Questions & Answers about यह पानी है।
- यह = a demonstrative pronoun/determiner, meaning this
- पानी = water
- है = the singular present form of to be: is
- । = the Hindi full stop, called danda
So grammatically, the sentence is:
- यह = subject/demonstrative
- पानी = predicate noun
- है = copula verb
A very literal word-for-word order would be this water is.
Because Hindi usually puts the verb at or near the end of the sentence.
English often uses:
- This is water
Hindi often uses:
- This water is
That is a normal Hindi sentence pattern. So यह पानी है is not unusual or poetic; it is standard word order.
It is written यह, but in modern spoken Hindi it is very commonly pronounced more like yeh.
A useful learner approximation is:
- यह → yeh
You may also hear shorter colloquial speech where it sounds closer to ye.
So:
- written form: यह
- common pronunciation: yeh
This kind of mismatch between spelling and everyday pronunciation is very common in Hindi.
है is usually transliterated as hai.
A practical learner pronunciation is:
- hai
Depending on accent, the vowel may sound a bit closer to eh than the English word high, but hai is the normal way learners remember it.
So:
- यह पानी है
- roughly: yeh paani hai
Hindi does not use articles the way English does.
English needs:
- This is water
- This is the water
- This is a book
Hindi often just uses the noun without an article:
- यह पानी है
- यह किताब है
Whether the meaning is closer to a, the, or just a general noun is understood from context.
So the lack of a/the here is completely normal.
पानी is generally treated as masculine.
However, in this sentence, you cannot tell that from है, because है does not change for gender in the singular.
So both of these are true:
- पानी is masculine
- this specific sentence does not visibly show that very clearly
You see the gender more clearly when an agreeing adjective is added, for example:
- ठंडा पानी = cold water
Here ठंडा shows masculine agreement.
Yes. Hindi demonstratives and third-person pronouns overlap a lot.
So यह can mean:
- this
- he
- she
- it
The exact meaning depends on context.
In यह पानी है, it clearly means this, because it is pointing out something identified as water.
But in another sentence, यह could refer to a person or thing already being talked about.
This is a very common learner question.
Broadly speaking:
- यह = this / he-she-it (near)
- ये = these / they (near)
So for a singular nearby thing, यह is the standard form:
- यह पानी है
For plural nearby things:
- ये किताबें हैं = These are books
In everyday speech, though, many speakers use ये where older textbook Hindi might use यह, especially in casual conversation. So learners may hear variation.
You would usually use वह.
So:
- यह पानी है = This is water
- वह पानी है = That is water
Like यह, वह also overlaps with pronoun meanings such as he/she/it depending on context.
In everyday speech, वह is often pronounced more like voh.
The most common neutral way is to add क्या at the beginning:
- क्या यह पानी है? = Is this water?
In speech, you may also hear a yes/no question formed just with intonation:
- यह पानी है?
But for learners, क्या + sentence is the safest and clearest pattern.
It is the Hindi full stop, called danda.
It works like a period in English:
- यह पानी है।
In modern informal writing, especially online, many people also use the regular English-style period ., but । is the traditional standard punctuation mark in Devanagari writing.