Bhai mai to Lucknow me he rahata tha , jo nwabiyat yahan logo no failai wo jane anjane pura mulk hindi indirectly bolne laga ha. Chalo gusse me hee sahi kuchh to failaya inhone.
Honestly, it’s the same pronunciation....I know of regions where the guy speaking “hindi” would be considered to have better pronunciation that the girl actually speaking “Urdu”
What might be some good examples of differences in advanced vocabulary? Also, although lexical differences are important, I usually find syntax to be more interesting. Are there any good examples of differences in syntax between Hindi and Urdu?
@@declup Advanced vocab is the words we don't use in informal casual conversation. Like Government in Hindi is Sarkaar and in Urdu it's Huqoomat. I'm not fluent in Urdu advanced vocab and sometimes Hindi speakers do get difficulty in understanding Pakistani news. But common conversation is pretty much same. Sentence structure, is totally the same. I don't know what's syntax, but if you'd explain, I could answer the you.
@@aayushsharma8735 -- 'Syntax' basically means 'sentence structure', so you've actually already done a good job of answering my questions. Thank you for that; I really appreciate your helping me to learn more about Hindi and Urdu.
@Hawk Who Knows All Urdu chori ki language hai Farsi arbi word ko chura kar hindi main mila kar urdu bani hai.....chori ki likhwat........ Ya ek fake or chori ki gai language hai Urdu....hindi ki grammar use karti hai...... Mughal chor the unki language bhi chori ki thi
@Hawk Who Knows All Pakistan ki language hai punjabi sindhi blochi.....urdu uttar pardesh ki language hai Tum logo ka identity crisis alag hi level ka hai Kabhi arab ko apna baap bolte ho Kabhi Turkey ko papa bolte ho Toh kabhi khudko persian bolte ho 🤦🏻♂️🤦🏻♂️....... Apni language bolo
Hindi = 45% Arabic words + 45-50% Persian words + hardly 🇮🇳 speaks 5-10% Sanskirt words Sanskirt is a dead language before Mughals before even 12 century Amir khusro times Indian used to talk farsi+arabic words . Urdu = 50% Arabic words +45% Persian words...5% other languages. . FACT & truth is 🇮🇳 speaks also URDU which is Arabic+Persian words mostly...but they called it Hindi👊 hindi/hindu is also persian word🌬 . 90% bollywood script are written in Urdu 98% Lyricist writes songs in Urdu Shayri toh hoti hi Urdu hai . Insaan- Human Maut- Death Admi - human Dimagh - brain Duniya - world Waqt- Time Mohabbat - love Nafrat - hate Hawaa - air Ilm - knowledge Aql - mind Kaam - work Subha- Morning Kitab- Book Lekin - but Lafz, Alfaaz - words Bilkul - ofcourse Shru'at- Beginning Khatam- Finished Gham sorrow Shaheed- Used only for Muslims😎 Kharaab- Bad sharaab - alcohol Daakhil- Enter Sabr- Patience Deen, mazhab Malik- Ruler Mulk Museebat- Misfortune Qaum- Nation Junoon Kursi- Chair Wakil- lawyer Adalat- court Jurm- Crime Mujrim Aurat - woman☕️ Izzat , zilat Ameer, gareeb , kareeb , ajeeb Sahi, galat, khirab , silsila Aadat, Halat , Ibadat , ijazat, Zehmat , hifazat Hasrat, Qudrat , Jannat , rehmat , dua Khayal, Mushkil, Mashoor, Qabool , Qabil Jism, Rooh, Haya, Aashiq, Ishq, Uns Aam, Khaas , khariyat Haram, Harami- Bastard Shaitan👹 Rab☝️ Shukar..Shukriya . These are some 1% arabic words. Indians even dont know that these are Arabic words..they think these are sanskirt words🦧😂 . ☆Zindagi, Azaadi, Asmaam, Zameen, Dil, Dard, Dost, Dushman, Ghar ,Darwaza Sar, Chera, Zaban, Khoon, Ganda, Khali, Andar, Bahar, Avaaz, khvaab Zaroori, Dewana, Khoob, Sabzi, Mazedar, Dariya, Rang, Safed, Hamesha, Khamosh, Shayad, Khali, Khatarnak,Pasand, Khush, Naraz, Bimaar, Dawaa, Khushbu, Badbu, Jawan, Hoshiyar, Meharban, Darkht ,phul, Mein, Mera, meri ,mere, Hum Shadi, hafta, mahina, shaam ,naam Shohar, bibi,Bacha, Ya , khud , Khuda Peeshab😂 These are some 1% farsi words hai. . Its really Funny 🇮🇳 speaks 90% Arabic+Farsi words which is called Urdu but they say we are using sanskirts words mostly thats why we are talking Hindi🦧 Delusional🤡 in Hindi u cannot even speak 1 sentence without using Arabic+Farsi words👊🌬
*_Hindi and Urdu are Like Purple and Voilet_* Both are Made of Red(Sanskrit) and Blue(Arabic/Persian) *_But_*_ one Has More Red(Hindi) and Other Has More Blue(Urdu)_ 😁
Many poeple dont know but old persian and vedic sanskrit are sisters as both of them are daughter languages of proto indo iranians. The languages of arayans
@@ArthurPPaiva galician/portuguese and Híndi/urdu comparison is incorrect. In Galician and Portuguese, some words having same roots are slightly different in spellings and pronunciations from the other corresponding word like ' cão-can' , ' pássaro-paxaro' etc. While in hindi-urdu It is the same and single language with no modifications in grammar, spellings and pronunciation, just a change in script and vocabulary. Every word in hindi is 100% same in urdu. Like for dog both languages say kutta and for 'My name is Christopher' it is translated into 'Mera naam Christopher hai' in both languages with no differences. So if u study urdu then you literally studied hindi.😊😊
@@christophergonsalves2179 i know it! Same has GL/PT, the difference of spellings are just regional.. in Portugal have 13 differents ways to speak portuguese in Brazil 16 and in Galícia 3... But in the end, all of these its the same language.
@@christophergonsalves2179 no its is different in grammar and use of words and spellings in thousands of ocassions .. From a urdu and hindi speaker ...
The grammar and basic vocabulary are the same. But abstract and more complicated words are totally different. I speak Hindi and understand an Urdu conversation but cann't understand the Urdu news at the radio.
I know that Hindi, Urdu and my native language, Spanish, are all Indoeuropean. But it still amazes me the similarities I heard with a few words. Numbers I heard similar. They are written in Spanish. 2: dos 7: siete 8: ocho 9: nueve 10: diez The color orange in Spanish is "naranja".
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Naranja is a Sanskrit word. The fruit was discoverd by the Arabs during their conquest of India and introduced to Spain through the Moors. The similarities in numbers surprised me though.
Yo soy de Puerto Rico y muchas de nuestras palabras son árabes e indígenas. I love hearing people from the Philippines speak because they'll throw in a random Spanish word I understand, and then I have no idea what else they're saying. 😅
Soy de India, hablo Hindi y inglés. Estoy aprendiendo español. Creo que aprender español es más fácil que aprender inglés para el hablante de hindi porque Hay muchas palabras similares.
Go south into India and the other languages also have similarities. The word mongoose came from Telugu mungisa, mango came from Malayalam mānga, rice came from Tamil arīs, but these are not Indo-European. These are native Indian.
@V O A lot of them came from Persian because only 1/3rd of it was from Arabic. But yeah that’s because Urdu, Hindi and Spanish and also Persian are Indo-European languages.
As a Russian,I was really impressed when I heard the word "Chai" for tea because we have the same word in Russian.It's the most popular beverage in my country!We drink it all the time with sweets and cakes!It's so delicious!😊
@@WaddiaS No,it's merely a myth.Yes,elders and youngsters can allow themselves to fully relax sometimes via consuming alcohol,but it doesn't mean they drink it permanently!On the other hand,drinking tea is widespread in Russia.It's like coffee in America with fast-prepared breakfast dishes such as sandwiches,toasts,sweets etc.
@@fractalinfinity1750 Sorry for being cheeky, lol~ I always thought Russia has very strong alcoholic tradition so it's pervasive. But yes your point is far stronger that tea is much more commonly consumed when compared to for example coffee in the US. What variety of tea is usually drunk in Russia? Our chai is mostly milk with black tea. Have a good day~~
@@WaddiaS Well,most of us drink black tea,but it actually depends on a person and his or her preferences.Some people lavish their attention on the taste of tea meanwhile the others look for the affordable prices on different sorts of tea in order to purchase the cheapest one and economize more money for further buying something else. To be honest,almost all the tea sorts aren't natural here.This is why it's not a difficult task to find it in the local shops and supermarkets cause of its availability via low prices. As I know,the natural Chinese tea tastes the other way and its taste is more unique. Green tea is also popular due to caffeine which stimulates the mind work and does not let you fall asleep during preparation for tests,exams etc.Many female students prefer to drink it. Regarding to milk,we can add it,but not all of us.The majority prefer to drink it without milk. Have a good day!
I saw this really interesting theory that basically stated that if tea had been brought by land, it was called Chai, and if it had come by sea, it was called Tea, thé, etc. For example, Чай in russian, but Thé in french. Another interesting thing to note is that the russian word Кайф comes from the same root as Coffee, relating to a high or euphoria
corrections: laal is also used in urdu (i am a native urdu speaker) and surkh is more like crimson color, it's a pretty rare word most people only use it in formal occasions. naaranji is the word for the fruit LMAO we also say naarangi. i have never heard someone say "sabz" for green ever, i've only heard hara.
I am Hindi speaker in our area, we say ' laal - surkh ' when we want to emphasize red colour of something. We never say sabz to any colour. Only vegetables are called sabzi.
In "proper" hindi, the word for white is श्वेत (shwēt)but we only use सफ़ेद (səfēd). Just another way to show that hindustani is basically one language with two ways to write.
@@furchtbar8311 i was born in pakistan, lived in karachi for my childhood, still speak urdu with my family, and have roots within deccani people, so it's safe to say i have some pretty deep conections with urdu. but it's possible, i'm pretty sure it's the same with laal/surkh, there's an informal version and then a formal version
2 things I learned 1. Hindi and Nepali are more similar than I thought (via. Sanskrit) 2. Bollywood uses a lot of Urdu words over Hindi words (for eg. Shukriya over Dhanyabad)
Urdu is written in farsi script. Both hindi and urdu are made from farsi mostly. During the times of Mughal empire lodhi dynasty and tughlaq dynasty, marathas empire. Farsi(Persian) was spoken in indian subcontinent. Even before the Muslim rule, the hindu empires also had farsi as official language. Even the names of country are in farsi like hindustan (land of hind ) and Pakistan (land of pure).Even punjab is farsi word meaning 5 rivers.
@mayank numbers like zero which is called sifr 1aik do 2 8 aath 9 no are in Persian (farsi). Pineapple (a anas) apple seeb are in Persian. I know you don't want to accept reality because of your anti muslim mind. But this is reality and if you read history indian subcontinent was ruled by turkic people like Mughals, lodhi dynasty, and khilgid dynasty, Ghurid kingdom and ghaznavid empire.
@mayank and colors like safeed white is in Persian. Siyah which means black comes from Persian. Zard meaning yellow comes from Persian. Also sabz which mean green comes from Persian.
@mayank before urdu and hindi that farsi (Persian) was spoken in whole Indian subcontinent. Persian has influenced pashto, punjabi baloch, kashmiris,hindko. Urdu was made 13 th century and had famous poets like amir khusro, mir taqi mir, bahador shah zafar, ghalib, altaf hussain hali and famous allama muhammad Iqbal the spiritual father of Pakistan.
@Baby Sama 712 exactly.They are idiots. They think they speak pure form of bangla. But these stupids don’t know that they also speak Bengali by mixing persian, arabic words. This aanpar only triggered Bengali Muslim that we only mix Arabic words in Bengali. But these airheads don’t know that they also do the same. They also mix Arabic words in Bengali. Illiterate kiddos.
Un fact Naranji is a Persian borrowed word, many of Hindi/Urdu words come from the Persian as it was the cultural language during the Mogol period, time in which those languages developed his definitive form today
Urdu is somehow old and common language of sub continent. During 1800 to 1947,Hindi was made a separate language full of Sanskritise hard words in place of Arabic and Persian words. Public and Bollywood use same old language which is easy to communicate.
