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Urdu is an official and nation language of pakistan.it is written in persian alphabet which looks like اب it is written from right to left but it can also be written in english alphabet .It is also one of the 22 official languages recognized in the Constitution of India. It is mutually intelligible with Hindi, and is the lingua franca of the Subcontinent of Hindustan (India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh). Urdu has roots of Sanskrit, an Indo-Aryan language, and has significant word and cultural borrowings from Arabic and Persian.[1]

Method 1
Method 1 of 2:

Learning Basic Urdu Vocabulary

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  1. SUBJECT, OBJECT, VERB (in English we use SUBJECT, VERB, OBJECT). Thus while in English you say "Jones [subject] sees [verb] Thomas [object]", the order of things in an Urdu sentence is "Jones [subject] Thomas [Object] sees [verb]."
  2. [2]
    • Me/I: Meiney';'Mai';'Mere'
    • You: Tum'Tumhae';tumharae';'Tumnae';'Tumsae';
    • He/She/It/That: Vo;'Usnae';'Uskee';
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  3. Each of these pronouns below has a plural equivalent, which is used when there are more than one of the things referred to by the pronouns, or also when the pronoun refers to someone you respect or who is of higher stature, or just to be polite or formal:[3]
    • We: Hum;'Humarae';'Humsae';'Humsab';
    • You (as in "you lot" - plural): Aap;'Aapsabh';'AapSabhee';
    • Them/Those: Vo;'Unhee';'Inhee';'Unko';
    • Plural pronouns are often used for singular subjects or objects to show respect like:
    • You: "Aap" for 'Tum', "Aapko" for 'Tumhae', "Aapnae" for 'Tumnae', and "Aapsae" for 'Tumsae';
    • He/She:'Uhunnae" for 'Usnae' and "Unkee" for 'Uskee'
  4. "To Be" has the following conjugations:[4]
    • To Be: Hona (infinitive)
    • I am: Mein hoon
    • You are: Tum ho
    • S/he/it/that is: Vo hai
    • Just to recap, "Mein hoon" means "I am" because "mein" means "I" and is the subject, "hoon" means "am" and is the verb, and the Urdu sentence order is Subject, Object (none in this case), Verb.
    • We are: Hum hain
    • You (pl) are: Aap hain
    • They/those are: Vo hain
    • Like English, the plurals all take the same conjugation.
  5. "Hona" - "To Be" - and "Dekhna" - "To See". Of the verbs that are regular, such as Dekhna (but not Hona), there is a simple rule for conjugating them in the present tense. This is to remove the "na" and add on the following instead. Note that in the first three cases, the underlined syllables are used only if the subject of the sentence is masculine (e.g. "John"). If the subject is feminine (e.g. "Jane") then those syllables are replaced by "i".[5]
    • I (Mein): ta
    • You (Tum): te
    • S/he/it (Vo): ta
    • We (Hum): tain
    • You (pl) (Aap): tain
    • Them (Vo): tain
    • Thus, as an example, the verb Dekhna (to see) would conjugate for me (I'm male) as "Dekhta" or for you (if you're female) as "Dekhti".
  6. Thus whereas in English we say "I see", in Urdu the translated equivalent would be "I am see" - or with the correct order, "I see am". Thus in Urdu, saying "I see" is like saying "I am, and see." Without the qualification that you are while you see, the verb of seeing would not be in the present tense. Thus:
    • "I [female] see": "Mein dekhti hoon"
    • "It sees": "Vo dekhta hai"
    • You will recall that "mein" is "I", "hoon" is "am" (conjugated for "I") and "dekhti" is the verb "To See" ("Dekhna") when conjugated for a female "I".
  7. Understand when pronouns are used as objects, they are changed slightly to denote that something is being done to them rather than by them. When nouns are used as objects, they are appended by "ko" to show this change. e.g. "John" is fine as a subject, but "John ko" is the object.[6]
    • I (Mein): Mujhe
    • You (Tum): Tumhe
    • S/he (Vo): Usse
    • We (Hum): Humhe
    • You (pl) (Aap): Aapko
    • Them (Vo): Unhe
  8. To say "I see John" in Urdu, we say something like "I John see am" - "I am, [present tense] and see John".
    • "I see John": Mein John ko dekhta hoon
    • "Jane sees John": Jane John ko dekhti hai
    • To deconstruct: "Jane [subject] John ko [object] dekhti [sees, feminine] hai [present tense "is"]"
    • "I see you": Mein tumhe dekhta hoon
    • "You [feminine] see us": Tum humhe dekhti ho
    • "They see Jane": Vo Jane ko dekhtain hain
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Method 2
Method 2 of 2:

Lessons

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Lesson 1

  1. Declarative sentences in the English language are the sentences that form a statement.
  2. Key words for Lesson 1.
    • one eak
    • two do
    • three ti'n
    • paper ka'g_haz dog kuta'
    • pen qalam monkey bandar
    • book kita'b
    • this yeh
    • that woh
    • is ha~ye
    • are ha~e(n)
  3. Verb to be ( am / is / are ) - the Present Simple Tense[7]
    • Eak do ti'n. One two three.
    • Yeh kita'b ha~ye. This is (a) book.
    • Yeh eak kita'b ha~ye. This is a book.
    • Yeh ka'g_haz ha~ye. This is (a) paper.
    • Yeh eak ka'g_haz ha~ye. This is a paper.
    • Yeh qalam ha~ye. This is (a) pen.
    • Yeh eak qalam ha~ye. This is a pen.
    • Woh eak kita'b ha~ye. That is a book.
    • Woh eak ka'g_haz ha~ye. That is a paper.
    • Yeh bandar ha~ye. This is (a) monkey.
    • Woh kuta' ha~ye. That is (a) dog.
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Lesson 2

    • eak, do, ti'n, ka'g_haz, ku-t-a, qalam , bandar, kita'b, yeh, , ha~ye, ha~e(n)
  1. Key words for Lesson 2.
    • Four C_ha'r Seven Sa'th Ten Das
    • Five Pa'nc_h Eight A't^h
    • Six C_heh Nine Naw
    • Greetings and Expressions
    • Hello Hello (used esp. when answering the phone and
    • in casual day to day greetings)
    • A'da'b Arz ha~ye./ A'da'b. /Sala'm. / Namaste.
    • / Namas_hka'r./ Hello / Assalam-o-alaikum
    • /Ra'm - Ra'm
    • How are you? A'p kaise ha~e(n)
    • I am good/fine Mai(n) ac_ha hu(n)
    • Goodbye K_huda-ha'fiz
    • Good night S_hab-be-k_hair
    • Have a good day A'p ka din ac_ha guzre
    • Thank you S_hukriya
    • You're welcome A'p ki meherba'ni
    • Welcome k_hus_h a'mdi'd
    • What's your name? A'p ka na'm ki~ya ha~ey
    • My name is Azad Mera naam Aza'd ha~ye
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Lesson 3

  1. Interrogative sentences in the English language are the sentences that form a question.
  2. Key words for Lesson 3.
    • one eak
    • two do
    • three ti'n
    • paper ka'g_haz dog kuta'
    • pen qalam monkey bandar
    • book kita'b
    • this yeh
    • that woh
    • is ha~ye
    • are ha~e(n)
    • Kya yeh eak(do,teen.....) ha~ye. Is this one(two,three........)?.
    • Kya yeh kita'b ha~ye. Is this (a) book?
    • Kya yeh eak kita'b ha~ye. Is this a book?
    • Kya yeh ka'g_haz ha~ye. Is this (a) paper?
    • Kya yeh eak ka'g_haz ha~ye. Is this a paper?
    • Kya yeh qalam ha~ye. Is this (a) pen?
    • Kya yeh eak qalam ha~ye. Is this a pen?
    • Kya woh eak kita'b ha~ye. Is that is a book?
    • Kya woh eak ka'g_haz ha~ye. Is that a paper?
    • Kya yeh bandar ha~ye. Is this (a) monkey?
    • Kya woh kuta' ha~ye. Is that is (a) dog?
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Lesson 4

