- Introduction to Punjabi
- Gurmukhi Script
- Pronunciation & Tones
- Grammar Foundations
- Useful Phrases
- Apps & Tools
- Books & Courses
- Listening & Audio
- Study Strategy
1. Introduction to Punjabi
Punjabi (ਪੰਜਾਬੀ) is spoken by roughly 125 million people worldwide, making it one of the most spoken languages on earth — yet it receives far less learner attention than its size warrants. It is the primary language of the Punjab regions of India and Pakistan, and has major diaspora communities in the United Kingdom, Canada, and Australia.
There are two major written standards: Gurmukhi (ਗੁਰਮੁਖੀ), used in Indian Punjab and by the Sikh community globally, and Shahmukhi (a Perso-Arabic script), used in Pakistani Punjab. This guide focuses on the Indian Punjabi / Gurmukhi standard, as it has more learner resources available in English.
What makes Punjabi interesting for English speakers
- A tonal Indo-European language — Punjabi is one of the very few Indo-European languages that uses lexical tone (pitch) to distinguish word meaning, making it a rare bridge between European-style grammar and East Asian-style phonology.
- Rich oral tradition — Punjabi has a vast tradition of folk poetry (including the works of Bulleh Shah and Waris Shah), Gurbani (the sacred scripture of Sikhism), and popular music including bhangra.
- Shared vocabulary with Hindi/Urdu — Progress in Punjabi gives you a useful running start on Hindi and Urdu. Many core words and structural patterns overlap.
- Diaspora accessibility — If you are in the UK, Canada, or Australia, there are likely Punjabi speakers in your city. This makes finding conversation partners and immersion opportunities far easier than for most languages.
How hard is Punjabi for English speakers?
The Foreign Service Institute does not formally classify Punjabi, but it is broadly comparable in difficulty to Hindi or Urdu — estimated around 1,100 hours for professional proficiency. The grammar is learnable and reasonably regular; the bigger adjustments for English speakers are the script, the tonal system, and a set of consonants that simply do not exist in English.
2. Gurmukhi Script
Gurmukhi is an abugida — each character represents a consonant with an inherent vowel sound (the vowel /a/), and additional diacritics modify or replace that vowel. It is written left to right. Unlike English spelling, Gurmukhi orthography is highly phonetic: once you know the letters, you can read with predictable accuracy.
There are 35 base consonants, 10 independent vowels, and a set of vowel diacritics. Learning the script is strongly recommended from the start — Punjabi romanization is non-standardized and inconsistent across sources.
Gurmukhi vowel diacritics (matras)
| Diacritic | Name | Sound | Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| ਾ | Aara | /aː/ | ਮਾ (maa — mother) |
| ਿ | Sihari | /ɪ/ | ਕਿ (ki — what) |
| ੀ | Lavan | /iː/ | ਨੀ (nee) |
| ੁ | Dulavan | /ʊ/ | ਤੁ (tu) |
| ੂ | Dulavan (long) | /uː/ | ਤੂ (tuu — you) |
| ੇ | Lavan (long) | /eː/ | ਮੇਰੇ (mere — my) |
| ੈ | Dulae Lavan | /ɛː/ | ਕੈ (kai) |
| ੋ | Hora | /oː/ | ਹੋਣਾ (honaa — to be) |
| ੌ | Kanaura | /ɔː/ | ਕੌਣ (kaun — who) |
Practical tip: Learn to write the Gurmukhi alphabet in the first week. A workbook or dedicated Gurmukhi app (see the Apps section) is invaluable. Aim to be able to read (not necessarily understand) basic Gurmukhi within 3–4 weeks.
3. Pronunciation & Tones
Punjabi has sounds that are challenging for English speakers, and a tonal system that is unlike anything in European languages. Take both seriously from the start.
Consonants: retroflex and aspirated stops
Punjabi has two sets of consonants that English lacks entirely:
- Retroflex consonants — produced with the tongue curled back to touch the roof of the mouth: ਟ /ʈ/, ਡ /ɖ/, ਣ /ɳ/, ਲ਼ /ɭ/. These contrast with dental consonants (tongue behind upper teeth): ਤ /t̪/, ਦ /d̪/. English speakers typically hear both as "t" and "d" — but mixing them up changes word meaning.