Hindu is older than urdu. Urdu uses hindi grammar. Without hindi grammar there will be no complete sentence in urdu only meaningless phrases will be left.
@@redstar1287 Lol. That doesn't mean I m wrong. Hindi as a language is older than urdu. Read amir khusro nd malik muhammad jaesi. What u r saying is not a criteria to decidecwhich language is older.
@@redstar1287 🤣 Arey bewakoof ke bchhe. Maen LANGUAGE ki baat kr rha hun..... SCRIPT ko nhi. U have no knowledge about the difference between language and script
Waaleikum us Salam. That's really great. Urdu is a beautiful language indeed. We also find v easy to read n understand Arabic as both languages are written in the same script.
But we don't generally use these words while speaking. I am Indian and some time ago I didn't even know the hindi word for pineapple. It's very unusual nowadays to hear anyone say ananas
@@muhammadsherazisherazi8714 oh boy I feel pity for you , how can you be uneducated for so long? You should have learnt the meaning of laaal back in 1971.
@@muhammadsherazisherazi8714 there is a caps lock button too if you have not seen in before. And if you are writing hinglish, please write it properly.
@@bvedant no it isn’t in fact if u walk around city like Karachi u will understand 99% of what they’re saying (this is because vocabulary words which are Persian and Arabic are not used)
They are the same. Urdu was made to give different feeling to hindus who converted into muslims during Islamic rule. They just change the script of hindi into arabic.
@@mausenpai215 😂😂😂 URDU or Ordu has persian script And its a Military language ,ordu means Camp . And hindu is a Persian arabic word Obviously they are Same ,created by same people .
@@_kartik_chauhan I know it.I am in the same sub-continent that's why many words are similar.I actually wanted to say that Hindi-Urdu almost same(different writing).
@@achiburshakib5804 yes Love from Dehradun , India And I want to ask did you guys still want Karimganj District Of Sylet that is now part of Assam State of Indian Union As " Mānacitrēra marasuma calachē " As Nepal want Kalapani That area is in my state And I have many relatives there and they are Indian by heart And Pakistan Just claim Junagad On Historical Grounds And karimganj district is Actually Was part of Sylet but when you got Khulna so Redcliff decides to give it to India as Sylet and karimganj district are separated by A River named " kushiyara What's your view on this Bro
I'm a Malaysian. My language is Bahasa Melayu. Since we can write/read it by using ABC and also by using the Jawi (Arabic Script). We passively can read the Urdu pronunciation even though some of it doesn't turned out to be correct (by my language side of the Arabic script).
@@saurabhkumar-cc2cx yes we did, the old Bahasa Melayu consisted a lot of Sanskrit and Arabic loan words and recently, English. Thus, our modern Bahasa Melayu was born. We were Hindu-Buddhism in the year 1500 and below, and Muslim in the year 1500 and above.
The Arabic script used for Urdu is inefficient in a few places. E.g.: The word for cat is بلے (billī) but nowhere in the word does it give you a hint that the letter L should be stressed. Whereas in Hindi it is बिल्ली। You can see the repeated letters which are joined, representing the stressed “L” sound. Another example is the word for blue, which is نیلا (nīlā). The Arab writing doesn’t tell you whether it’s supposed to be pronounced nīlā, nailā or nēlā. But in Hindi it’s written नीला, where the नी is pronounced nī.
What is even more surprising is that Urdu, an Indian language, is being shown with a Pakistani flag! What can be more hilarious? Pakistanis, who adopted an Indian language, are teaching Indians how to speak their own language! I think very soon, Pakistanis will teach English to the British, Persian to Iranians, and Arabic to the Saudis!
I'm Indian. I can speak and read both versions. On ground even the colour names are the same as spoken on the street. I know surkh and sabz, but in practice even Urdu speakers would normally say laal and hara. Naranji too is something one hears very rarely, everybody normally says narangi.
This man is absolutely right. No one in Pakistan (पाकिस्तान) uses Sabz, but hara for green. Sabz is commonly used in its other forms like sabz’a’ (greenery) n sabzi (vegetables or green vegetables). Also we don’t say naragi, instead we use phrase ‘orange color ka’. 😅
As someone who is Indian and Urdu/Hindi speaking, It would be more appropriate to also add the Indian flag to your Urdu section. Urdu is widely spoken in Delhi and UP. Urdu is a language of the Indian subcontinent. Urdu is spoken in Pakistan as is Punjabi, SIndhi etc. Urdu is the prettier more gentle language and so its used extensively in Bollywood song lyrics. But high Urdu is too formal and not spoken in day to day speech. Neither India or Pakistan can claim ownership of Urdu- both countries have native Urdu speakers. Afterall, it used to be the same country :)
@@globalcitizen1856 you're an id*iot*"* together hindi and urdu were called hindustani but now they're two seperate languages and separate scripts although an indian can easily conversate with a pakistani but that doesn't make it any less than hindi
Note: hindi and urdu are both derived from same language called hindustani or earlier known as khadi boli , the difference is urdu have arabic, persian and to a lower extent some turkish loanwords where as Hindi has Sanskrit loanwords that is the only difference there maine vocabulary and words are same
@Akar Acharya You need professional help because you seem like an unapologetic inveterate liar. Hindi came from khadi boli, awadhi and sanskrit. We had literary works in these languages even before Islam was born in Arabia. #StopThePropaganda #spreadTruth
@@tejaspathak7298 Aree bhai pure Urdu suni hai kabhi 🤣🤣🤣 Pakistan ke log ko sunana vo hoti hai pure Urdu hum kuch words istemaal karte hai iska matlab ye nhi hum Urdu bolte hai even English bhi bahut se Latin words use karti hai
Hindi and Urdu are 99% similar. Except some words are different and the script is different. Think of it like Russian used in Cyrillic vs Russian used in the Latin alphabet, with also tiny word differences between the two.
I am from Pakistan my childhood was passed by listening old Indian songs watching Indian movies and dramas love all the Indian brothers and wants to unite why we separated and a lots of our own people hate us due to these borders politicians and media My dream is that Pakistan and India unite together like before and no one defeat us we look same our dresses same our color same we also understand the languages of each other but why we are far above In foreign countries all the Pakistani Bangladeshi and Indians live together like brothers but in our own countries why we can not met why we can not share our happiness and sadness each other we are not different nations we are one the subcontinentals Love Indian and Bangladeshi brothers from Pakistan❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤🇵🇰🇮🇳🇧🇩 Ah ! Feeling so sad and hurted💔😔
Love u brother from India.... Kaash aj india pakistan ek hote to hum aj ek dusre ke shehar aaram se ja pate... Bina visa passport ke 😭😭😭sab politicians ki vjah se hua hai...
@@nightmare4164 do(2), ti (3), sat (7), ót (8), nóu (9), das (10), narandi (laranja), ananás (ananás/abacaxi em português culto), tchaê (chá), cófi (café), gaê (gado), sanp (serpente). Essas línguas são da família do português, mas são como primos de 4 grau hahaha
Not hindi, Urdu is mostly influenced by Persian. But yes, hindi and other languages have also been used. People at my place say, Urdu is a lashkari zubaan. According to the popular myth, Urdu is a 'camp language' or 'lashkari zaban' because it originated in the army camps of the Mughals(Arab and Persians). The soldiers who spoke these languages were recruited to the Mughal army and to communicate among themselves they used this new language, and thus Urdu was born. I am Indian btw and I can read urdu too. 😄
Urdu: Hindustani with several Arabic and some Turkic loan words. Hindi: Hindustani with a more conservative trend toward Sanskrit loan words. 99% of the languages are the same. It’s literally a difference of where their liturgical and ministerial words come from. Hindi speakers are generally-not always-of the Hindu faith. While Urdu speakers tend toward Islam-again vast oversimplification. Because the vedas are written in Sanskrit, more Sanskrit is used the Hindi language. Because many Muslims believe that the only way to truly understand the Quran is by reading it in Arabic, many Arabic loan words entered Urdu.
Akar Acharya I literally don’t see how what I said contradicts anything you said. Hindustani is the name Linguists use to describe the two languages because they are literally the same language with different loan words. I never said which came first or which came second. As far as being “pushed on” people by the government, there are literally hundreds of different people groups in that region which each have their own language and writing system. The fact is that any country with such diverse language demographics is going to need a lingua Franca to communicate across groups. That’s Hindustani for Pakistan and for India. I have literally zero care to discuss the politics of language. That is why I discussed the differences of the different dialects of Hindustani. Not the timeline. Because there’s little reason to cause a flame war in the comments. There’s a long standing rivalry between the two countries and getting in the middle of that was exactly what I was trying to avoid.
Hindi was created from Urdu by ousting persian words and sanskrtitizing replacing persian script with devnagri Bcoz urdu was made in muslim rule for muslims are lingua franca All of pakistani languages have persian vocab..There is nothing called hindustani stoopid
@Akar Acharya No, Hindi and Urdu developed together. Standardization of Hindi is not the same as the development/formation of it, nor is its name's origin the same as the origin of the language.
Nah both are differnt apart fron few words . Ppl in india speak urdu and they say its hindi..Modi speak hindi and being urdu speaker i dont get him at all..urdu made in turkoMongol rule of india who were inspired from persian...All of pakistani languages have persian script and vocab so urdu...urdu just has some sanskrit words like Me Kiyon tum kis liye and its integerated in indian culture by bollywood and indian muslims so indians can understand . Suwagat - Khush Amded Dhanevad - Shukriya Shama chahta hun -Muazrat Dhyan - tawaja man - dil mehek - khushboo Diya - shama Aag - atish Pani - aab Hansi,muskan - muskurahat Ghau/chot - Zakham Seynek - foji Marna - intqal karna Mutna - peshab karna Sham - shab Virodh - ikhtilaf Kathin - mushkil Shanti - khamoshi Janam - pedaish and list goes on i dont have that much time. Agar still confuse ho to National anthems suno jakar
@Akar Acharya 😁😁😁 where did you get Hindi language born in 18th century ??? Share me the info Because I get in Google its Developed in 7th century and become a stable by 10th century 🤔
Both are two registers of the same root language- Hindustani. Urdu uses more Arabic and Persian loan words. Hindi uses more indigenous Sanskrit and Prakrit words. Both languages are mutually intelligible, however Urdu uses the modified Arabic alphabet while Hindi uses Devanagari. It should be noted that the official language of the elite during Mughal times was Dar(ba)ri Persian, however the lower ranking foreign soldiers residing in Urds (Turkic : Ord = camp, tents) started using a mixed language - Urdu- for daily communication with native Hindus. After the fall of the Mughals to the Marathas and later British, the use of Dari declined. The lower ranking Muslims under patronage of British were encouraged to develop Urdu as a literary language by retaining Persian and purging Indian words, this new language also adopted the modified Arabic writing system . Likewise upper caste Hindu elite steered Hindi away from Persian and more towards indigenous Sanskrit words. The Hindi spoken in Delhi retains more Persian, however the one spoken in Indore or Varanasi is heavy on Sanskrit. Urdu spoken in Lucknow still retains the Persian influence, however Pakistani Urdu evolved again since the late 1970s under Saudi influenced Zia Ul Haq, this time Persian words were actively purged and replaced with Arabic ones. Khoda Hafez became Allah Hafeez and so on...
Who told you that Sanskrit is indigenous ? It was the language of Aryans from central Asia. Sanskrit arrived in the Indian subcontinent from the north-west sometime during the early second millennium BCE. The indigenous language of India is Tamil and its sister languages like Kannada, Telugu. Malayalam born out of Tamil. Both Hindi and Urdu were born in India, Sanskrit is not indigenous. Out of 1.35 billion Indians hardly 25,000 ppl speak Sanskrit. It s a language in coma status for more than a millennium and still breathing because Hindu holy scriptures were written in it.
Hindi and Urdu are both the form of hindustani. You persianise it becomes urdu, sanskritise it becomes Hindi. They basically are same. The languages inside the Hindi belt has more variations
As a Venezuelan ,I was impressed when I heard the word naranji for orange because in Spanish is naranja and sounds very similar, the same with Lilac. sometimes we connected by little things like this
You should really read about Andalusia, which is where you will find many words still used by Muslims whether in Arab countries, Turkey or South Asia :) E.g. Look up educacão. It has more in common with its Arabic equivalent than with French/English/Latin!
