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1. Common Verbs 

See

Chūḍu

English

Telugu

See

Present Tense

- I see: Nēnu chūstunnānu

- You see: Nuvvu chūstunnāvu

- He/She sees: Ataḍu/Aame chūstunnāḍu/chūstundi

- We see: Manaṁ chūstunnāmu

- They see: Vāru chūstunnāru

Present Continuous Tense

- I am seeing: Nēnu chūstunnānu

- You are seeing: Nuvvu chūstunnāvu

Future Tense

- I will see: Nēnu chūstānu

- You will see: Nuvvu chūstāvu

Past Tense

- I saw: Nēnu chūsānu

- You saw: Nuvvu chūsāvu

- He/She saw: Ataḍu/Aame chūsāḍu/chūsindi

Negative Forms

- I do not see: Nēnu chūḍanu

- I did not see: Nēnu chūḍalēdu

Interrogative Forms

- Did you see?: Nuvvu chūsāvā?

- Will you see?: Nuvvu chūstāvē?

Imperative Forms

- See (command): Chūḍu

- Please see: Dayachēsi chūḍaṇḍi

Usage in Sentances

- Please see the picture: Dayachēsi chitraṁ chūḍaṇḍi

- Did you see the movie?: Nuvvu sinimā chūsāvā?

- She sees the problem: Aame samasya chūstundi

- They saw the event: Vāru jaruguthunna vishayam chūsāru

- I will not see that: Nēnu adhi chūḍanu

Practice Exercises

- We are seeing the results: Manaṁ phalithālu chūstunnāmu

- He did not see the sign: Ataḍu pāta chīna chūḍalēdu

- Will you see the match?: Nuvvu pōtu chūstāvē?

Additional Vocabulary

- See clearly: Spashṭamga chūḍu

- See again: Malla chūḍu

Cultural Notes

- In Telugu culture, seeing often implies understanding or realizing something. It's common to use visual metaphors to express insight or enlightenment.

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