  1. Imperative sentences in the English language are the sentences that make a command or request.
    • Yaha'n a'o. Come here.
    • Yaha'n jaldi a'o. Come here quickly.
    • A'j wa'pas a'o. Come back today.
    • A'j hi' wa'pas a'o. Come back today only.
    • Wuh ka'm jaldi karo. Do that work quickly.
    • Yeh ka'm jaldi karo. Do this work quickly.
    • A'hista mat bolo Don't speak slowly.
    • Zor se mat bolo. Don't speak loudly.
    • A'j waha'n ja'o. Go there today.
    • Ba'har baitho. Sit outside.
    • Andar a'o. Come inside.

Lesson 5

  1. Exclamatory sentences in the English language are the sentences that attempt to powerful feelings, or emotions.
    • Kya yeh eak(do,teen.....) ha~ye. Is this one(two,three........)?.
    • Kya yeh kita'b ha~ye. Is this (a) book?
    • Kya yeh eak kita'b ha~ye. Is this a book?
    • Kya yeh ka'g_haz ha~ye. Is this (a) paper?
    • Kya yeh eak ka'g_haz ha~ye. Is this a paper?
    • Kya yeh qalam ha~ye. Is this (a) pen?
    • Kya yeh eak qalam ha~ye. Is this a pen?
    • Kya woh eak kita'b ha~ye. Is that is a book?
    • Kya woh eak ka'g_haz ha~ye. Is that a paper?
    • Kya yeh bandar ha~ye. Is this (a) monkey?
    • Kya woh kuta' ha~ye. Is that is (a) dog?
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Community Q&A

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  • Question
    How do I differentiate ki and ka?
    Community Answer
    Community Answer
    Ki is used to refer a female, and Ka is used to refer males.
  • Question
    What do you suggest for learning and speaking Urdu fluently?
    Community Answer
    Community Answer
    Start by trying to get your accents right, then learn the basics. After that, focus on grammar. Practice speaking and listening as much as possible.
  • Question
    How do I say I love you very much in Urdu?
    Community Answer
    Community Answer
    Female: "Mein tum se bohat mohabat karti hoon." Male: "Mein tum se bohat mohabat karta hoon."
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Tips

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Tips from our Readers

  • If you are serious about reading Urdu, Hindi, or similar dialects, start by memorizing the alphabet. Write the alphabet on paper, then memorize it. Learn how each letter is pronounced and which letters commonly go together. Then, you can start reading and phonics.
  • Find someone who speaks Urdu as a first language but is in the process of learning your primary language. Have conversations in Urdu and your primary language, and give each other tips along the way.
  • Learning Urdu will make it really easy to learn other languages of the Indian subcontinent, including Hindi, Punjabi, Gujarati, Bhojpuri, Haryanvi, Kashmiri, Marathi, and even Nepali.
  • All Urdu nouns are considered either male or female. Female nouns are usually non-living things, but not always.
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Things You'll Need

  • Urdu dictionary

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References

  1. https://www.loc.gov/item/2021666209/
  2. https://mylanguages.org/urdu_pronouns.php
  3. https://mylanguages.org/urdu_pronouns.php
  4. https://mylanguages.org/urdu_verbs.php
  5. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XZ2MYytACJw
  6. https://mylanguages.org/urdu_pronouns.php
  7. https://learnenglishurdu.com/present-simple-or-present-indefinite-tense/
  8. Syed Fasih Uddin and Quader Unissa Begum (1992). "The Modern International Standard Letters of Alphabet for URDU - (HINDUSTANI) - The INDIAN Language, script for the purposes of hand written communication, dictionary references, published material and Computerized Linguistic Communications (CLC)". Chicago.

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