@@Gulchih The fact is , It came from the dravidian word Aaranj (Aaru is 6 and Anju is 5) orange mostly has 11 minor segments in it. Dravidian to Sanskrit to Arabic to European Langages
@@rishiatheist2362 Dekha bhai mene toh copy paste Kiya hai WhatsApp group se par sachai saamne as gayi na urdu phatichar language ki bhaade ki language
The only word in Hindi I know that is similar to a Chinese word is the Chinese word for tea. In Hindi, it is Chaa. I think it is there is a word that has similar speaking.
No the languages have differences. Different ways to say things and pronunciation. For example there is a sentence ending that I don’t quite remember in Hindi but it’s not a word in Urdu. Also Urdu has 1 or 2 maybe more letters or sounds that aren’t in Hindi. For example the word for blood in Urdu is khoon but in Hindi it’s koon. The difference is that in Urdu the k is a very soft and in the back of your throat kind of k but in Hindi it’s pronounced like an English k. To sum it up Urdu and Hindi are somewhat similar but like any other language they have their differences and they are 2 different languages, just with many similarities.
@@wonderlandangel9834 the word for blood in Hindi is khoon!!"ख़ून" not koon "कून" you need to hear how Hindi speakers pronounce it again. I don't know where you get koon from
@@wonderlandangel9834 There are words that are used in my dialect of English that other dialects don't use. Words can come into different dialects of a language based on contact with peoples from other cultures, peoples of different languages. Not all dialects of the same language will be exactly the same. For instance. In my dialect of English, H is completely gone in pronunciation. There are also instances where the phoneme [t] has become [ʔ]. This make these three words sound almost identical: A - [a] At - [aʔ] Hat - [aʔ] Also, in my dialect, 'Water' is pronounced as: ['wɔ:.ʔa]. In Received Pronunciation, 'Water' is as follows: [wɔː.tə]. In General American English it's: [ˈwɔ.ɾɚ] There are sounds in my dialect that don't exist in other dialects, and other dialects have sounds that don't exist in mine such as H. Look at the way they talk in Liverpool in England or in Scotland. There are words that exist in the Scottish dialect of English that don't exist in mine that come from Scottish Gaelic, which is a separate language spoken there.
And there is a fact that some of you may have noticed: except the name of the animals, most of the rest of the words are used in Farsi/Dari too. for me, it is really easy to learn Hindi/Urdu and I'll be happy to hear some easy ways of that from you guys.😊
Hearing the words one and one instead of speaking in sentences made me think of farsi/dari too! But once a person starts speaking hindi or urdu it sounds much more different.
This video is incorrect. If you want to compare Urdu and Hindu, then compare them with their literature not by words commonly used in daily life because in modern India most people speak Urdu, and they don't even know about it. For example: You will never hear a Hindi speaking student calling a Book as Pustak, does that mean BOOK is a Hindi word? OfCourse not. friend --Mitr--Dost. But commonly Indians use the word dost, though it is an Urdu word, but if you ask them if it is an Urdu word, they will disagree.
Hindi and Urdu are like Ice creams with toppings ! Both have same ice cream flavour (Sanskrit) which forms the base on top of that they have different toppings . Hindi has less Persian influence (chocolate sauce) and Urdu has extreme Persian and Arabic influence (Triple chocolate sauce) . However, Hindi is served in a cone(Devanagari script) and Urdu in a cup( Perso-Arabic script)!!
@@saharsharun9703 but urdu is persian derived which is a semite language not indo-european , they've just been together for hundreds of years THATS why there are so much similarities
@@Kokapaoo Tu chutiya hi rehna ! Aisay mein bhi bol sakta hon ke tu Jo Hindi bol raha hai wo asal mein Urdu hai ! Dekho asal baat hai yea hai jo language hum log aaj bol rahay hain wo mixture hai Urdu aur Hindi kui ke hum log itna time sath rahay hain tw words adopt kar liay hain Baqi rahi baat pure urdu aur Hindi ki tw na tum pure Hindi (Derived from Sanskrit) bol saktay ho aur na mein pure Urdu( Persian+ Turkish+ Arabic) bol sakta hon
Common thing is that both language Hindi and Urdu was invented in India but the difference is Hindi is third most spoken language on the earth with 615 million speakers as compared to urdu
Its because the persians conquered that part of india that we nowadays call Pakistan When the persian empire falled The monarchs that were ruling across the persian empire splitted And formed their own kingdom Thus why urdu seem to use arabic script When its actually farsi(persian)(even if the persians changed alphabets to the Arabian one) The similarities in term of speaking is flagrant Even in term of ethnicity the proof are there For me urdu is a mixture of farsi and hindi
We Bangladeshi rejected Urdu in 1952 and saved our Bengali language. Now, Bengali is the 6th most spoken language in the world. And Bengali Speaking people have the power to understand some languages like Assamese, Odia, Hindi, Punjabi, Bhojpuri, Urdu and Nepali. Because, the Bengali language has the potential and mutual relations with those languages I included. A Bengali man can easily understand and speak hindi but Hindi educated people may find 5% similarities between the two languages. 🇧🇩♥️🇧🇩♥️ 1) shikshak(hindi)- Shikkok(Bengali). 2) Kela (hindi)- Kola (Bengali). 🍌 3) Adhyapak- Odhdhapok. 4) Rang( color) - Rong (Bengali) 5) Prashna - Proshno Etc..........
Naarangi is called both naarangi(mostly) and naaranji in Urdu. Haraa is also called both haraa(mostly) and sabz in Urdu. To conclude, it is the single language "Hindustani" originated in northern Indian region of UP and Delhi , now having two major dialects known as Hindi and Urdu.
Actually that's not true there was never such language as Hindustani (or anything similar) Urdu is the descendant language of Persian which borrows a few words and grammar from sanckrit due to the influence..... on the other hand Hindi is the descendant language of Prakrit (descendant of sanckrit) which is only spoken by the native people of UP, Bihar, Rajasthan, Jharkhand and MP.....the so called Hindi that you hear these days or khari Hindi to be specific is further example of Persian influence over Hindi and people starting to use both languages in a mixed manner just like we use English words these days...
@@adityendrapratapsingh4628 that is not true. They are indeed different registers of the same language that people call Hindustani. They share the same standard grammar except for loanwords from Arabic and Sanskrit.
@@ranjodharora6592 see language sounding similar can have similarities but aren't the same until there is an extensive reason why they sound similar... now if I go by your opinion then there are several other languages that would be merged into pseudo Hindustani even if they are not the part of it! Eg Punjabi which shares 80% same word and grammar yet is differentiated by script and accent. Actual Hindi is what you hear in the villages of North India (braj, bhoj Puri, banarasi, awadhi, haryanvi etc) khari boli itself is that one dialect of Hindi which got influenced by Urdu because if the language shared comman ancestry all the dialects should have experienced it as for the similar words in this vid they are practically the urdu lone words or foreign words which ended up being the same in both languages if you make Punjabi stand next to them it would sound similar too
@@adityendrapratapsingh4628 What you are saying is factually incorrect. Standard Hindustani (Hindi and Urdu) is based on the way Khariboli was spoken in Delhi. Punjabi shares so much vocabulary with it because both of them are descendants of Shauraseni Prakrit and form a dialect continuum with Haryanvi in the middle of them. But Punjabi is classified differently mainly because of two reasons: it has a standard form with a radically different grammar, and it has a distinct phonological thing going on. What I am saying is not an opinion. These are stone cold facts. Hindi doesn't have Urdu loan words, it has Persian and Arabic loanwords from the time Persian was the language of prestige in North India.
@@ranjodharora6592 let's make this even simpler..... If Hindi and Urdu are standard Hindustani as you said then how do you address the absolute zero resemblance between the 100s of dialects which can't be ignored if you are referring to Hindi and not just one of its dialects (khari boli) all of your points are legitimate at one condition which is if you are referring only and only to khari boli which is just a dialect itself but If you are referring to the entire Hindi language the argument completely falls down. Now considering khari boli as the Standard Hindi is yet another assumption from your side just because it's widely spoken these days which is against the fact that there is no standard Hindi you might term it as official dialect purely because majority speaks it today though it doesn't make it standard. As for Punjabi Idk where did you learn this radically different grammar cuz my Punjabi lessons were filled with topics and functionings which a hindi speaker might find familiar as for phonology we face that difference in dialects too remember? But what differentiates Punjabi is the script only and it didn't develop from shauraseni but from paishachi... you keep pointing my factual knowledge as incorrect without any evidence yet forgot to check your own facts..... just to let you know my facts and theory is what they teach the people who graduated with ancient Languages and a specialization in Indo Aryan branch I'm a student. These are not my opinion but what they teach me in India
good to see the video of our countries. all time i see videos on different accent of english like uk vs us etc. we Pakistani and Indian should be proud of our languages like others do. love this
@youcometome9 sumerian is 5000 years old. We have old egyptian texts 2400 BC. In Egyptian we can obeserve the evolution of the language in a time span of 3000 years
@@pospos3418 there is no "oldest language" this is bullshit. but there is the oldest written language at this is sumerian and old egyptian more than 4000 years old.
@OuiBoi Naka Patel prevented further dislocation of India after independence .India was already united by the Brits ! Some were even forced to join the Union by force .
🇮🇳♥️🇵🇰always and forever. People , their language, their culture is so similar to each other. Don't let those politicians destroy the love we have for each other
@The silentWHISPERerror dude u just think that uRdU is ur language then i think u should shutup because when urdu was made there was no freaking india, pakistan and india was together that time also urdu was made before hindi so yea hindi is a copy of urdu
No. Urdu took birth in and around what today is known as Delhi. Hindi and Sanskrit were two popular languages before the beginning of Delhi sultanate in subcontinent. When these people came to the subcontinent they adopted a language which had words from Sanskrit, Hindi and Persian. But they wrote them in a script that they brought with them from outside. Hence, same words but different scripts.
@@tomorrowisanotherday12 hindi and urdu originated at the same time Give and take a century. Pali prakrit sanskrit and other Dravidian languages were present in the sub continent. Hindi is not as old as you claim. It's a product of mughal invasion. It's one of the youngest indian languages.
only u got some point bcz other indian saying that hindi is very old language and urdu is not that old like that they dont know that it was called hindustani not hindi
Hindi and Urdu have lots of difference And nowdays most of the people of india choose to speak urdu vocabulary instead of hindi vocabulary I don't know who is using pure hindi and urdu But usage of urdu vocabulary is much in hindustani language...
@@EZIOGAMER333 you r wrong, I from Gilgit Baltistan every educated person can speak urdu coz urdu is simple and sweet language. In our schools we speak urdu.
@@EZIOGAMER333 Yes, that's right ... People in Pakistan's Punjab don't speak Urdu, I think they urdu speak in Karachi. And in india it is spoken by most of the muslim The best urdu spoken near Lucknow ... I m from there...
**spoken hindi and urdu are 90-95% same** only difference is urdu being more focused(specially in technical words) towards persian and hindi being more focused towards sanskrit. Else both are basically same language with different names because both derive words from Arabic, persian, sanskrit, turkish, Portuguese, english and some other indian regional dialects. And language is never of any religion but region. This is our language call it urdu or hindi it's your wish.
I think the difference would be something like that between standard Received Pronunciation of English and Scots (or Scots English if you call it a dialect). Both 'languages' had their histories as languages of royal courts, but eventually Scots ceased to be called a language after 1713 due to political reasons. If Scotland had remained independent, we probably would be calling English and Scots separate languages. Urdu and Hindi are just examples of a common language split up for political reasons. I'm sure there are dialectal extremes of either variety that are completely unintelligible to the other, however, whereas any dialect of English doesn't really have this (unless you were to count Jamaican patois or Tok Pisin as dialects of English).
Yes brother both languages are same just like British English & American English. And even Punjabi Language is very Similar. That's why People in North Can Communicate very Easily in Hindi. Most people from Bengal, Assam, Gujarat, Maharashtra and other North, East & Western State Can Easily Understand Hindi.
95% Bollywood k Movies, Dialogues, song’s Lyrics, Movie titles Urdu main hi hote hai. Jese k: Urdu: Don ko pakadna mushkil hi nahin ... namumkin hai Hindi: Don ko pakadna kathin hi nahi ….Asambhav hai Urdu: Mugambo Khush hua Hindi: Mugambo prasanna hua Urdu: Rishte me hum tumhare baap lagte hain…naam hai Shehenshah Hindi: Sambandh me to hum tumhare pita lagte hain ….naam hai Samraat Urdu: Kitne aadmi the Hindi: Kitne vyakti the
I am from Hyderabad of India. My mother tong is Urdu 💖. Proud to be Urdu Wala. Urdu hv sweet words in it that causes bollywood film industry Urdu word to make song. I like hindi also bcz i am 100℅ perfect in it. Who like Urdu & Hindi?
