What's new

CRPF to Use 'Shaheed' For Troopers Killed in Line of Duty

Comparing Hindi which is a recent corruption of Urdu with Arabic which is thousands of years old language is unfair.
Even in Urdu there r many Portugese words,these r called loan words at the best

And Muslims say Ameen not Amen. Arabic and Hebrew are both related languages.
Sirjee,u did not get my point. I know there r certain common words in Hindi,Arabic.(For eg Kannon,Kamiz)
Captain is also written as Kaptain whether it is Ameen or Amin,both are same.The word Ameen is Jewish word pronounced as (Ah-men),Infact The word "Amen" is not found anywhere in the Quran
On topic,here Shaheed is just a title for soldiers killed in line of duty by CRPF,it doesn't imply that Indians have adopted Arabic culture

"Hindi is a corruption of Urdu", oh dear god.:rofl:
@Jaanbaz
It is the other way,infact Urdu uses Hindi Grammar,if I am not wrong
 
Comparing Hindi which is a recent corruption of Urdu with Arabic which is thousands of years old language is unfair.

And Muslims say Ameen not Amen. Arabic and Hebrew are both related languages.

Hindi is the original one, the jaat villages of Western UP still speak purest of Khariboli, the Urdu was just pidgin created out of Hindi with Persian-Arabic words.
 
Hindi is the original one, the jaat villages of Western UP still speak purest of Khariboli, the Urdu was just pidgin created out of Hindi with Persian-Arabic words.

Exactly.But here in PDF,Hindi manages to become a "raped version of Urdu"!! :o: :pdf:
 
Urdu uses Hindi Grammar

Urdu uses Sanskrit grammar not Hindi. Hindi and Urdu are pretty much different dialects of the same language.

Hindi is the original one, the jaat villages of Western UP still speak purest of Khariboli, the Urdu was just pidgin created out of Hindi with Persian-Arabic words.

I believe Urdu itself was the actual language, as Urdu means camp in Turkic languages. It was the language of invaders, when local population started adopting Urdu, from there it probably shifted towards Sanskrit based grammar instead of Turkic.
 
Urdu uses Sanskrit grammar not Hindi. Hindi and Urdu are pretty much different dialects of the same language.

I believe Urdu itself was the actual language, as Urdu means camp in Turkic languages. It was the language of invaders, when local population started adopting Urdu, from there it probably shifted towards Sanskrit based grammar instead of Turkic.

you mean Urdu is an Altaic language of Turkic people :rofl::rofl: Do you have any idea about Sanskrit grammar, I have studied Sanskrit. As I mentioned earlier, Urdu is the just a pidgin developed out of the Hindi with Arabic-Persian loanwords. ;)
 
you mean Urdu is an Altaic language of Turkic people

I never claimed such thing. Try to read carefully before laughing like a pregnant donkey. Cheers.

Do you have any idea about Sanskrit grammar,

That is why I said Urdu currently uses Sanskrit grammar.

I have studied Sanskrit

You haven't studied anything but 101 on trolling.

As I mentioned earlier, Urdu is the just a pidgin developed out of the Hindi with Arabic-Persian loanwords.

You keep saying Hindi, what is Hindi? It looks like a bastardized version of Urdu to me.
 
I never claimed such thing. Try to read carefully before laughing like a pregnant donkey. Cheers.



That is why I said Urdu currently uses Sanskrit grammar.



You haven't studied anything but 101 on trolling.

I have these two sentences for you. ;)

1. Pot calling the kettle black.
2. A little learning is a dangerous thing.
 
I have these two sentences for you. ;)

1. Pot calling the kettle black.
2. A little learning is a dangerous thing.

You have a long way to go my friend. Reading a few books and ''studying'' Sanskrit does not make you a professor in history of Urdu.
 
You have a long way to go my friend. Reading a few books and ''studying'' Sanskrit does not make you a professor in history of Urdu.

