we’ve already learned, is “55” while kamaraa is “room.”
So, kamaraa nambar 55 is “room number 55.”
kamaraa nambar paCHpan
kamaraa nambar paCHpan
THahraa hoon means “I’m staying.”
THahraa hoon
THahraa hoon
Now, this is how a male would say it.
If you are a female, you would say main kamaraa nambar paCHpan mein THahrii hoon.
main kamaraa nambar paCHpan mein THahrii hoon
main kamaraa nambar paCHpan mein THahrii hoon
In this sentence, only the verb [*], which means “to stay” changes.
Now, let’s say you wanna get some change and you would say, I want some change for 65 rupees, which in Hindi would be mujhe painsaTh rupye ke CHutte CHaahiye.
mujhe painsaTh rupye ke CHutte CHaahiye
mujhe painsaTh rupye ke CHutte CHaahiye
In this sentence, painsaTh, as we’ve already learned, is “65” so rupye is “rupees” in English.
painsaTh rupye
painsaTh rupye which means “65 rupees.”
ke CHutte means “change for.”
ke CHutte
ke CHutte
CHaahiye comes from the verb [*], “want.”
CHaahiye
CHaahiye
So, mujhe painsaTh rupye ke CHutte CHaahiye means “I want change for 65 rupees.”
And finally, if your friend asks you, how many different kinds of paintings you saw at the art museum, you could say, “I saw 67 kinds of paintings,” which in Hindi is maine sadsaTH prakaar ke CHiTra deKHe.
maine sadsaTH prakaar ke CHiTra deKHe
maine sadsaTH prakaar ke CHiTra deKHe
In this sentence, maine, means “I” and sadsaTH, as we’ve learned is “67.”
So, sadsaTH prakaar ke CHiTra means “67 kinds of paintings.”
sadsaTH prakaar ke CHiTra
sadsaTH prakaar ke CHiTra
deKHe comes from the verb [*], which means “to see.”
deKHe
deKHe
So again, maine sadsaTH prakaar ke CHiTra deKHe means “I saw 67 kinds of paintings.”

Outro

Okay, to close out this lesson, we'd like you to practice what you've just learned. I'll provide you with the English equivalent of the phrases and you're responsible for shouting it out loud. You'll have a few seconds before I give you the answer, so गुड लक! (guud Lak!), which means "good luck" in Hindi.
"43 people are traveling with me." - mere saaTH TainTaaliis log yaaTraa kar rahe hain
mere saaTH TainTaaliis log yaaTraa kar rahe hain
mere saaTH TainTaaliis log yaaTraa kar rahe hain
"I'm staying in room 55.” (masculine) - main kamaraa nambar paCHpan mein THahraa hoon
main kamaraa nambar paCHpan mein THahraa hoon
main kamaraa nambar paCHpan mein THahraa hoon
"I'm staying in room 55.” (feminine) - main kamaraa nambar paCHpan mein THahrii hoon
main kamaraa nambar paCHpan mein THahrii hoon
main kamaraa nambar paCHpan mein THahrii hoon
"I want change for 65 rupees." - mujhe painsaTh rupye ke CHutte CHaahiye
mujhe painsaTh rupye ke CHutte CHaahiye
mujhe painsaTh rupye ke CHutte CHaahiye
"I saw 67 kinds of paintings." - maine sadsaTH prakaar ke CHiTra deKHe
maine sadsaTH prakaar ke CHiTra deKHe
maine sadsaTH prakaar ke CHiTra deKHe
All right. That’s going to do it for today. Remember to stop by HindiPod101.com and pick up the accompanying PDF. If you stop by, be sure to leave us a comment.
फिर मिलेंगे (phir milenge), goodbye!

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