Watching this for the third time now just to hear their pronunciation! Didnt realize how pretty both languages are growing up 😻 Looking forward to a comparison vid with Bengali next, 😊
It's not same. I'm half Pakistani and half Indian. I can only understand about 75% of each language. Urdu has more Persian and Arabic words compared to Hindi and Urdu is also written in the Persian script but has 8 more words added too.
Narenc is an old word nobody would use that, "turuncu" is the one for color Narenciye = Citrus Portakal is orange (fruit) I wrote that so nobody confuses "portakal" and "turuncu" What you said was not incorrect but I wanted to write common used words so it'll be better for people learning :v
Both languages are mutually intelligible in everyday colloquial language but once you start to hear Hindi news or Urdu news, they become mutually unintelligible
I'm an iranian kurd & I speak kurdish & persian .some of the word are same or close in my languages to this language .specialy numbers and foods are very close .
My uncle is Kurdish and yeah he told me some words and I noticed the word for "cheese" is the same. And as a French I hear some words that are pretty similar too. That's fascinating to know that half of humans speak a language that comes from there.
Dear Pakistanis, let's just speak in a more similar language, screw them politicians always trying to divide us. I speak Punjabi and Hindi so I am sure I am able to communicate with 90% Pakistan easily. Let's focus on similarities rather than differences.
you speak punjabi which have many urdu words, that's why you think hindi is similar to urdu, beta hindi is much more pure and advanced then urdu , it was created before both urdu and punjabi.
So it's 99% same at pronouncing but different written!
Bhai mai to Lucknow me he rahata tha , jo nwabiyat yahan logo no failai wo jane anjane pura mulk hindi indirectly bolne laga ha.
Chalo gusse me hee sahi kuchh to failaya inhone.
@T. K. हिंदी कण्ठ, कड़क, आर्द्रता लिख सकते हो पर उर्दू ने जिस फ़ारसी भाषा लिपि का उपयोग किया है वो तो सीमित है।
@T. K. that's exactly what he just said 🤨🤨
Verdade.
Dá pra entender os 2 idiomas mesmo sem conhecer.
Honestly, it’s the same pronunciation....I know of regions where the guy speaking “hindi” would be considered to have better pronunciation that the girl actually speaking “Urdu”
Two Languages.
Same grammar.
Same common vocabulary.
Different advanced vocabulary.
Different scripts.
What might be some good examples of differences in advanced vocabulary? Also, although lexical differences are important, I usually find syntax to be more interesting. Are there any good examples of differences in syntax between Hindi and Urdu?
@@declup Advanced vocab is the words we don't use in informal casual conversation.
Like Government in Hindi is Sarkaar and in Urdu it's Huqoomat. I'm not fluent in Urdu advanced vocab and sometimes Hindi speakers do get difficulty in understanding Pakistani news. But common conversation is pretty much same. Sentence structure, is totally the same. I don't know what's syntax, but if you'd explain, I could answer the you.
Two Languages :
-Same language
-Different countries
(Yes, that's stupid)
@@aayushsharma8735 -- 'Syntax' basically means 'sentence structure', so you've actually already done a good job of answering my questions. Thank you for that; I really appreciate your helping me to learn more about Hindi and Urdu.
@@declup both have the same sentence structure. Thanks 🙏🙏
They're basically the same except Urdu is more Persian
@MN - 09ZZ - Fletchers Meadow SS (2492) Urdu's birthplace is region around Delhi
And kurdish
@Hawk Who Knows All
Urdu chori ki language hai
Farsi arbi word ko chura kar hindi main mila kar urdu bani hai.....chori ki likhwat........ Ya ek fake or chori ki gai language hai
Urdu....hindi ki grammar use karti hai...... Mughal chor the unki language bhi chori ki thi
@Hawk Who Knows All 🤦🏻♂️🤦🏻♂️
Dhyaan se dekh....mene likkha hai....bol nahi raha.... Speaking writing main antar hai
@Hawk Who Knows All
Pakistan ki language hai punjabi sindhi blochi.....urdu uttar pardesh ki language hai
Tum logo ka identity crisis alag hi level ka hai
Kabhi arab ko apna baap bolte ho
Kabhi Turkey ko papa bolte ho
Toh kabhi khudko persian bolte ho
🤦🏻♂️🤦🏻♂️....... Apni language bolo
As a persian I love how I could understand 70% of the words,it's so cool to have languages similar to yours
because they have the same origin dummy
Hindi = 45% Arabic words + 45-50% Persian words + hardly 🇮🇳 speaks 5-10% Sanskirt words
Sanskirt is a dead language before Mughals before even 12 century Amir khusro times Indian used to talk farsi+arabic words
.
Urdu = 50% Arabic words +45% Persian words...5% other languages.
.
FACT & truth is 🇮🇳 speaks also URDU which is Arabic+Persian words mostly...but they called it Hindi👊
hindi/hindu is also persian word🌬
.
90% bollywood script are written in Urdu 98% Lyricist writes songs in Urdu
Shayri toh hoti hi Urdu hai
.
Insaan- Human
Maut- Death
Admi - human
Dimagh - brain
Duniya - world
Waqt- Time
Mohabbat - love
Nafrat - hate
Hawaa - air
Ilm - knowledge
Aql - mind
Kaam - work
Subha- Morning
Kitab- Book
Lekin - but
Lafz, Alfaaz - words
Bilkul - ofcourse
Shru'at- Beginning
Khatam- Finished
Gham sorrow
Shaheed- Used only for Muslims😎
Kharaab- Bad
sharaab - alcohol
Daakhil- Enter
Sabr- Patience
Deen, mazhab
Malik- Ruler
Mulk
Museebat- Misfortune
Qaum- Nation
Junoon
Kursi- Chair
Wakil- lawyer
Adalat- court
Jurm- Crime
Mujrim
Aurat - woman☕️
Izzat , zilat
Ameer, gareeb , kareeb , ajeeb
Sahi, galat, khirab , silsila
Aadat, Halat , Ibadat , ijazat, Zehmat , hifazat
Hasrat, Qudrat , Jannat , rehmat , dua
Khayal, Mushkil, Mashoor, Qabool , Qabil
Jism, Rooh, Haya, Aashiq, Ishq, Uns
Aam, Khaas , khariyat
Haram, Harami- Bastard
Shaitan👹
Rab☝️
Shukar..Shukriya
.
These are some 1% arabic words.
Indians even dont know that these are Arabic words..they think these are sanskirt words🦧😂
.
☆Zindagi, Azaadi, Asmaam, Zameen, Dil, Dard, Dost, Dushman, Ghar ,Darwaza
Sar, Chera, Zaban, Khoon, Ganda, Khali, Andar, Bahar, Avaaz, khvaab
Zaroori, Dewana, Khoob, Sabzi, Mazedar, Dariya, Rang, Safed, Hamesha, Khamosh, Shayad, Khali, Khatarnak,Pasand, Khush, Naraz, Bimaar, Dawaa, Khushbu, Badbu, Jawan, Hoshiyar, Meharban, Darkht ,phul,
Mein, Mera, meri ,mere, Hum
Shadi, hafta, mahina, shaam ,naam
Shohar, bibi,Bacha, Ya , khud , Khuda
Peeshab😂
These are some 1% farsi words hai.
.
Its really Funny 🇮🇳 speaks 90% Arabic+Farsi words which is called Urdu but they say we are using sanskirts words mostly thats why we are talking Hindi🦧 Delusional🤡 in Hindi u cannot even speak 1 sentence without using Arabic+Farsi words👊🌬
@@PabloEscobar-j7n OH! My dear spammer .
Bro I’m Indian💀
@@PabloEscobar-j7n Modern Hindi is more like 30% Persian 30% Sanskrit/Prakrit and 30% English and 10% Arabic.
*_Hindi and Urdu are Like Purple and Voilet_*
Both are Made of Red(Sanskrit) and Blue(Arabic/Persian)
*_But_*_ one Has More Red(Hindi) and Other Has More Blue(Urdu)_ 😁
that's a pretty good analogy
Yes, you gave a very good example 👍
You should also add a little bit of Turkish since the Mughals were of Turko-Mongol descent and spoke Chaghtai
Many poeple dont know but old persian and vedic sanskrit are sisters as both of them are daughter languages of proto indo iranians. The languages of arayans
@@abhinavchauhan7864 yes, you're right. I'm glad that someone else knows this linguistic fact too 😁
I am Pakistani and I know how to read and write Hindi. I self taught myself.
Sach me ?
Wow? Great but why
oh great ! I did the same.It takes just a weekend to learn writing script.
@@manitdoshi4645 I know hindi and urdu
Alllooooo
I don't think they have difficulties to understand each other, except for the writing system.
Its the same language like Galician and Portuguese & Russian and Ucranian... Only political problems thats makes they try to get different each other.
@@ArthurPPaiva galician/portuguese and Híndi/urdu comparison is incorrect. In Galician and Portuguese, some words having same roots are slightly different in spellings and pronunciations from the other corresponding word like ' cão-can' , ' pássaro-paxaro' etc. While in hindi-urdu It is the same and single language with no modifications in grammar, spellings and pronunciation, just a change in script and vocabulary. Every word in hindi is 100% same in urdu. Like for dog both languages say kutta and for 'My name is Christopher' it is translated into 'Mera naam Christopher hai' in both languages with no differences. So if u study urdu then you literally studied hindi.😊😊
@@christophergonsalves2179 i know it! Same has GL/PT, the difference of spellings are just regional.. in Portugal have 13 differents ways to speak portuguese in Brazil 16 and in Galícia 3... But in the end, all of these its the same language.
@@christophergonsalves2179 no its is different in grammar and use of words and spellings in thousands of ocassions .. From a urdu and hindi speaker ...
The grammar and basic vocabulary are the same. But abstract and more complicated words are totally different. I speak Hindi and understand an Urdu conversation but cann't understand the Urdu news at the radio.
I know that Hindi, Urdu and my native language, Spanish, are all Indoeuropean. But it still amazes me the similarities I heard with a few words.
Numbers I heard similar.
They are written in Spanish.
2: dos
7: siete
8: ocho
9: nueve
10: diez
The color orange in Spanish is "naranja".
Hi everyone,
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If you want to learn urdu don't worry I'm here to teach you
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Naranja is a Sanskrit word. The fruit was discoverd by the Arabs during their conquest of India and introduced to Spain through the Moors.
The similarities in numbers surprised me though.
Yo soy de Puerto Rico y muchas de nuestras palabras son árabes e indígenas. I love hearing people from the Philippines speak because they'll throw in a random Spanish word I understand, and then I have no idea what else they're saying. 😅
Soy de India, hablo Hindi y inglés. Estoy aprendiendo español. Creo que aprender español es más fácil que aprender inglés para el hablante de hindi porque Hay muchas palabras similares.
Go south into India and the other languages also have similarities. The word mongoose came from Telugu mungisa, mango came from Malayalam mānga, rice came from Tamil arīs, but these are not Indo-European. These are native Indian.
As a Persian speaker: I understood 70% of the words.
@V O A lot of them came from Persian because only 1/3rd of it was from Arabic. But yeah that’s because Urdu, Hindi and Spanish and also Persian are Indo-European languages.
me to
@@mamouta5376 ya osld persian and sanskrit were like twins
Hmm here in India we learn Persian Too 😅
@@SayPedia Really? Cool. In all of the schools?.
Looks like the guy is just teaching the words to this girl and she's repeating them to show how well she is learning.
Looks like u too have watched the American Vs British Vs Australian accent video, am I right?🤪🤔
@@PositiveCanathalTilt hahaha..yes😁🤟
I watched it a long time ago.
😛🤣
@@abcdbyeilliteracy645 lawra lag gaya😂
Ikr! It's so similar.
As a Russian,I was really impressed when I heard the word "Chai" for tea because we have the same word in Russian.It's the most popular beverage in my country!We drink it all the time with sweets and cakes!It's so delicious!😊
isnt it alcohol
@@WaddiaS No,it's merely a myth.Yes,elders and youngsters can allow themselves to fully relax sometimes via consuming alcohol,but it doesn't mean they drink it permanently!On the other hand,drinking tea is widespread in Russia.It's like coffee in America with fast-prepared breakfast dishes such as sandwiches,toasts,sweets etc.
