REET Level 1 study notes
Noun, Pronoun, Adjective and Indeclinable in Primary Hindi
This REET Level 1 Hindi note treats noun, pronoun, adjective and indeclinable as sentence functions, not as isolated labels. The RBSE syllabus line asks for types and recognition, so candidates must identify what a word is doing in a simple sentence. A noun names, a pronoun replaces a noun, an adjective describes or counts a noun or pronoun, and an indeclinable does not change form while joining, relating, intensifying or expressing emotion. The classroom method uses stories, picture talk, sentence cards and inclusive group work.
Key points
- The RBSE Hindi grammar boundary names noun, pronoun, adjective and indeclinable with types and recognition.
- The safest exam method is sentence first and label second.
- A noun names a person, place, object, animal, group, material or idea.
- A pronoun replaces a noun; the key question is whose place the word has taken.
- An adjective gives quality, number, quantity or pointer information about a noun or pronoun.
- An indeclinable does not change form with gender, number, person or case.
- NCF-FS 2022 reading strategies support grammar through story, shared reading, guided work and independent marking.
- REET traps often confuse every small word with an indeclinable or every word before a noun with an adjective.
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This REET Level 1 Hindi note treats noun, pronoun, adjective and indeclinable as sentence functions, not as isolated labels. The RBSE syllabus line asks for types and recognition, so candidates must identify what a word is doing in a simple sentence. A noun names, a pronoun replaces a noun, an adjective describes or counts a noun or pronoun, and an indeclinable does not change form while joining, relating, intensifying or...
