EngToHindi

Telling time & dates in Hindi

How to ask the clock, say the hour, handle the quarter-and-half words, and speak dates — the practical Hindi of appointments, trains, and "see you at half past five".

Time vocabulary is one of those small areas that quietly unlocks daily life: meeting a friend, catching a train, asking when a shop opens. The Hindi system is mostly logical once you meet four special words — बजे, सवा, साढ़े, and पौने. They do the heavy lifting for almost every time you'll ever say. This page builds on the counting you'll find on our numbers in Hindi page, so if your 1–12 is shaky, start there first.

Two words cover "time" itself: समय (samay) is the neutral, slightly formal term, while वक़्त (waqt), borrowed from Urdu/Arabic, is just as common in speech. Either works when you ask what time it is.

Asking and the core words

The vocabulary you need before reading a clock.
EnglishHindiPronunciation
Timeसमयsamay
Time (colloquial)वक़्तwaqt
What time is it?क्या समय हुआ है?kya samay hua hai?
What o'clock is it?कितने बजे हैं?kitne baje hain?
O'clockबजेbaje
Hourघंटाghanta
Minuteमिनटminat
Quarter past (+15)सवाsava
Half past (+30)साढ़ेsaadhe
Quarter to (−15)पौनेpaune
Two irregulars to memorise. "Half past one" is the special word डेढ़ (dedh) and "half past two" is ढाई (dhai) — you do not say saadhe ek or saadhe do. From three o'clock onward, साढ़े behaves normally: साढ़े तीन (3:30), साढ़े चार (4:30), and so on.

Example times on the clock

How everyday times are spoken aloud.
ClockHindiPronunciation
1:00एक बजेek baje
2:15सवा दोsava do
1:30डेढ़ बजेdedh baje
2:30ढाई बजेdhai baje
3:30साढ़े तीनsaadhe teen
3:45पौने चारpaune chaar
4:15सवा चारsava chaar
5:00पाँच बजेpaanch baje
10:10दस बजकर दस मिनटdas bajkar das minat

Parts of the day

Attach these to a time to fix it as morning or night.
EnglishHindiPronunciation
Morningसुबहsubah
Noon / afternoonदोपहरdopahar
Eveningशामshaam
Nightरातraat
Todayआजaaj
Tomorrow / yesterdayकलkal
Date (calendar)तारीख़taareekh

Usage notes & common mistakes

a.m. / p.m. Hindi has no a.m./p.m.; you place the part of the day before the time. "Seven in the morning" is सुबह सात बजे (subah saat baje), and "eight at night" is रात आठ बजे (raat aath baje).

The same word for tomorrow and yesterday. कल (kal) means both — the verb tense tells you which. With a future verb it's tomorrow; with a past verb it's yesterday. The day before/after is परसों (parson).

Speaking dates. Dates are read as "number + month": "the 5th of June" is पाँच जून (paanch joon). For the day-of-month number you use ordinary counting (see our numbers page), and the English month names are widely used and understood. For the month list itself, see months in Hindi.

The classic beginner trap is forcing saadhe onto one and two o'clock. Say डेढ़ and ढाई instead — every native speaker does.

Translate your own text

Need to write an exact time, a meeting date, or a schedule in Hindi? Type it below.

Frequently asked

How do you ask the time in Hindi?
Say क्या समय हुआ है? (kya samay hua hai?) or, more casually, कितने बजे हैं? (kitne baje hain?) — both mean "what time is it?"
What does baje mean in Hindi?
बजे (baje) is "o'clock". दो बजे (do baje) is two o'clock. It comes from बजना, "to chime", from when a clock struck the hour.
How do you say quarter and half past in Hindi?
Hindi uses single words: सवा (sava, quarter past), साढ़े (saadhe, half past), and पौने (paune, quarter to). So सवा तीन = 3:15, साढ़े तीन = 3:30, पौने चार = 3:45.
What are the parts of the day in Hindi?
They are सुबह (subah, morning), दोपहर (dopahar, afternoon), शाम (shaam, evening), and रात (raat, night). Put them before the time to mark a.m. or p.m.
Why is 1:30 not "saadhe ek"?
One-thirty and two-thirty are irregular: they're the special words डेढ़ (dedh) and ढाई (dhai). From 3:30 onward, साढ़े works normally.