@@fractalinfinity1750 Sorry for being cheeky, lol~ I always thought Russia has very strong alcoholic tradition so it's pervasive. But yes your point is far stronger that tea is much more commonly consumed when compared to for example coffee in the US.
What variety of tea is usually drunk in Russia? Our chai is mostly milk with black tea. Have a good day~~
@@WaddiaS Well,most of us drink black tea,but it actually depends on a person and his or her preferences.Some people lavish their attention on the taste of tea meanwhile the others look for the affordable prices on different sorts of tea in order to purchase the cheapest one and economize more money for further buying something else. To be honest,almost all the tea sorts aren't natural here.This is why it's not a difficult task to find it in the local shops and supermarkets cause of its availability via low prices. As I know,the natural Chinese tea tastes the other way and its taste is more unique.
Green tea is also popular due to caffeine which stimulates the mind work and does not let you fall asleep during preparation for tests,exams etc.Many female students prefer to drink it.
Regarding to milk,we can add it,but not all of us.The majority prefer to drink it without milk.
Have a good day!
I saw this really interesting theory that basically stated that if tea had been brought by land, it was called Chai, and if it had come by sea, it was called Tea, thé, etc. For example, Чай in russian, but Thé in french. Another interesting thing to note is that the russian word Кайф comes from the same root as Coffee, relating to a high or euphoria
corrections: laal is also used in urdu (i am a native urdu speaker) and surkh is more like crimson color, it's a pretty rare word most people only use it in formal occasions. naaranji is the word for the fruit LMAO we also say naarangi. i have never heard someone say "sabz" for green ever, i've only heard hara.
I am Hindi speaker in our area, we say ' laal - surkh ' when we want to emphasize red colour of something. We never say sabz to any colour. Only vegetables are called sabzi.
@@krishnapalsinghsisodiya9678 ye vegetables are called sabzi but i've never ever heard anybody say "sabz" it's only been haraa for green
In "proper" hindi, the word for white is श्वेत (shwēt)but we only use सफ़ेद (səfēd). Just another way to show that hindustani is basically one language with two ways to write.
@@msruag you must be living in non urdu speaking area even we indian muslims hear sabz as green very often
@@furchtbar8311 i was born in pakistan, lived in karachi for my childhood, still speak urdu with my family, and have roots within deccani people, so it's safe to say i have some pretty deep conections with urdu. but it's possible, i'm pretty sure it's the same with laal/surkh, there's an informal version and then a formal version
2 things I learned
1. Hindi and Nepali are more similar than I thought (via. Sanskrit)
2. Bollywood uses a lot of Urdu words over Hindi words (for eg. Shukriya over Dhanyabad)
honestly, most people in north india speak a mix of hindi and urdu. there's times i'll say "shukriya" and times i'll say "dhanyawaad".
Hindi word more use karna chahiye
Pure nepali isn't same as hindi 😀 and I guess nepali has more older history then hindi language !!
There is a reason to use urdu in movies as many people can't understand pure hindi that's y they are made only using urdu only
@Alexander shah pakistani understan pure hindi but not snskrit. Hindi people can not understand pure hindi if snskrit words used in it.
Hindi & Urdu are 99% equal, but scripts are different.
Hindi written by Devnagri script.
Urdu written by Arabian script.
Urdu is written in farsi script. Both hindi and urdu are made from farsi mostly. During the times of Mughal empire lodhi dynasty and tughlaq dynasty, marathas empire. Farsi(Persian) was spoken in indian subcontinent. Even before the Muslim rule, the hindu empires also had farsi as official language. Even the names of country are in farsi like hindustan (land of hind ) and Pakistan (land of pure).Even punjab is farsi word meaning 5 rivers.
@mayank numbers like zero which is called sifr 1aik do 2 8 aath 9 no are in Persian (farsi). Pineapple (a anas) apple seeb are in Persian. I know you don't want to accept reality because of your anti muslim mind. But this is reality and if you read history indian subcontinent was ruled by turkic people like Mughals, lodhi dynasty, and khilgid dynasty, Ghurid kingdom and ghaznavid empire.
@mayank and colors like safeed white is in Persian. Siyah which means black comes from Persian. Zard meaning yellow comes from Persian. Also sabz which mean green comes from Persian.
@mayank before urdu and hindi that farsi (Persian) was spoken in whole Indian subcontinent. Persian has influenced pashto, punjabi baloch, kashmiris,hindko. Urdu was made 13 th century and had famous poets like amir khusro, mir taqi mir, bahador shah zafar, ghalib, altaf hussain hali and famous allama muhammad Iqbal the spiritual father of Pakistan.
@Baby Sama 712 exactly.They are idiots. They think they speak pure form of bangla. But these stupids don’t know that they also speak Bengali by mixing persian, arabic words. This aanpar only triggered Bengali Muslim that we only mix Arabic words in Bengali. But these airheads don’t know that they also do the same. They also mix Arabic words in Bengali. Illiterate kiddos.
Naranji is so similar to naranja in Spanish.
Un fact Naranji is a Persian borrowed word, many of Hindi/Urdu words come from the Persian as it was the cultural language during the Mogol period, time in which those languages developed his definitive form today
Yes, proto indo european root
In Georgian as well - Narinjisferi - orange colour
@@nyah_tan nope. narinj is an Arabic word
@@iosebdzamukashvili5360 io
Urdu is somehow old and common language of sub continent. During 1800 to 1947,Hindi was made a separate language full of Sanskritise hard words in place of Arabic and Persian words. Public and Bollywood use same old language which is easy to communicate.
Hindu is older than urdu.
Urdu uses hindi grammar.
Without hindi grammar there will be no complete sentence in urdu only meaningless phrases will be left.
@AARYAN-r1A1 You are wrong. Urdu was made official language of courts in 1831 not Hindi. Hindi, s first newspaper was published after Urdu .
@@redstar1287
Lol.
That doesn't mean I m wrong. Hindi as a language is older than urdu.
Read amir khusro nd malik muhammad jaesi.
What u r saying is not a criteria to decidecwhich language is older.
@AARYAN-r1A1 Amir Khusro and Malik Md. Jaisi, written their poetry in Urdu script. Bewakoof...
@@redstar1287
🤣 Arey bewakoof ke bchhe.
Maen LANGUAGE ki baat kr rha hun..... SCRIPT ko nhi.
U have no knowledge about the difference between language and script
I'm Arab and I can speak a little bit of Urdu. Assalamualikum ❤️ 🇵🇸🇵🇰🇮🇳🇧🇩.
Then u can say u can speak little bit of hindi too LOL
@@kamnasingh9654 Yes, but Urdu and Arabic almost have the same alphabets and many common words. So, it's more easier for me to learn👍.
w.salam
@@nanyy7860
Hindi is a Arabic Word too .
You call people of subcontinent al hind .
So sad you Arabs forget these things .
Waaleikum us Salam. That's really great. Urdu is a beautiful language indeed. We also find v easy to read n understand Arabic as both languages are written in the same script.
I’m happy that Hindi and Urdu both didn’t borrow “pineapple” from English and remained as “ananas”
Pineapple was brought in india by Portuguese along with its name
Lol we german say to pineapple ananas too
But we don't generally use these words while speaking. I am Indian and some time ago I didn't even know the hindi word for pineapple. It's very unusual nowadays to hear anyone say ananas
In Bangladesh We call it "ANAROSH"
@@Mdharun-nz1ny I have always found Bengali very interesting. Or Bangla as you call it. I am from Punjab.
I am sure every Pakistani knows what "Laal" or "Hara" means.
WE ONLY KNOW LAL IS WHAT WHICH CHINA HAD DONE WITH ENDIA IN GALWAN
@@muhammadsherazisherazi8714 oh boy I feel pity for you , how can you be uneducated for so long? You should have learnt the meaning of laaal back in 1971.
@@abcgames4454 HAHAHAHA LOL MERA AK FLUKE LAG GAYA TU HERO BAN GAY
@@muhammadsherazisherazi8714 there is a caps lock button too if you have not seen in before. And if you are writing hinglish, please write it properly.
@@Artist_of_Imagination LOL MERA MERA KEYBOARD MERI MARZI
As an Indonesian, I think I can learn Hindi through the Arabized Urdu, since I come from an ethnicity that used Hijaiyya as its own script.
Short answer: Words are 95% same but the writing is very different
Urdu spoken in Pakistan will be a bit more Persian-influenced but yes. Urdu spoken in India and Hindi are very similar
@@bvedant yes
Just write in English. Bas aise likhlo problem solve
@@bvedant no it isn’t in fact if u walk around city like Karachi u will understand 99% of what they’re saying (this is because vocabulary words which are Persian and Arabic are not used)
@@noneimportant5951 yes agree just their accent is different than us.
The two languages sounds so similar and beautiful 😊
Hugs from 🇧🇷
They are the same. Urdu was made to give different feeling to hindus who converted into muslims during Islamic rule.
They just change the script of hindi into arabic.
Hi bro I love Brazil soccer team 🇮🇳♥️🇧🇷
Language is too similar just wriiting style is different we can speak both language you can understand that this is one language
@ㅤㅤ hindi in 7th ce urdu in 12th ce
@@mausenpai215
😂😂😂
URDU or Ordu has persian script
And its a Military language ,ordu means Camp .
And hindu is a Persian arabic word
Obviously they are Same ,created by same people .
I am a Bangladeshi,,
We understand many sentence both of these languages,,,
Accent almost same. 😶
@Akar Acharya
So why We have many similar Words in Hindi , Bengali, Gujrati , Telgu, Kannada and marathi
You are just pagal
Shakib
You are part of the Subcontinent so why didn't you Understand this
We are connected man
😅😅😅😅
@Akar Acharya no, hindi in 7 th century
@@_kartik_chauhan I know it.I am in the same sub-continent that's why many words are similar.I actually wanted to say that Hindi-Urdu almost same(different writing).
@@achiburshakib5804 yes Love from Dehradun , India
And I want to ask did you guys still want
Karimganj District Of Sylet that is now part of Assam State of Indian Union
As
" Mānacitrēra marasuma calachē "
As Nepal want Kalapani
That area is in my state And I have many relatives there and they are Indian by heart
And
Pakistan Just claim Junagad
On Historical Grounds
And karimganj district is Actually Was part of Sylet but when you got Khulna so Redcliff decides to give it to India as
Sylet and karimganj district are separated by A River named " kushiyara
What's your view on this
Bro
I'm a Malaysian. My language is Bahasa Melayu. Since we can write/read it by using ABC and also by using the Jawi (Arabic Script). We passively can read the Urdu pronunciation even though some of it doesn't turned out to be correct (by my language side of the Arabic script).
Bahasa is a sanskrit/Hindi word which means language, looks like Malaysia has some indian history
@@saurabhkumar-cc2cx yes we did, the old Bahasa Melayu consisted a lot of Sanskrit and Arabic loan words and recently, English. Thus, our modern Bahasa Melayu was born. We were Hindu-Buddhism in the year 1500 and below, and Muslim in the year 1500 and above.
The Arabic script used for Urdu is inefficient in a few places. E.g.:
The word for cat is بلے (billī) but nowhere in the word does it give you a hint that the letter L should be stressed. Whereas in Hindi it is बिल्ली। You can see the repeated letters which are joined, representing the stressed “L” sound.
Another example is the word for blue, which is نیلا (nīlā). The Arab writing doesn’t tell you whether it’s supposed to be pronounced nīlā, nailā or nēlā. But in Hindi it’s written नीला, where the नी is pronounced nī.
@liverbot4854 also, urdu doesn't have ण ळ ष sounds
@@mintodak6509money Malaysian languages are Sanskrit
It's sounds like they're teaching each other...
🤞🤞🤞🤣🤣
What is even more surprising is that Urdu, an Indian language, is being shown with a Pakistani flag! What can be more hilarious? Pakistanis, who adopted an Indian language, are teaching Indians how to speak their own language! I think very soon, Pakistanis will teach English to the British, Persian to Iranians, and Arabic to the Saudis!
@PM Сен ақымақсың it actually is!
@@globalcitizen1856 Why are you so mad lol
@@blokblocks8216 No, actually I am enjoying the comedy😜
I'm Indian. I can speak and read both versions. On ground even the colour names are the same as spoken on the street. I know surkh and sabz, but in practice even Urdu speakers would normally say laal and hara. Naranji too is something one hears very rarely, everybody normally says narangi.
