Hindi Lessons in Brighton. Learn Hindi
We provide native-speaking, fully-qualified Hindi language trainers for individual, paired, or small-group learners. Whether you are learning for personal or business reasons, your trainer will incorporate your individual needs and learning goals into your personalised syllabus. Classes can be held at your office or home, on weekdays or weekends, and at the most convenient time of day for you.
One-to-one General/Business
Hindi Course in Brighton
If you want to be taught Hindi for academic reasons, business needs or gain a working knowledge of the language for general purposes, our tailormade lessons are guaranteed to be the ideal solution.
While a General Hindi course will provide you with enough linguistic ammunition to allow you to survive a short visit to the country (greetings, basic conversation and a solid grammatical foundation). Business courses will centre more on formal, business communication, and focus more on reading and writing skills as you advance further.
Courses are, however, tailor-made - you cover in your lessons what you need to cover. Most students taking a Business Hindi course will gain telephone and email expertise, as well as general conversation skills. Likewise, a General course can include specific elements that are integral to your needs, for example if you need vocabulary specific to buying property overseas.
Typical Business course students include those in international import/export, those hoping to gain acquisitions in foreign countries, those within multinational corporations, and people who do business with foreign institutions and governments. General courses in Hindi suit those hoping to emigrate to foreign shores, people with a view to travel to countries where Hindi is the vernacular tongue, those with a keen interest in Hindi culture and language, and people with foreign spouses.
› Two-to-One and Small Group - Hindi Course in Brighton (closed group)
Info about Brighton
Sunny Brighton is the most popular seaside resort in the UK, and a real centre for multiculturalism, which is promoted throughout the city. Each summer brings with it many thousands of students from overseas, coming to Brighton to learn English and, if they're lucky, to get a glimpse of British sunshine. Over 8 million tourists also visit Brighton every year.
Brighton's popularity is mainly because the city has so much to offer; thanks to the seafront, the buzzing nightlife, the annual Brighton festival, its proximity to London, the huge array of shops and boutiques, and much more.
The ethnic mix in Brighton is a testament to the easy-going lifestyle throughout the city, and makes it a fantastic place to pick up a new language from scratch - especially for the more popular European tongues like German, French, Spanish and Italian; though there are plenty of other cultures in abundance throughout the city.
Brighton Facts
- Population of Brighton: 898721
- Top restaurants in Brighton: Hotel du Vin
- Top Sports Teams in Brighton: Sussex County Cricket Cub
- Top hotels in Brighton: Hilton Brighton Metropole Hotel
- Famous Parties in Brighton: Gay Pride
Info about Hindi
Although it is the official language in only India, Pakistan and Fiji; as many as 500 million people worldwide are native speakers of Hindi. Dating back to the end of the 10th century AD, 'Standard Hindi' is basically a dialect (known as khari boli) which has had vocabulary from Sanskrit introduced to it, and is written using the Devanagari script.
Increasingly in recent years, many speakers of Hindi are also able to speak 'Hinglish', a vernacular language in which Hindi and English are used together. This is mostly heard in highly-populated urban areas, but thanks to the popularity of Bollywood, the use of English in Indian schools and the introduction of cable television, Hinglish is becoming more and more accepted amongst Hindi speakers.
With the huge amount of Indian and Pakistani immigrants found across the UK, Hindi can be heard in many areas of the country, and is an exciting and relatively new language to pick up.
Language Blog
'Foreign accent syndrome'A woman from Birmingham recently recovered from the flu only to find she had a French accent. 'I had a bad seizure and when it stopped my mouth wouldn't work. Over the next month, I had to learn to... » Read More
Our Twitter
SPRAT (noun): a small or inconsequential person or thing -- Word of the Day 12-05-04
- » Join the conversation
Hi Sol, I met Oliver and everything was good. All the best from Barcelona, Ryan
Typical course length:
• 30 hours per level
(classes are usually 2 hours each)
We also offer packages of:
• 20 hours
• 50 hours
• 100 hours
(with discounted rates)















