Talk:मरना

Future Imperatives in Hindi
There are some conjugations given in the conjugation table which I have issues with, which are,

1. there are two tenses of imperatives in Hindi, present, and future. People often skip or do not realise that there are two tenses in imperatives because most languages don't. It's a rare feature in languages, especially in Indo-European (modern-day). And this conjugation pattern (shown below in the table) is valid for all Hindi verbs, so it should and must be mentioned in the conjugation table. Also, there is Jussive mood in Hindi which means indirect orders are possible to give in Hindi, which means 3rd person imperatives are possible.

I'll give examples to make this clear, context being someone giving directions to someone:


 * तुम 2 कीलोमीटर आगे जाना और फिर वहाँ से दाएँ मुड़ जाना।
 * तुम 2 कीलोमीटर आगे जाओ और फिर वहाँ से दाएँ मुड़ जाना।
 * तुम 2 कीलोमीटर आगे जाओ और फिर वहाँ से दाएँ मुड़ जाओ। (ungrammatical sentence!)

You can change the future imperative to the present imperative in the first sentence to make the first sentence, however, if you do the same with the future imperative मुड़ जाना at the end, the sentence becomes ungrammatical. So, it is a fundamental conjugation of Hindi which cannot be ignored in the conjugation table.

Agentive Feminine Plural Wrong
The agentive impersonal shows feminine plural as मरनेवाली but it should be मरनेवालीं. When you use it as the future participle then the nasalisation can be optionally be removed there but it cannot be removed when it is not used as a participle.

Progressive Participle Missing
The progressive participle (an impersonal form) is missing in the table of Hindi impersonal forms. करते-करते, मरते-मरते etc are very fundamental to Hindi too. And, I think it is the only impersonal form missing in the conjugation table.