Surkh would be a brighter hue of red than lal. And sabz is your vegetable green hue.
This man is absolutely right. No one in Pakistan (पाकिस्तान) uses Sabz, but hara for green. Sabz is commonly used in its other forms like sabz’a’ (greenery) n sabzi (vegetables or green vegetables).
Also we don’t say naragi, instead we use phrase ‘orange color ka’. 😅
@@Diecast_Den normal zubaan mein kehne ko to hum bhi orange colour ka hee kehte hain, lekin narangi technically correct word hai
I don't know about Both of this languages but hindi script looks beautiful and unique with that line __ it looks so disciplinly designed.
Tamilzh ah?
@@SureshS-iv4qj yes
Enda Ooru neenga mam
Devnagari is world most phonetic script adopted by hindi later. It's the script of sanskrit and marathi too.
@@Top-notch_beauty yes
As someone who is Indian and Urdu/Hindi speaking, It would be more appropriate to also add the Indian flag to your Urdu section. Urdu is widely spoken in Delhi and UP. Urdu is a language of the Indian subcontinent. Urdu is spoken in Pakistan as is Punjabi, SIndhi etc. Urdu is the prettier more gentle language and so its used extensively in Bollywood song lyrics. But high Urdu is too formal and not spoken in day to day speech. Neither India or Pakistan can claim ownership of Urdu- both countries have native Urdu speakers. Afterall, it used to be the same country :)
Agree! And also in Telangana (Hyderabad, India)
Well said 👏
@@socialjusticeMD Also in Karnataka
I think simple urdu and simple hindi are almost similar but urdu language used in urdu literature and poetry is more like persian..
Kind of like English from Shakespeare vs. today's common English. Most people don't want to read it even though they could if they really tried
Exactly 👍
For hindi use "sanskrit" Is the place of "Persian"
Hindi has more influence of Sanskrit and Urdu has more influence of Persian and turkish
@@damnsk85 Persian and arabic not much Turkish influence
I hope India and Pakistan live peacefully, I'm from Indonesia 🇮🇩
🇵🇰❤️🇮🇩
India taught peace to the world, while Pak taught terrorism! How can they live peacefully?
@@globalcitizen1856 don't be provoke!
@@volksraad6253 But how? Indonesia, a muslim country, is also waging a war against terrorism - Laskar jihad & East Indonesia Mujahideen. Why?
@@globalcitizen1856 oknum
Hindi and Urdu language are real sister among themselves. Only their script is different.
bhai jaan ye bahne nahi eek hi hai bus doo shaklen hai is ki
Urdu is Hindi with Persian words. So they are not sisters. Hindi is the mother and Urdu is just one of the many accents of Hindi
@@globalcitizen1856 you're an id*iot*"* together hindi and urdu were called hindustani but now they're two seperate languages and separate scripts although an indian can easily conversate with a pakistani but that doesn't make it any less than hindi
@@o_0264 true absolutely true
@@o_0264 wow. What manners.
Note: hindi and urdu are both derived from same language called hindustani or earlier known as khadi boli , the difference is urdu have arabic, persian and to a lower extent some turkish loanwords where as Hindi has Sanskrit loanwords that is the only difference there maine vocabulary and words are same
Main difference is grammar.
Urdu has no grammar of its own. While hindi has it.
Urdu uses hindi grammar.
@ Sorry you are wrong , Urdu and Hindi both have same grammar as they are both same language.
@@faheemsheikh8432
No. There r similarities but they r not same.
@ Both are same languages , which was intentionally made different to divide Hindus and Muslims
@@faheemsheikh8432
No.
I've just realised that The Jungle Book cartoon is about India because that bear called Baloo because it's just a bear in Hindi. I'm so stupid.
Good one
@Akar Acharya You need professional help because you seem like an unapologetic inveterate liar. Hindi came from khadi boli, awadhi and sanskrit. We had literary works in these languages even before Islam was born in Arabia. #StopThePropaganda
#spreadTruth
@Akar Acharya lol 😂😂 matlab kuch bhi
Hey you learn something everyday. Do you Aladdin is actually a Chinese story
@@diptosarker810 NO! DON'T LIE! IT'S NOT TRUE :C
When I was learning Hindi many years ago I was also learning Urdu simultaneously all along. That is insane.
You were learning just urdu pure hindi is now becoming extinct in most parts of India specially northern
@@tejaspathak7298Well I've heard that they are technically the same language.
@@FaeTae2014 no pure hindi is mostly taken from sanskrit and urdu is taken from Arabic and persian
@@tejaspathak7298what I meant was how a lot of the words SOUND the same. However they do look different visually.
@@tejaspathak7298 Aree bhai pure Urdu suni hai kabhi 🤣🤣🤣 Pakistan ke log ko sunana vo hoti hai pure Urdu hum kuch words istemaal karte hai iska matlab ye nhi hum Urdu bolte hai even English bhi bahut se Latin words use karti hai
The girl sounds like Punjabi, she has pretty Punjabi accent
Yeah
Agree
I was thinking the same, i lived with punjabi people for 9 years and i think the same.
Most Pakistani people know to speak punjabi (in my opinion)
@@prisha1050 that is true
Hindi and Urdu are 99% similar. Except some words are different and the script is different. Think of it like Russian used in Cyrillic vs Russian used in the Latin alphabet, with also tiny word differences between the two.
I'm Pakistani Punjabi and I know both scripts of Punjabi (Shahmukhi & Gurmukhi) and I know Urdu and Hindi both scripts. ❤️
@𝖩𝗈𝗌𝖾𝗉𝗁'𝗌 Misconception ❖ then you know nothing..
so cool dude. i'd love to learn punjabi script. i already know most of the urdu script because i know the arabic script though.
@༼ཆ༽ Oh you're right! Sorry!
yeeeeahh
You can read
Guru Granth Sahib which is nothing but Islamic terms in Sanskrit.
Love to all Indian and Pakistani people from Bangladesh.
🇧🇩❤️🇵🇰❤️🇮🇳
Love from Pakistan🇵🇰🇵🇰
Lots of love from India 🇮🇳 😊 🙏
Bengali has more sanskrit than even hindi
@@byron-ih2ge I am pakistani and I can understand majority of the words of Bengali language
@@o_0264 because urdu also has sanskrit as its base although doesnt have much of sanskrit loanwords like hindi or bengali
I am from Pakistan my childhood was passed by listening old Indian songs watching Indian movies and dramas love all the Indian brothers and wants to unite why we separated and a lots of our own people hate us due to these borders politicians and media
My dream is that Pakistan and India unite together like before and no one defeat us we look same our dresses same our color same we also understand the languages of each other but why we are far above
In foreign countries all the Pakistani Bangladeshi and Indians live together like brothers but in our own countries why we can not met why we can not share our happiness and sadness each other we are not different nations we are one the subcontinentals
Love Indian and Bangladeshi brothers from Pakistan❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤🇵🇰🇮🇳🇧🇩
Ah ! Feeling so sad and hurted💔😔
Well said. There are many countries that should unite/reunite, like Spain and Portugal. Sadly, there is too many division in this world.
@Indian Stars Pakistan is land of munafiqs
Love u brother from India.... Kaash aj india pakistan ek hote to hum aj ek dusre ke shehar aaram se ja pate... Bina visa passport ke 😭😭😭sab politicians ki vjah se hua hai...
Agreed. Honestly anywhere in the world besides Pakistan and India, the two nationalities get along fine. My best friend in uni was Pakistani
What has Bangladesh got to do with it? 🤔
As a Bengali speaker, I understood 95.5% of the words.
As a Brazillian, for me both the languages have beaultiful sounds, but the writing I'ts moreless. 🇧🇷💖I love Hindi and Urdu languages.💖🇧🇷
em todo lugar tem Braslieiro pqp KKKKKKKKKK
O dez é bem semelhante com o nosso 😂
Os números são parecidos ao Português e às outras línguas neolatinas em geral
@@nightmare4164 do(2), ti (3), sat (7), ót (8), nóu (9), das (10), narandi (laranja), ananás (ananás/abacaxi em português culto), tchaê (chá), cófi (café), gaê (gado), sanp (serpente).
Essas línguas são da família do português, mas são como primos de 4 grau hahaha
@@imlukasmatheus pior que sim kkkkk
So, If I know Hindi then I know Urdu
Yes! I know 4 languages!
Yes
Me too lol😂😂
Yess!! But I guess you need to know the script to actually 'know' the language.
@@Krutikakulkarni17 I guess so
Not hindi, Urdu is mostly influenced by Persian. But yes, hindi and other languages have also been used. People at my place say, Urdu is a lashkari zubaan. According to the popular myth, Urdu is a 'camp language' or 'lashkari zaban' because it originated in the army camps of the Mughals(Arab and Persians). The soldiers who spoke these languages were recruited to the Mughal army and to communicate among themselves they used this new language, and thus Urdu was born.
I am Indian btw and I can read urdu too. 😄
Urdu: Hindustani with several Arabic and some Turkic loan words. Hindi: Hindustani with a more conservative trend toward Sanskrit loan words. 99% of the languages are the same. It’s literally a difference of where their liturgical and ministerial words come from. Hindi speakers are generally-not always-of the Hindu faith. While Urdu speakers tend toward Islam-again vast oversimplification. Because the vedas are written in Sanskrit, more Sanskrit is used the Hindi language. Because many Muslims believe that the only way to truly understand the Quran is by reading it in Arabic, many Arabic loan words entered Urdu.
Akar Acharya I literally don’t see how what I said contradicts anything you said. Hindustani is the name Linguists use to describe the two languages because they are literally the same language with different loan words. I never said which came first or which came second. As far as being “pushed on” people by the government, there are literally hundreds of different people groups in that region which each have their own language and writing system. The fact is that any country with such diverse language demographics is going to need a lingua Franca to communicate across groups. That’s Hindustani for Pakistan and for India. I have literally zero care to discuss the politics of language. That is why I discussed the differences of the different dialects of Hindustani. Not the timeline. Because there’s little reason to cause a flame war in the comments. There’s a long standing rivalry between the two countries and getting in the middle of that was exactly what I was trying to avoid.
Hindi was created from Urdu by ousting persian words and sanskrtitizing replacing persian script with devnagri Bcoz urdu was made in muslim rule for muslims are lingua franca All of pakistani languages have persian vocab..There is nothing called hindustani stoopid
@Akar Acharya Hindi is not imposed on the entirety of India. Many South Indians don't know how to speak Hindi
@@blacksheep6174 Neither Pakistani as well.
@@vineetkumar52 yes..
Hindi and Urdu are indeed two mass spoken languages, and they have similarities and differences for sure.
I am Bangladeshi, I love India and Pakistan.
Love from Pakistan 🇵🇰🇧🇩🇮🇳
Love to you guys and Pakistan ❤❤
No way not Pakistan 🇵🇰💩🇵🇰💩 never forget 1971 genocide
@@lightyagami9409 pakistani citizens weren't responsible for that.
@@o_0264 Dont mind his language..love for both countries from🇧🇩🇧🇩
They're basically two dialects of Hindustani
Hindustani is the colloquial form of both the languages.
@Akar Acharya No, Hindi and Urdu developed together. Standardization of Hindi is not the same as the development/formation of it, nor is its name's origin the same as the origin of the language.
Nah both are differnt apart fron few words . Ppl in india speak urdu and they say its hindi..Modi speak hindi and being urdu speaker i dont get him at all..urdu made in turkoMongol rule of india who were inspired from persian...All of pakistani languages have persian script and vocab so urdu...urdu just has some sanskrit words like Me Kiyon tum kis liye and its integerated in indian culture by bollywood and indian muslims so indians can understand .
Suwagat - Khush Amded
Dhanevad - Shukriya
Shama chahta hun -Muazrat
Dhyan - tawaja
man - dil
mehek - khushboo
Diya - shama
Aag - atish
Pani - aab
Hansi,muskan - muskurahat
Ghau/chot - Zakham
Seynek - foji
Marna - intqal karna
Mutna - peshab karna
Sham - shab
Virodh - ikhtilaf
Kathin - mushkil
Shanti - khamoshi
Janam - pedaish
and list goes on i dont have that much time.