- Aspirated stops — consonants followed by a puff of air. Punjabi has four pairs: ਪ/ਫ (p/ph), ਤ/ਥ (t/th), ਕ/ਖ (k/kh), ਬ/ਭ (b/bh). English "p" in "pot" is aspirated; in "spot" it is not. Punjabi uses aspiration to distinguish meaning.
The three tones
Punjabi has three lexical tones: high-falling (ਉੱਚਾ), low-rising (ਨੀਵਾਂ), and level/mid (ਮੱਧ). Tone is not marked in standard Gurmukhi — it is instead indicated by the presence of the consonants H (ਹ) and the voiced aspirates (ਘ, ਝ, ਢ, ਧ, ਭ) in the word's structure. English speakers often find this counterintuitive at first: "the letter h doesn't sound like h here?"
Tone examples
| Word | Meaning | Tone |
|---|---|---|
| ਕੋੜਾ (kora) | whip | High-falling |
| ਕੋੜ੍ਹਾ (korha) | leper | Low-rising |
| ਕੋਰਾ (kora) | blank / new | Level |
These three words are nearly indistinguishable in romanization but completely different in Punjabi. Tone matters.
4. Grammar Foundations
Punjabi is a Subject-Object-Verb (SOV) language — the verb comes at the end of the sentence, which is the exact opposite of English (SVO). This is the single biggest structural shift for English speakers to make.
Word order: SOV vs. SVO
English: I am eating an apple. → Subject + Verb + Object
Punjabi: ਮੈਂ ਸੇਬ ਖਾ ਰਿਹਾ ਹਾਂ। → Subject + Object + Verb
Translated literally: I apple eating am.
This verb-final pattern is consistent throughout Punjabi. Adjectives precede nouns; postpositions follow nouns (rather than prepositions before them).
Grammatical gender
Punjabi has two grammatical genders: masculine and feminine. Gender affects noun endings, adjective agreement, and verb conjugation. Unlike Romance languages, there is no reliable article to signal gender — you learn each noun with its gender.
| Masculine | Feminine |
|---|---|
| ਕੁੱਤਾ (kutta — dog) | ਕੁੱਤੀ (kutti — female dog) |
| ਵੱਡਾ ਘਰ (vadda ghar — big house) | ਵੱਡੀ ਕਿਤਾਬ (vaddi kitab — big book) |
Postpositions instead of prepositions
Where English uses prepositions before nouns ("in the house," "with my friend"), Punjabi uses postpositions after nouns:
- ਘਰ ਵਿੱਚ (ghar vich) — in the house (literally: house in)
- ਦੋਸਤ ਨਾਲ (dost nal) — with a friend (literally: friend with)
- ਸ਼ਹਿਰ ਤੋਂ (shehar ton) — from the city (literally: city from)
Postpositions also trigger oblique case — noun endings change when followed by a postposition. This is one of the trickiest patterns for beginners.
Verb conjugation basics
Punjabi verbs conjugate for gender, number, and tense. The infinitive ends in -ਣਾ (-ṇā): ਖਾਣਾ (to eat), ਜਾਣਾ (to go), ਕਰਨਾ (to do).
| Pronoun | ਕਰਨਾ (to do) — Present |
|---|---|
| ਮੈਂ (I) | ਕਰਦਾ ਹਾਂ / ਕਰਦੀ ਹਾਂ (m/f) |
| ਤੂੰ (you – informal) | ਕਰਦਾ ਹੈਂ / ਕਰਦੀ ਹੈਂ |
| ਆਪ (you – formal) | ਕਰਦੇ ਹੋ |
| ਉਹ (he/she/they) | ਕਰਦਾ ਹੈ / ਕਰਦੀ ਹੈ |
| ਅਸੀਂ (we) | ਕਰਦੇ ਹਾਂ |
5. Useful Phrases
Greetings & basics
| Punjabi | Transliteration | English |
|---|---|---|
| ਸਤਿ ਸ੍ਰੀ ਅਕਾਲ | Sat Sri Akal | Traditional Sikh greeting (also general hello) |
| ਹੈਲੋ / ਹੈਲੋ ਜੀ | Hello / Hello ji | Casual hello (ji adds respect) |
| ਕਿਵੇਂ ਹੋ? | Kiven ho? | How are you? |
| ਮੈਂ ਠੀਕ ਹਾਂ। | Main theek haan. | I'm fine. |
| ਤੁਹਾਡਾ ਨਾਮ ਕੀ ਹੈ? | Tuhada naam ki hai? | What is your name? |
| ਮੇਰਾ ਨਾਮ ___ ਹੈ। | Mera naam ___ hai. | My name is ___. |
| ਧੰਨਵਾਦ | Dhanyavaad | Thank you |
| ਕੋਈ ਗੱਲ ਨਹੀਂ | Koi gal nahi | No problem / You're welcome |
| ਮੈਨੂੰ ਨਹੀਂ ਸਮਝ ਆਈ। | Mainu nahi samajh aai. | I didn't understand. |
| ਹੌਲੀ ਬੋਲੋ ਜੀ। | Hauli bolo ji. | Please speak slowly. |
6. Apps & Tools
Resource reality check: Punjabi has far fewer learner tools than major languages like Spanish or Mandarin. Apps like Duolingo do not offer Punjabi. Focus your energy on the resources below, which genuinely support Punjabi from English.
