There are various ways to say 'What is your name?' in Hindi. The formal way is, 'Aapka nam kya hein?' Aapka is pronounced ap-kah, the 'a' like in are. The end should have slight nasal quality. Nam is pronounced nam, the 'a' like in are. Kya is pronounced kya, with an h sound at the end. Hein is pronounced ha, the a as in cat, with not so much of your breath coming out when you say the word. 'Tera/Tumara nam kya hein?' is the informal way of saying this, although when you ask one's you generally do not know them too well and thus you should only ask in the formal way. The sentence in Hindi literally translates as 'Your name what is?'
museli has the same name in hindi. museli powder is very popular!
No where i have faced the same problem too. Convert english to hindi (choose only the main points) it is easy beleve me
I had the same question . I think there is no award like that
If the question refers to measures of area, they are the same.
No. Nepali and Hindi are not same. They are different languages.
'Akshar-dham' is itself a Hindi word and here it has been mentioned as a 'name' of a temple and the the names remain same in any language.
To type a question mark in Hindi, you can use the same key as in English, which is usually the shift key combined with the forward slash (/) key on most keyboards. If you're using a Hindi typing software or an input tool, you can typically find the question mark on the keyboard layout. Additionally, some typing tools may allow you to switch between English and Hindi layouts, enabling you to type punctuation marks easily.
this word is same in Hindi and English
Which country? Which question?
"You can ask 'Are you busy?' in Hindi by saying 'क्या आप व्यस्त हैं?' (Kya aap vyast hain?)" Note: Hindi is a highly versatile language, so there may be other ways to express the same question.
Yes, chameli and jasmine are the same flower. "Chameli" is the Hindi name for the jasmine flower, which is known for its fragrant and white blooms.
Hindi and Punjabi sound exactly the same... --------------- Hindi is heavily influenced by Urdu and Sanskrit.