میں جوس پیتا ہوں۔ Main juice peeta hoon. मुझे जूस पीना अच्छा लगता है।

English: I drink juice.

Grammar Focus:

Tense: Present Simple – used to describe regular habits and actions that happen often or every day.

Structure: Subject + verb + Object. (I = Subject, drink = verb, juice = Object)

Simple Rule: When you want to describe an action of consuming something, use: Subject + action word + what you are consuming.

Urdu Insight:

میں (Main): Means "I" – the person doing the action

جوس (Juice): Means "juice" – a masculine noun in Urdu

پیتا (Pita): Means "drink" – verb in masculine singular form matching the subject "I"

ہوں (Hoon): Means "am" – helper verb showing present time with "I"

In Urdu: Verbs change their ending based on who is doing the action. "Pita" is for "I/he" (masculine), "piti" is for "she" (feminine), and "pite" is for plural.

Use case Sentences:

When to Use: When describing the consumption of liquids and eating/drinking habits. Use this for daily routines involving food and beverages.

Examples: I drink water. She drinks milk. They drink tea. He drinks coffee.

Real-World: "I drink juice every morning for vitamins and energy." Or in Urdu: "Main har subah vitamins aur energy ke liye juice pita hoon."

Synonyms / Alternatives:

Synonyms: Words that mean the SAME thing

✓ "I consume juice." – more formal word for drinking

✓ "I have juice." – casual way of saying you drink juice

Alternatives: Different ways to say the SAME idea

✓ "I am drinking juice." – shows the action happening right now (Present Continuous)

✓ "I drink juice daily." – adds frequency information to the sentence

Common Mistake:

❌ Mistake: "I juice drink." (Wrong word order)

✅ Correct: "I drink juice." (Subject + verb + Object)

Why: In English, the verb comes directly after the subject, and the object comes after the verb.

❌ Mistake: "I drinks juice." (Wrong verb form)

✅ Correct: "I drink juice." (No 's' for "I")

Why: Only add 's' for he/she/it. For "I/you/we/they", the verb stays in base form.

Short Explanation:

"I drink juice" means you consume juice, typically as a beverage. It describes a regular habit or action involving drinking.

Subject (I): The person who is doing the action.

Verb (drink): The action being performed – what you are doing (consuming a liquid).

Object (juice): What is receiving the action – what is being consumed.

This sentence describes a consumption or eating/drinking habit. It's commonly used when talking about beverages, nutrition, daily routines, and food preferences.

Practice Exercise:

1. Fill the blank: "He ___ water." (drink / drinks)

Answer: drinks (because "he" needs 's' added)

2. Fill the blank: "They ___ milk." (drink / drinks)

Answer: drink (because "they" is plural, no 's')

3. Translate to English: "وہ چائے پیتی ہے۔" (Woh chai piti hai.)

Answer: "She drinks tea."

Why: Same pattern – Subject + verb + Object

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