هو हो ho
H هو हो ho [Prk. होइअ; S. भूत्वा], conj. part. (of honā), Having been; being:—ho-ānā, v.n. For this and other compounds, see s.v. honā.
هو हू hū
H هو हू hū, s.m. Noise, report, rumour, &c. (i.q. hūhā, q.v.).
هی है hai, haʼe i.q. hāy, or hāʼe, the more com. form in Hindī
P H هی है hai, haʼe (i.q. hāy, or hāʼe, the more com. form in Hindī), intj. Ah! alas! strange! wonderful! eh! ha!:—hai-hai, or haʼe-haʼe, Alas, alas! alack-a-day! alas the day! well-a-day!
هي है hai, and Braj हे he
H هي है hai, (and Braj) हे he [old H. (2nd pers. sing.) ahasi, ahahi, or hai; Prk. prob. अहहि=S. अस्+असि (cf. hūṅ);—old H. (3rd pers. sing.) ahaʼi, or ahai; prob. Prk. अहइ=S. अस्+अति], (Thou) art;—(he, she, or it) is;—he (in Braj also)=ʻwere':—hai, adv. It is so; yes; indeed.
ه hā called hāʼe-hawwaz, 'h of the word hawwaz,' or hāʼe-mudawwara, 'the round h'
ه hā (called hāʼe-hawwaz, 'h of the word hawwaz,' or hāʼe-mudawwara, 'the round h'), is the thirty-fourth letter of the Urdū alphabet (the thirty-first of the Persian and the twenty-seventh of the Arabic alphabet), and corresponds to ह ha, the thirty-third consonant of the Hindī or Devanāgarī alphabet. It is one of the guttural letters, having the sound of the English h. When used to denote a number, it stands for five; and in almanacs it may represent Thursday, or the zodiacal sign Virgo:—hāʼe-jalī, or hāʼe-z̤āhir, or hāʼe-malfūz̤ī, The perceptible h (at the end of a word, as h in bādshāh):—hāʼe-mukhtafī, or hāʼe-maktūbī, The imperceptible h (at the end of a word, as in بہانه bahāna):—ha-kār, s.m. The letter or sound ha.