A complete path from your very first namaskaar to holding a real conversation, greetings, grammar, all six tenses, and the everyday speech of Maharashtra. Self-paced, phone-first, with native audio on every word.
This course started as something I built for my own Marathi learning, and I'm proud to share it. Start with Module 1 and go in order, each one builds on the one before. The 24 modules are designed to be worked through in about a month, but finishing them isn't the same as the language staying with you. That's why your access runs well beyond 30 days: the real progress comes from coming back, practising, and testing yourself again.
Modules unlock as you go, so every new idea rests on one you've already met.
Designed for ~30 days of first-pass learning, with access well beyond so you can return and revise.
Pair the lessons with the Boliye Abhyas practice quiz to check what's actually stuck.
All 24 modules are live, from your first greeting through every tense to the everyday speech of Maharashtra.
Your first words, namaskaar, dhanyavaad, kripayaa, maaf karaa, ho, naahi, how to introduce yourself, and polite vs. casual greetings.
Talk about home, village, town, city, district, state; say “I live in Pune”; and see how “my” (माझा/माझी/माझे) changes shape.
Name the everyday world, animals, fruits, vegetables, objects, professions, the body, and say “I like X” as the verb shifts by gender.
Count one to a hundred, the days Monday to Sunday, and clock phrases like “it's half past three”, across two real conversations.
The quarter system for telling time, plus rupees and paise, asking prices, bargaining, and paying by UPI.
54 essential words across colours, fruits, flowers, animals, birds and the body, with audio, and a relaxed picnic chat with Aaji.
Talk through your day from morning to night, with verbs that change with the speaker's gender, plus a Sunday phone call with Ajoba.
All eight pronouns from मी to तुम्ही, and how आहे changes for each, so you can say “I am a teacher”.
Say “not” and ask yes/no questions with naahi and kaa, building on the aahe forms from Module 8.
Spot a noun's gender from its -aa / -ee / -e ending, handle the exceptions, and build plurals, plus adjectives that shift with gender.
my, your, his, her, our, their, where the ending matches the object's gender, not the speaker's, plus the -la suffix.
Six pointing words, haa/hee/hey and toh/tee/tey, that agree with the object's gender and number.
Marathi's nine question words and six essential location words, seen at work in two real conversations.
Wanting, asking, telling, refusing, three wanting words, twelve ways to command, and how to firmly refuse an OTP scam call.
Your first tense, say what happened, with the two gender-agreement patterns and 24 everyday verbs.
What's happening this very moment, the stem + त + aahe pattern, shifting across seven pronouns.
What you do regularly, agreement endings across pronouns, with a clean contrast to the present continuous.
What will happen, future endings across pronouns, with a three-way contrast so the tenses stay distinct.
What was going on at a past moment, the past be-form across nine gender-sensitive patterns.
What you'll be in the middle of doing, future be-forms, closing with all six tenses tested together.
Twenty postpositions for place, direction and time, the -la suffix, and compounds like gharachya samor (in front of the house).
Around sixty adjectives and thirty adverbs, variable ones shift with gender, invariable ones and adverbs never change.
Around twenty connectors for joining, contrast and cause, plus matched pairs like jo…to and jevha…tevha.
The capstone, seven survival packs and ten real conversations where grammar becomes live speech, each with a He/She toggle.
Module 1 is waiting. Currently in beta at a discounted launch price, and your feedback shapes what comes next.