Agar still confuse ho to National anthems suno jakar
@Akar Acharya 😁😁😁 where did you get Hindi language born in 18th century ??? Share me the info
Because I get in Google its Developed in 7th century and become a stable by 10th century 🤔
@@blacksheep6174 worlds oldest languages are 1. Tamil 2. Sanskrit 🇮🇳💪
All others copycat of Sanskrit language
Both are two registers of the same root language- Hindustani. Urdu uses more Arabic and Persian loan words. Hindi uses more indigenous Sanskrit and Prakrit words.
Both languages are mutually intelligible, however Urdu uses the modified Arabic alphabet while Hindi uses Devanagari.
It should be noted that the official language of the elite during Mughal times was Dar(ba)ri Persian, however the lower ranking foreign soldiers residing in Urds (Turkic : Ord = camp, tents) started using a mixed language - Urdu- for daily communication with native Hindus. After the fall of the Mughals to the Marathas and later British, the use of Dari declined. The lower ranking Muslims under patronage of British were encouraged to develop Urdu as a literary language by retaining Persian and purging Indian words, this new language also adopted the modified Arabic writing system
. Likewise upper caste Hindu elite steered Hindi away from Persian and more towards indigenous Sanskrit words. The Hindi spoken in Delhi retains more Persian, however the one spoken in Indore or Varanasi is heavy on Sanskrit.
Urdu spoken in Lucknow still retains the Persian influence, however Pakistani Urdu evolved again since the late 1970s under Saudi influenced Zia Ul Haq, this time Persian words were actively purged and replaced with Arabic ones. Khoda Hafez became Allah Hafeez and so on...
@Mustafa Alam It is. Just accept it like a good boy.
@Mustafa Alam what's not true?
@Mustafa Alam lt is
Sanskrit? Indegineous? Laughs from Caucasus mountains...lol
Who told you that Sanskrit is indigenous ?
It was the language of Aryans from central Asia. Sanskrit arrived in the Indian subcontinent from the north-west sometime during the early second millennium BCE.
The indigenous language of India is Tamil and its sister languages like Kannada, Telugu. Malayalam born out of Tamil. Both Hindi and Urdu were born in India, Sanskrit is not indigenous.
Out of 1.35 billion Indians hardly 25,000 ppl speak Sanskrit. It s a language in coma status for more than a millennium and still breathing because Hindu holy scriptures were written in it.
Urdu Aur Hindi Mein Farq Hain Bass Itna.
Urdu Dekhti Hain Khwaab.
Hindi Dekhti Hain Sapna.
🌹❤🌹❤🙏🙏🤗🤗🤝🤝👌👌💪💪✌✌👍👍🙂🙂😎😎😊😊.
In INDIA we speak in both Hindi and Urdu language and with other languages too.. ❤😍😊
Correct! In India, regional languages are prevalent, and languages are not really associated with religions!
@Funny boy every language is beautiful.. none of them are inferior or superior
@@UditplayzWHAT our Hindi is superior than this shitty Urdu sunne Mai he guu Lagta hai sala
@@Orewa_Ani4683
🤣🤣🤣
Tu gao k gdha hy
Hindi is village people language
Urdu is Nawabi royal language
@@mylakshmiveganheaven4562 nice both languages are good I know both ....
Hindi and Urdu are both the form of hindustani.
You persianise it becomes urdu, sanskritise it becomes Hindi.
They basically are same. The languages inside the Hindi belt has more variations
Hindi: Humen shudh Hindi me vaartalap karne ki kshamta prapt hain.
Urdu: Hum khalis Urdu me guftgu ki gunjaaish rakhte hain.
*************
Urdu to Hindi
*************
Peer - Somwar
Mungal - Mangalwar
Budh - Budhwar
Jumarat - Guruwar
Jumma - shukrwar
Hafta - Shaniwar
Itwar - rabiwar
Orat - Mahila
Mard- Purush
Bivi - Patni
Shohor - Pati
Khandaan - parewaar
Asman/falak - Akash/gagan
Zammen - Pritwi
Parinda - Pakshi
Khat - patr
Khush - prasanna
Khafa - Nirash
Dil - Hridya
pagal - vikshipth
Wada - Vachan
Azeem - Wishal
Pyaar - Preem
Khubsoorat - Sundhar
badsoorat - badda
bardaasht - sahen
kambakht - abhaga
Rishte - Sambandh
Yaqeen - Vishwas
namumkin - Asambhav
aadmi - vyakti
Lafz - Shubd
Matlab - arth
Shukriya - Dhaynevad
Shukr guzaar - Aa bhari
Malumat - Jankari
Waqt - Samay
Haq - Adhikaar
Mareez - Rogi
aasan - saralta
mushkil - Kathin
Acha - Barhiya
bura - ashub/hanikark
Izzat - Samman
nazdeek - nikaṭ
chahna - eccha
mazaydar - swadish
badtameez - ashabiye
wazeh/Saaf - prakat
shandaar - vismikari
naqaabile yaqeen - ashrejanak
hairat angaiz- Adbud
dilkash - manoram
umeed - Asha
Imtihaan - Pariksha
Mustaqbil - Bhavishya
Quwat /Taqat - Shakti
Taqatwar - Shaktishali
Jang - Yudh
qabool - swikar
Darkhast- vinti
Mazaq - Uphas
Simt - Disha
Zakhmi - Ghayal
Deshat gard - Aatank wadi
Shair-Kavita
Subh bakhair - Shub prabat
Seh pehar bakhair - Shubh Madhyanh
Raat bakhair - shubh raatri
Alwida - Vidah ki samay ki ram ram
Barhae mehrbani - Kyrapa krana
Zabardast - Vishaal
Mujhe afsos hai - Mujhe khed hai
khush aamdeed - Swagat
@@murtaza-ahmad-khan
Yaar itna time kaise mila aapko 😂😂😂
@ 14 December 2023 @ 10:54 PM
Divided by Media.
United by Language.🇵🇰❤🇮🇳
Mughal Ka language Jo Hindi language sa Bana hai 😑
LOVE AND RESPECT FOR PAKISTAN AND PAKISTANI PEOPLE AND THEIR CULTURE FROM BANGLADESH..❤🤍💚🇵🇰🇧🇩🇵🇰🇧🇩🇵🇰🇧🇩🇵🇰🇧🇩🇵🇰❤🤍💚
@@nazmoonnahar2489
Lag tha hai tum ko 1970 ma Kay Kay huwa tha patha nhi hai 🤣
@@nazmoonnahar2489 🇧🇩❤🇵🇰
@@reactionon3762 hr jaga aag lagani zaroori nahi!
As a Venezuelan ,I was impressed when I heard the word naranji for orange because in Spanish is naranja and sounds very similar, the same with Lilac. sometimes we connected by little things like this
You should really read about Andalusia, which is where you will find many words still used by Muslims whether in Arab countries, Turkey or South Asia :)
E.g. Look up educacão. It has more in common with its Arabic equivalent than with French/English/Latin!
The word orange is from Sanskrit nāranga. Mango is from Malayalam mānga. Funny how these words have become household names.
@@Gulchih The fact is , It came from the dravidian word Aaranj (Aaru is 6 and Anju is 5) orange mostly has 11 minor segments in it. Dravidian to Sanskrit to Arabic to European Langages
@@cornationboot8690 😂 here comes the ridiculous pseudoscience of the jealous Indians
The number sounds a little bit similar to indo-european languages
I noticed too. Cool
They are indo european languages.
They looks exactly like portuguese. Well at least the numbers and some colour's names
Because it is Indo-European.
Also notice snake: sānp=serpent.
Because its Indo-European languages
A língua hindi é uma das mais lindas do mundo 🇧🇷🇮🇳 Salve Índia
🇧🇷, 🤩
EU ACHO O FRANCÊS E O PORTUGUÊS
Write in english bro
Abbe yaar kiya likha hey???
Nao é não
*HINDI/URDU* *SANSKRIT* (ORIGIN)
HAATH = HAST
HAATHI= HAATHI
KAAN = KARN
NAAK= NAASIKA
AANKH= AKKSHI
ONTH,HONTH(LIPS)= ONTH(PRA KIT),OSTH(SANSKRIT)
SAMAJHNA( TO UNDERSTAND)= SAMUJJHADI(PRAKRIT),
SAMBOOJHYATE (SANSKRIT)
KAALA= KAALA(SANSKRIT)
SAFED, SHWET= SHWET(SANSKRIT)
NAARANGI= NAARANGI (SANSKRIT),NAARANJI(PERSIAN)
UUPAR = UPPAR
NICHE= NICHE
SAB, SABSE = SARV
UCHAA= UCHCHA
SADAA= SADAA
SIR(HEAD)= SHIR
TUM= TWAM(SANSKRIT)
AAP= AAPP(PRAKRIT), AATM(SANSKRIT)
MAIN(ME)=MAE(PRAKRIT),MAYA(SANSKRIT)
HAI(IS)= AHHAI,HOI(PRAKRIT),ASTI(SANSKRIT)
THAA(WAS)= THAA(PRAKRIT),AASEET(SANSKRIT)
AKELA= AKELA
SAKTA(CAN) = SHAKYTAA
DANDA(STICK)= DANDA(SANSKRIT)
SUKH/DUKH= SUKH/DUKH(SANSKRIT)
BADAA(BIG)= VADDHA(PRAKRIT),VRAHAD(SANSKRIT)
CHHOTA(SMALL)=CHHOTA(PRAKRIT), KSHOTA(SANSKRIT)
LAGAANA( TO APPLY)= LAAGYATE(SANSKRIT)
SOOKHA(DRY)= SHUSHK(SANSKRTI)
JEET (WIN)= JEET
