EngToHindi

English to Hinglish (Roman Hindi)

What "Hinglish" really means, how Indians text in Roman Hindi like kaise ho, and how to get it from this translator.

What is Hinglish / Roman Hindi?

Hinglish — also called Roman Hindi — is the Hindi language written in the Latin (English) alphabet instead of the Devanagari script. Instead of typing कैसे हो you type kaise ho; instead of क्या कर रहे हो you type kya kar rahe ho. The words, grammar, and meaning are all ordinary Hindi — only the spelling switches to Roman letters.

This is how a huge number of Indians actually text, chat, and post. An English keyboard is everywhere and fast, so people simply spell Hindi sounds out: kaise ho ("how are you"), kya kar rahe ho ("what are you doing"), theek hai ("okay"), chalo ("let's go"). There is no official, fixed spelling — kya and kyaa are both fine — so Roman Hindi is loose and personal by nature. It is informal: great for WhatsApp and Instagram, but formal writing, school, and print all use Devanagari.

Important: this tool outputs Devanagari Hindi

Our translator produces proper Devanagari Hindiकैसे हो — not the romanised kaise ho. That is deliberate: Devanagari is the correct, standard way to write Hindi. To get the Roman Hindi spelling, you read the pronunciation column (shown in italics) in the example tables below. That italic romanization is Hinglish — it is exactly how you would type the same line on an English keyboard. So the workflow is: translate your English into Hindi, then read off the italic pronunciation to chat in Roman Hindi.

Translate English to Hindi

Type your English below to get the Devanagari. For the Hinglish version, match it against the romanization in the table beneath.

Common English → Hinglish → Hindi

The italic middle column is the Roman Hindi (Hinglish) you would actually type.
EnglishHinglish (Roman)Hindi (Devanagari)
How are you?kaise ho?कैसे हो?
What are you doing?kya kar rahe ho?क्या कर रहे हो?
I'm finemain theek hoonमैं ठीक हूँ
Okay / alrighttheek haiठीक है
Let's gochaloचलो
What happened?kya hua?क्या हुआ?
Where are you?tum kahaan ho?तुम कहाँ हो?
I love youmain tumse pyaar karta hoonमैं तुमसे प्यार करता हूँ
Thank youshukriyaशुक्रिया
No problemkoi baat nahinकोई बात नहीं

Reading the romanization

Read Roman Hindi phonetically, the way English would sound the letters: aa is a long a as in "father", ee is a long e as in "see", and short vowels stay short. So kaise ho is roughly "KY-seh ho", and theek hai is "teek heh". Because there is no standard, you will see the same word spelled a few ways online — that is normal, and people still understand each other.

One thing to note: the masculine and feminine forms differ. A man says karta hoon (करता हूँ); a woman says karti hoon (करती हूँ). Roman Hindi carries that difference too, so pick the form that fits the speaker.

Want to write it properly? If you are learning to read and type the actual script, our beginner's guide walks through Devanagari from the start, and the greetings and common phrases pages give you ready chat lines in both scripts.

Frequently asked

What is Hinglish or Roman Hindi?
Hinglish, also called Roman Hindi, is Hindi written in the Latin alphabet instead of Devanagari — for example kaise ho for कैसे हो ("how are you"). Indians use it constantly when texting and chatting because it is fast to type on an English keyboard.
Does this tool output Hinglish or Devanagari?
The translator outputs proper Devanagari Hindi, not romanised text. To get the Roman Hindi spelling, read the pronunciation (italic) column in our example tables, which shows how each Hindi line is written in the Latin alphabet.
Is Hinglish real Hindi?
Yes — it is the same Hindi language, just typed in Roman letters. There is no single official spelling, so kya for क्या might also be written kyaa. It is informal and perfect for chat, but formal writing uses Devanagari.
How do I read the romanization correctly?
Read it phonetically as English would: aa is a long a as in "father", ee is a long e as in "see", and ho rhymes with "go". So kaise ho is roughly "KY-seh ho".