Yes, once I read some Pakistani article claiming Urdu is 70% Persian, 30% Persian-Arabic and 0% Indian, there is a limit in faking of history in Pakistan. :rofl::rofl::rofl: BTW I learned Sanskrit in school and passed the exam and also aware of history of my language from Vedic Sanskrit to Prakrit to modern Hindi. ;)
 
Yes, once I read some Pakistani article claiming Urdu is 70% Persian, 30% Persian-Arabic and 0% Indian

Probably some cow manure, ironically similar to the ones left behind by you on most of the threads here.
 
The name Zaban e Urdu e Mualla was coined by Shah Jehan in 17th century, before that it was known with various names like Hindustani, Hindi/Hindavi, Dehlavi etc. for the language of the native Indians while the Muslims dynasties spoke Persian.

Urdu’s origin: it’s not a ‘camp language’ - Newspaper - DAWN.COM

Really? You posted a link of Dawn newspaper. And I haven't disagreed over the various dialects of Urdu. Urdu was also known as Hindustani. But I have never heard of Urdu being referred as Hindi.
 
Probably some cow manure, ironically similar to the ones left behind by you on most of the threads here.

Here it the history of Urdu according to Pakistanis. :omghaha::omghaha::omghaha:

Urdu, the national language of Pakistan, was created around the 1600’s in Central Asia.:lol::lol::lol: The word ‘Urdu’ comes from the Turkish word ‘ordu’ meaning ‘camp’ or ‘army’. It was used as a unifying communication tool between the Muslim soldiers during their conquest of Ancient India (including Countries east until Myanmar) and Eastern Persia. These soldiers were of Persian, Arab, or Turkish descent. The majority of the soldiers, however, were of Persian origin. This directly affected the language to be used between them. The language of the government and that which dominated earlier on was Farsi, but eventually changed to Urdu to accommodate the other races. Despite the fact, Urdu vocabulary contains approximately 70% Farsi and the rest being a mix of Arabic and Turkish. :lol::lol::lol: The grammar takes some elements from Farsi and Arabic but also has elements that are unique and different from all three of its mother tongues. In current times, however, many Urdu speakers have adopted many English and Hindi terms following the effects of globalization and the success of Bollywood, the Indian film industry, in Pakistan.

URDU ZABAN KI INFORMATION
 
Pakistanis wrote their whole national anthem in Persian. Once I showed it to one of my Iranian friends, he understood it almost completely. Sadly most Pakistanis probably understand 20-30% of it. Nearly everything about Pakistanis from religion to language is borrowed from outsiders. And then they have the gall to lecture others on the use of a foreign origin term. :lol:
 
Here it the history of Urdu according to Pakistanis. :omghaha::omghaha::omghaha:

Urdu, the national language of Pakistan, was created around the 1600’s in Central Asia.:lol::lol::lol: The word ‘Urdu’ comes from the Turkish word ‘ordu’ meaning ‘camp’ or ‘army’. It was used as a unifying communication tool between the Muslim soldiers during their conquest of Ancient India (including Countries east until Myanmar) and Eastern Persia. These soldiers were of Persian, Arab, or Turkish descent. The majority of the soldiers, however, were of Persian origin. This directly affected the language to be used between them. The language of the government and that which dominated earlier on was Farsi, but eventually changed to Urdu to accommodate the other races. Despite the fact, Urdu vocabulary contains approximately 70% Farsi and the rest being a mix of Arabic and Turkish. :lol::lol::lol: The grammar takes some elements from Farsi and Arabic but also has elements that are unique and different from all three of its mother tongues. In current times, however, many Urdu speakers have adopted many English and Hindi terms following the effects of globalization and the success of Bollywood, the Indian film industry, in Pakistan.

URDU ZABAN KI INFORMATION

Complete bull shit. I never believe this kind of manipulation of history. I think you are wrongly mistaking me for someone with identity crisis. You will have to try a bit more hard to troll me sir. :P
 

Latest posts

Back
Top Bottom