Examples of using Urdu in English and their translations into Urdu
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The Oxford English Urdu Dictionary is the most authoritative language tool available for the Urdu language of Pakistan and India.
Urdu is the national language which is spoken
Indian Urdu poet and theorist Shamsur Rahman Faruqi held aloft the light of literature.
Books and Publications: He has written many books in Urdu and English, his first book was published in 1988. The titles of his books are as follows.
Sapnaonline. com. Retrieved 2014-02-27.↑"Mubahasa: Urdu magazine from Patna| The World of Urdu Poetry, Literature& News".
Urdu, being the national language of Pakistan,
Urdu is a national language of Pakistan
(2) Subject to subsection(1), the English language may be used for official purposes until arrangements are made for its replacement by Urdu.
Subject to clause(1), the English language may be used for official purposes until arrangements are made for its replacement by Urdu.
Writing in Urdu has never been so easy. Just type in Roman English and proper Urdu words will appear automatically.
MANUU is a unique university which imparts education to its students through Urdu medium. This characteristic of MANUU presents us with monumental challenges.
Sassi Punno is a 2004 Pakistani film in the Urdu language. It was directed by Hassan Askari.
Yasmeen Hameed(Urdu: یاسمین حمید)(born 18 March 1951) is a Pakistani Urdu poet, translator and an educator.[1][2].
Mazhab. PK is an authentic Urdu religious website in Pakistan.[1] The founder of this website is Ahsan Iqbal.
This site contains almost all the literary work of famous Urdu poet and writer Mr. Haider Qureshi.
Kitaab is an outstanding app and along with it's e-publishing system, Kitaab is opening new digital frontiers for Urdu.".
The presence of the Muslim gentry in a largely Hindu India, while clearly acknowledged, did not so nearly dominate the consciousness of the Urdu poet as much as did the continuing traditions of Islam and Persia.
We provide independence day speech in Urdu for school students, teachers give the
Shah Shuja(Bengali: শাহ সুজা, Urdu: شاہ شُجاع),(23 June 1616- 7 February 1661)[1]
Afreen pursued her undergraduate education at the Allama Iqbal Govt College Karachi and later received her master's degree in Urdu Literature from the University of Karachi, Pakistan. She also taught at the Aga Khan School and boardinghouse.