- Anki — The best vocabulary tool available. Search AnkiWeb for "Punjabi" decks, or build your own Gurmukhi–English deck. Free on desktop/Android; one-time purchase on iOS.
- Ling App — One of the few apps that actually supports Punjabi from English. Covers script, vocabulary, and basic phrases. Not as comprehensive as Duolingo for other languages, but a legitimate starting point.
- Glosbe Punjabi–English — A bilingual dictionary with real corpus examples. Useful for seeing words in context.
- Google Translate (Punjabi) — Covers Gurmukhi; useful for quick lookups and pronunciation via text-to-speech, though accuracy varies. Use it as a tool, not as a teacher.
- iTalki — Finding a Punjabi tutor or language partner here is the most efficient path to conversational practice. Community tutors are often inexpensive; search specifically for native Punjabi speakers from Indian Punjab.
7. Books & Courses
- Teach Yourself Punjabi (Hodder / Teach Yourself series) — The most complete structured course for English speakers. Covers Gurmukhi, grammar, and vocabulary systematically.
- Colloquial Punjabi (Routledge) — A solid audio-accompanied course; focuses on spoken Punjabi as used in daily life.
- Gurbani texts — If you are interested in Sikhism, reading Gurbani (the Guru Granth Sahib) with a transliteration guide is a meaningful and immersive way to build reading fluency, since the text is widely available with word-by-word translations.
- SOAS Punjabi online resources — The School of Oriental and African Studies (University of London) has made some introductory Punjabi materials freely available online.
8. Listening & Audio
- Punjabi music (bhangra, folk) — Music is one of the most natural listening resources. Artists like Gurdas Maan, Surjit Bindrakhia, and Satinder Sartaaj use rich, traditional Punjabi. Bollywood Punjabi pop is simpler and more colloquial.
- PTC Punjabi / Zee Punjabi — Punjabi-language television channels available via YouTube. News and drama programs provide exposure to spoken formal and informal registers.
- YouTube: "Learn Punjabi" channels — Search for "Punjabi sikhiye" (ਪੰਜਾਬੀ ਸਿੱਖੀਏ) channels aimed at diaspora learners. Some are excellent for beginners.
- Punjabi Radio (BBC Asian Network / Radio Punjab) — Available online; provides spoken Punjabi in a natural context.
9. Study Strategy
Recommended learning sequence
- Weeks 1–3: Learn Gurmukhi script. Don't skip this. Romanization is inconsistent and will create bad habits. Use a structured workbook or the Ling App's script module.
- Weeks 4–8: Core grammar (gender, SOV order, postpositions, present tense verbs) using Teach Yourself Punjabi or Colloquial Punjabi.
- Month 3 onwards: Add Anki for vocabulary, iTalki for conversation, and passive listening (music, TV).
- Throughout: Tone awareness. Practice distinguishing the three tones in real words from the beginning — don't defer this.
What to expect
Punjabi has fewer structured resources than Hindi, but the grammar is similar. If you find that a Punjabi resource is too thin in an area, Hindi grammar books and Hindi YouTube lessons often apply directly and can fill the gap. Treat proximity to Hindi and Urdu as a dividend — not a crutch.
Questions or resource suggestions: stevelegg2000@gmail.com