Bengali Language/Pronouns

Personal Pronouns
Bengali personal pronouns share some similarities with pronouns in other Indo-Aryan languages and even English, but also some marked differences compared to these languages.


 * Pronouns do not differentiate for gender - the same pronoun can be used for a male or a female person.
 * The second-person pronouns have three forms - the very familiar (VF), the familiar (F), and the polite (P) forms. Which set of pronouns is to be used in a given situation depends on the familiarity/intimacy of the person to the speaker (similar to the tú/usted distinction in Spanish).
 * Similarly, the third-person pronouns also have three forms - the familiar (F), the polite (P), and the inanimate (I) - where the inanimate pronouns are used to refer to inanimate objects. The VF form doesn't apply to third-person pronouns.
 * In addition to the different pronouns for familiarity/intimacy, the third-person pronouns also offer three forms based on the on proximity of the person to the speaker - the here (H), the there (T), and the elsewhere (E) forms. The first is used to refer to people who are nearby, the second to those a little far away, and the last to refer to those who aren't present at all.

Let's start by looking at all these personal pronouns for the nominative case.

Nominative case
The nominative case is used to refer to the subjects in the sentence, such as "I am talking", or "You look great!".

Objective case
The objective case is used to refer to the direct or indirect objects in speech, (i.e., upon which (or whom) the verb acts), such as "I am talking to him", or "He took it".

Note that the I (inanimate) pronouns remain the same in objective case as they are in the nominative case. Typically this isn't a problem since the context can easily determine if a pronoun is acting as a subject or an object. For all the other pronouns, simply adding the -কে ("ke") suffix for singular pronouns, and the -দেরকে ("derke") suffix for the plural pronouns, along with slight modification the original nominative pronoun, yields the objective case pronoun.

Possessive case
The possessive case is used to show possession, such as "Where is your coat?" or "Let's go to our house". In addition, sentences such as "I have a book" or "I need money" (আমার টাকা দরকার) also use the possessive (more on this in later chapters).

Again, similar to the objective case pronouns, pronouns in the possessive case are formed by introducing small suffixes (র for singular, দের for plural) to the corresponding nominative pronoun, along with slight modifications.

Demonstrative Pronouns
Before you proceed to study the demonstrative pronouns, make sure you understand the singular and plural articles/markers describe in the Nouns chapter.

Demonstrative pronouns - this, that, these, those - are used to point out things or refer to previously defined objects in a sentence without naming them again. Observe some examples below to see how we would use them in Bengali: As you may have already noticed, there are two basic pronouns - এ and ও - and these are suffixed with specific markers to make them refer to particular objects. Similar to the articles used to refer to nouns, the -টা marker is for singular nouns, while -গুলো is for plural nouns, although these can be replaced with -টি/-গুলি.

These pronouns can be used in interrogative sentences as well (note that কি is the translation for 'what' in the examples below): Notice that these pronouns are identical to the third-person personal pronouns (H and T forms) for inanimate objects. For animate beings - you guessed it - you would use the third-person H and T pronouns in F or P, depending on the formality you wish to convey to the person being referred by the pronoun. Observe the examples below using the F form (note that কে is the translation for 'who', and কারা refers to 'who' in the plural) : As with the pronouns in the inanimate case, there are two basic pronouns - এ and ও - and these are suffixed with specific markers to make them refer to particular people. For singular animate nouns, no marker is used, while -রা is for plural animate nouns.