Tue. May 26th, 2026

Sat Sri Akal! 🙏
Welcome back!
So far, we’ve learned Punjabi greetings (Lesson 1) and numbers 1–10 (Lesson 2).
Today, we’ll learn pronouns — the little words that replace names so we can talk about ourselves, others, and groups.


1️⃣ Subject Pronouns in Punjabi

EnglishPunjabi (Gurmukhi)Punjabi (Romanized)Pronunciation
Iਮੈਂmainmeh(n)
You (informal)ਤੂੰtutoo
You (formal/respectful)ਤੁਸੀਂtusitoo-see
He / She / That personਉਹuhooh / uh
Weਅਸੀਂasinuh-seen
They / Those peopleਉਹuhooh / uh

💡 Tip: Punjabi uses the same word ਉਹ (uh) for “he,” “she,” and “they,” but context tells you who you’re talking about.


2️⃣ Using Pronouns in Sentences

Example 1:

  • English: I am fine.
  • Punjabi: ਮੈਂ ਠੀਕ ਹਾਂ। (Main theek haan.)

Example 2:

  • English: You are my friend.
  • Punjabi: ਤੂੰ ਮੇਰਾ ਦੋਸਤ ਹੈਂ। (Tu mera dost hain.) — to a male friend
  • Punjabi: ਤੂੰ ਮੇਰੀ ਦੋਸਤ ਹੈਂ। (Tu meri dost hain.) — to a female friend

Example 3:

  • English: We are from Canada.
  • Punjabi: ਅਸੀਂ ਕੈਨੇਡਾ ਤੋਂ ਹਾਂ। (Asin Canada ton haan.)

Example 4:

  • English: They are happy.
  • Punjabi: ਉਹ ਖੁਸ਼ ਹਨ। (Oh khush hann.)

3️⃣ Quick Grammar Note

Punjabi changes the form of the verb “to be” (ਹਾਂ / ਹੈਂ / ਹਨ) depending on the pronoun:

  • ਹਾਂ (haan) → for I and we
  • ਹੈਂ (hain) → for you
  • ਹੈ (hai) → for he/she/it
  • ਹਨ (hann) → for they

✏️ Practice Exercise

  1. Write 5 sentences about yourself in Punjabi starting with Main (I).
  2. Practice greeting a friend and saying where you’re from using Tu or Tusi.
  3. Point to family photos and describe them:
    • Uh mera pita hai. (He is my father.)
    • Uh meri maa hai. (She is my mother.)

🎯 Key Takeaway

With pronouns, you can finally start building real Punjabi sentences instead of just memorizing phrases. Combine these with greetings and numbers, and you can already have short conversations.

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