How to Say अक्सर, हमेशा, शायद ही कभी in English | Speaking Practice & Vocabulary from Hindi | Awal

Learn how to say अक्सर, हमेशा, कभी कबार, कभी नहीं, शायद ही कभी, बहुत बार, बहुत कम, etc. in English. Learn 10 daily English conversation words with meaning in Hindi, along with example sentences with subtitles, in this Hindi to English lesson by Awal.

If you want to be fluent in spoken English, you have to know the right translation for sentences that you use in your own language. The 10 words taught in this video are also called as Adverbs of Frequency, because you use these words to tell someone how frequently something is done. Awal has also provided full form and meaning of FAQ in this video. Increase your vocabulary, learn new words and improve your English speaking skills through this video.

This video is helpful for beginners as well as others to learn the translation of Hindi words to English words, improve vocabulary by knowing new English words, and practicing sentences to have conversation with people in English confidently and fluently.

This video is in simple Hindi / Urdu for Indians, Pakistanis and anyone who can understand Hindi. This video will help you in daily use English practice with translation from Hindi.

Watch other videos of Awal on link below:
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLR2GOVaoHO5_o33NOUcvgtFI5IUDInB4K

Follow Awal on Facebook:
http://www.facebook.com/LearnEnglishWithAwal

https://www.youtube.com/TSMadaan is a Hindi Life Changing Videos Channel by Ts Madaan to raise your Success and Happiness level on various subjects like motivation inspiration and self help plus personality development. This channel also shows health videos and English Videos by various trainers.

19 Replies to “How to Say अक्सर, हमेशा, शायद ही कभी in English | Speaking Practice & Vocabulary from Hindi | Awal”

  1. I have never seen before such a great teacher like you ❤️🥰😍❤️
    Your every video just class-apart sir ❤️🥰❤️

  2. Sir plz simple past indefinite ke only postive sentence ki video bna do🙏 Interogative aur negtive nhi

Comments are closed.