Examples of using Pashto in English and their translations into Urdu
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Ecclesiastic
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Colloquial
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Computer
Pashto Sindhi Balochi.
Pashto- Pakistan- Book.
Pashto- Afghanistan- Book.
Language: Pashto- Pakistan.
Language: Pashto- Afghanistan.
French Kurmanji Pashto Tigrinya Turkish Urdu.
Northern Pashto* 75,000 Also spoken in Afghanistan.
Southern Pashto* 87,000 Also spoken in Afghanistan.
He was the only psychiatrist in northern Afghanistan to speak Pashto, the language of most Taliban.
Pashto is the most pervasive language while Hindko is the second most commonly spoken indigenous language.
Pashto is one of the official languages of Afghanistan
Abdul Hameed masho gagar(Pashto: عبدالحميد ماشوخېل- also known as Abdul Hamid Baba), was a Afghan poet
We believe Najid could well be a Pashto name but not one our translators had come across.
The term Dasht-e Yahudi literally means, the"Jewish Desert" in Urdu and"Jewish wasteland" in Pashto.[3] It is an archaic term that first appears in Persian,
Muhammad Ali Wazir(Pashto/Urdu: محمد علي وزیر)
It now publishes six magazines in Pashto, Dari, Urdu and Arabic, and posts news reports on 10 websites in five languages, as well as operating smaller websites that offer theological guidance, videos, and war poetry written by fighters.
Millions of Urdu speakers do not count Urdu as their mother tongue. Regional languages in South Asia that use the Arabic Script, such as Pashto, Sindhi, Balochi and Panjabi, are even more under-represented than Urdu in the digital sphere.
Parcham(Pashto/Persian: پرچم, meaning"Banner" or"Flag") was the name
Chapli Kebab or Kabab(Pashto: چپلي کباب)[lower-greek 1][lower-greek 2]
Ali Rehman Khan(Pashto/Urdu: علی رحمان خان; born 6 May 1980)