HAAR(LOSE)= HAAR
ANDAR = ANTAR
BAAHAR= BAAHARYA
NAAM= NAAM
MOTA(FAT)= MOTTA(PRAKRIT), MEDU(SANSKRIT)
PATLA(THIN,LEAN,SLENER,LEAFY,WEAK)= PATTLA(PRAKRIT),PATTRATALA(SANSKRIT)
TOPI(CAP,HAT)=TOPIKA(SANSKRIT) RELATED TO TOP(ENGLISH)
KAMBAL(BLANKET)= KAMBAL(SANSKRIT)
BAAL(HAIR)= VAAL(SANSKRIT)
PAJAAMA= PAAYDAMA(SANSKRIT) PYJAMA,PAIJAMA(ENGLISH,FRENCH,SPANISH)
KURTA= KURTAKA(SANSKRIT)
KANGHA,KANGHI (COMB)= KANKAT(SANSKRIT)
KAACH(GLASS)= KAACH(SANSKRIT)
KADAAHI=KATAAHI(SANSKRIT) KHAAT,KHATIYA(COT,BED)= KHATVA(SANSKRIT) ENGLISH=COT
KAMEEJ,KAMEEZ(SHIRT)= LATIN= CAMISIA,FRENCH= CHEMISE,GERMAN=HEMD,ARABIC=QAMEEZ(BORROWED FROM PIE) FROM
PROTO INDO EUROPEAN
PATLOON(PANTS)= PENTALOON(ENGLISH),PENTALON(FRENCH),
PENTALEON(ITALIAN)
GRAAHAK= GRAAHAK
VYAAPAAR, VYAAPAARI= VYAAPAAR, VYAAPAARI
RANG- RANG
HARAA= HARA, HARIT
PEELA= PEETA
SAFED = SHWET
BAARISH= VARSHA
AAG= AGNI
PAANI = PAANEEY
BEBAS- VIVASH
EK = EK
DO= DWO
TEEN= TREENI
CHAAR= CHATVARI
PAANCH= PANCH
CHEH= SHASHHA
SAAT= SAPT
AATH = ASTH
NOU = NAV
DAS = DASH
KAARWAYI= KARYAWAHI
AAJ(TODAY) = ADHYA
DIN= DIN, DINAK, DIVAS
RAAT= RAATRI, RAAT
SHAAM= SAAYAM, SHYAM(Black) SAANJH
DOPAHAR= DOPAHAR ( PAHAR/PRAHAR IS A SANSKRIT METHOD OF MEASURING TIME)
SOORAJ= SOORYA
CHAAND= CHANDRA, CHANDRAMA, CHANDRA DEV
TAARA, SITARA= TAARA, SITARA(SANSKRIT)
GHODA- GHOTAK
BANDAR= VAANAR
KAISA= KEEDRASHA
KAHAN,KIDHAR= KUTR
YAHAN,IDHAR= YATR
AKHROT, AXROT(URDU)= AKHHOT(PRAKRIT), AKSHOT(SANSKRIT)
AB, ABB(NOW)= EVAM EV
TAB, TABB(THEN)= TAA(THAT) + EVAM EV
ISS(THIS)= YAS
SAMBHAALNA( TO HANDLE, TO MANAGE)= SAMBHAALNA (PRAKRIT), SAMBHAARYATI(SANSKRIT)
TAK, TAKK(TILL , UNTILL)= TAAVATK(SANSKRIT)
BAAGH(TIGER)= VYAAGHRA(SANSKRIT)
BHOGNA(TO BEAR)= BHOGATI (BHOG) = PRASAAD OR FRUIT OF WORK, ACTION)
KAHAANI(STORY)= KAHAANI(PRAKRIT), KATHAANAK(SANSKRIT)
RUKNA(TO STOP) = RUDHYATE(SANSKRIT)
JANAM,JANM(BIRTH)=JANM(SANSKRIT)
SACH(TRUTH)= SATYA(SANSKRIT)
JHOOTH= JUSHTHA(SANSKRIT)
DENA(TO GIVE)= DADAATI, PRADAANAM KAROTI , DAAN( CHARITY)
ALAG( DIFFERENT)= ALAGNA(SANSKRIT) ALAGNA= A+ LAGNA = SEPARATE
MAANNA( TO ACCEPT)= MAANYATE(SANSKRIT), MAANYATA( PERMISSION, ACCEPTANCE)
DHOKHA( DECIEVE, CHEAT)= DHOKKH( PRAKRIT), DROH(SANSKRIT)
BASNA(TO LIVE, TO RESIDE)= WASATI(SANSKRIT), NIWAAS (PLACE OF RESIDENCE)
AARAAM(REST, PLEASURE)(PERSIAN)= AARAAM(SANSKRIT) ,VISHRAAM IS ANOTHER SYNONYM
CHEENKA(TO SNEEZE)= CHIKKANA(SANSKRIT)
GHATNA(LESSEN, REDUCED)= GHATTYATI(SANSKRIT)
PAL(MOMENT)= PAL(SANSKRIT)
MAA(MOTHER)= MAA
BAAP(FATHER)= BAPPA(PRAKRIT), VAAPYA(SANSKRIT)
BHEED(CROWD)= BHEED
SADAA(ALWAYS)= SADAA
CHALTA HAI= CHALISHYATI
KARTA HAI= KAROTI
DAUDTA HAI= DRUTAGATI, DAUDATI, DHAAVATI
NIKALNA( TO EXIT)= NISHKALYATI (EXIT DOOR= NIKAAS DWAAR)
KAAM= KARM, KAARYA
SUNNA ( TO LISTEN) = SHRAWAN
BILLI= BILLI(PRAKRIT),VIDALI(SANSKRIT)
GADHA= GADHA(SANSKRIT)
BAKRAA(GOAT)= BARKRA(SANSKRIT)
BHAALU= BHAALOOK
AALOO(POTATO)= AALOO
MIRCH(CHILLI)= MARICH(SANSKRIT)
DOODH(MILL)= DUGDHA(SANSKRIT)
DAHI(CURD/YOGURT)=DADHEE(SANSKRIT)
KAAGAZ(PERSIAN), KAAGAJ(HINDI)= KAAGAD,KAARGAJ(BOTH SANSKRIT)
BAND(CLOSE)= BAND(SANSKRIT)
PET(STOMACH)= PET
PEETH(BACK)= PRISHTH
BAAL(HAIR)= VAAL
BEECH(MIDDLE)= VEECHYA
BHOOKH(HUNGER)= BUBHUKSHA
PYAAS= PIPAAS
NEEND(SLEEP)= NIDRA
TARBOOJ, TARBOOZ (PERSIAN)= TARAMBUJ(SANSKRIT)
UTHNA= UTHISTHATI
BAITHNA= BISTHATI
CHALNA= CHALISHYATI
CHALAANE WALA(DRIVER)= CHAALAK(SANSKRIT)
MEHNDI( HAND ART IN WEDDING)= MENDHIKA(SANSKRIT)
BARAAT( RITE IN INDIA AND PAKISTAN WEDDING)= BARAATT(PRAKRIT), VARYAATRA(SANSKRIT)
SEHRAA(WORN BY GROOM)= SHIRHAAR,SHEESHHAAR
GIREBAAN(NECK,COLLAR)(PERSIAN)= GREEVA(SANSKRIT) (PIA)
HRIDAY,DIL= HRIDAY (SANSKRIT), ZRDAY(AVESTAN/OLD PERSIAN), DIL(PERSIAN), HEART (ENGLISH) (PIE) AND
AADAT(HABIT)= AADATT(आदत्त ) SANSKRIT ,AADAH,EADAH(ARABIC) BOTH MEANING HABIT, BECOMING USED TO , ACCEPTING IN BEHAVIOUR
PAIMANA= PAITIMANA(AVESTAN/OLD PERS),PRATIMAAN(SANS)
LAHSUN,LASUN= LASHUN(SANSKRIT)
KAAJU(CASHEW)= KAJUTAK)SANSKRIT)
BADAAM(ALMOND)= VATAAM,BADAAM(BOTH SANSKRIT)
TEL(OIL)= TEIL(SANSKRIT)
LAHAR,TARANG(WAVE)= LAHARI(PRAKRIT),LAHARI(SANSKRIT)
PEHLA(FIRST)= PRATHILA(PRAKRIT),PRATHAM(SANSKRIT)
CHAMAK,DAMAK(LUSTURE, SHINE)= CHAMAK, DAMAK(SANSKRIT)
DHAMAAKA(EXPLOSION)= DHAMAAKA
DHAMKI(THREAT)= DHAMKI(SANSKRIT)
BIJLI(ELECTRICITY)= BIJJULI(PRAKRIT), VIDDYUT(SANSKRIT)
BHEED(CROUD)= BHEED
JAWAAN= YUVAAN
SHAAYAD(PERSIN)= SYAAD, SYAAT, KADACHIT( SANSKRIT)
NASS(BLOOD VEIN)= NASS(PRAKRIT),SNASS(SANSKRIT)
CHHORNA(TO LEAVE)= KSHOTYATI(SANSKRIT)
RAKHNA ( TO KEEP)= RAKSHYATI(SANSKRIT)
AUR(AND)= AWAR(PRAKRIT), APAR(SANSKRIT)
DAADHI(BEARD)= DAADHI, DAADHIKA
MOOCHH(MOUSTACHE)= SHMUSHRA
KATORA (BOUL)= KATORA
CHAMMACH= CHAMMAS
THAALI= THAALI, STHAALI
AAGE= AGGRE
PEECHE= PEECHE, PRASHTHA
NAYAA= NAVEEN, NAV
PURAANA= PURAATAN, PRACHEEN
POORA= POORNA
AADHA= ARDHA
THODA= THODA(PRK),STHOKAH(SANS)
RONA= ROODAN
HASNA= HAASYA
KHELTA HAI= KHELATI
KHAATA HAI= KHAADATI
PEETA HAI= PIBATI
BAJAA= BAAJAA(PRAKRIT), VAADYAYANTRA(SANSKRIT)
BAJAANA= BAJAANA(PRAKRIT), VAADAN(SANSKRIT)
PATTA(LEAF)= PATTA,PATR
SHOR(SOUND,NOISE)= SWAR(SANSKRIT)
DHARTI= DHARTI
SAAF(CLEAN)= SPHUT, SWACCH(SANSKRIT)
SUTHRAA= SUSHTHIR(SANSKRIT)
CHAHIYE(TO WANT) = CHAHASI
PHOOL (FLOWER) = PHOOL
PHULANA (TO FILL AIR IN SOMETHING) = PRAPHULLATI
DARR(FEAR)= DARR(SANSKRIT)
SEEKHNA= SEEKH(Prk) SHIKSHA(Sans)
CHHED(HOLE) = CHHIDRA
BADAA= BADAA, BRIHAD
AISA(LIKE THIS) = AESHAHA
UTHNA= UTHATI, UTISHTATI
OONTH= OOSTHA
GIRNA= GIRATI
BAAT-CHEET= VAARTA-CHEETKAR(SHOUTING)
BAAZU(PERSIAN)= BAAHU,BHUJA(SANSKRIT)(PIA)
SEETI(WHISTLE,ACT OF WHISTLING)= SEETTI(SANSKRIT)
PURVAJ(ANCESTOR)= PURVAJ
MILNA(TO MEET) = MILATI, MILAAN, MILAAP
PHASNA(TO GET TRAPPED)= SPHASYATE
PHAANSI=PAASH(SANSKRIT)NECK TRAP, ROPE TRAP
TAIRNA(TO SWIM)= TIRATI(SANSKRIT)
ITNAA(THIS MUCH)= ITTYAKT(SANSKRIT)
JITNA= YAAVAT
KHAANSI(COUGH)= KAANSI(SANSKRIT)
JOSH(ENTHUSIASM)= JOSH(जोष)(SANSKRIT)ALSO JOSH(जोश)(PERSIAN)
NISHAANA(TARGET)= NISHAANA(SANSKRIT)
NISHAAN(OBSERVATION, MARK)= NISHAAN(SANSKRIT)
BAHUT= BAHUT(PRAKRIT), BAHUTVA(SANSKRIT)
POOCHNA (TO ASK) = PRUCHHATI
KHEENCHNAA(TO PULL)=KHECHHAN(PRAKRIT), KARSHAN(SANSKRIT)
KHEECHTA HAI(PULLS)= KHECHHADI(PRAKRIT), KARSHATI(SANSKRIT)(ATTRACTION= AAKARSHAN)
AATAA(FLOUR)= AADR(SANSKRIT)
GEHOON(WHEAT)= GODHOOM(SANSKRIT)
ACCHA(GOOD) = ACCHA (SANSKRIT)
NA, NAHIN (NO) = NA, NAHIN
JAAN(LIFE)(Persian)= JAAN(SANSKRIT)
EK BAAR(ONCE) = EK VAARAM
DARAAR= DARAKAAR=DAR+AAKAAR(SANSKRIT)
KAMAR(WAIST)(PERSIAN)= KMARTI(SANSKRIT)(CURVED ,CROOKED)
JAVAAN(YOUNG)= YUVAAN(SANSK RIT)JAWAAN(PERS),Juvenile(Eng)(PIE)
KHUJLI(ITCHING)= KHURJ(SANSKRIT)
KHARAASH,XARAASH= KHURJ(SANSKRIT),XURZ(PERSIAN)
CHASHMAH(SPECTACLES,GLASSES)(PERSIAN),CHASM(EYES)(PERSIAN)=CHASKHU,CHAKSHAN,CHAKSHAS(SANSKRIT)
GEND(BALL)= GEND(SANSKRIT)
BALLA(BAT)= VALLA(SANSKRIT)
NAIN, NAINA(EYES) = NAYAN
UDNA(TO FLY) = UDDYAN
KARAARA(STRONG,FIRM)= KARAALA(PRAKRIT),KADAAR(SANSKRIT)
SAU= SAU, SHAT
LAKH= LAKH, LAKSH (NOT LAKSHYA, LAKSHYA= TARGET)
PAABANDI= PRATIBANDH
SEEDHA(STRAIGHT) = SIDDHA
HAR(EVERY)= HAR(SANSKRIT), SARV(SANSKRIT)
BISTAR(BED)= VISTAAR(SANSKRIT) (VISTAAR= TO SPREAD)
PUXTAA(CONFIRMED)= PAKKA(PRAKRIT),PAKVA(SANSKRIT),PUSHT(SANSKRIT) PUSHTI= CONFIRMATION
DHONAA(TO WASH)= DHOWATI(SANSKRIT)
KAPDAA(CLOTH)= KARPAT( SANSKRIT)(KARPAT= CLOTH WORN ON HANDS LIKE OLD INDIANS DID),KARPAAS(COTTON)
SAVAAR(RIDER/HORSE RIDER)(PERSIAN)= ASHWAAROH( SANSKRIT)
BIKHARNA,BIKHERNA(SCATTER, SPREAD UNTIDILY)= VIKSHAARYATI(SANSKRIT)
PEHNNA( TO WEAR)= APAHNYATI(SANSKRIT)
MUFT(FREE)(PERSIAN)= MUKT(SANSKRIT) (FROM PROTO INDO EUROPEAN ROOT)
CHABAANA(TO CHEW)= CHYAWAN(SANSKRIT)
CHABAATA HAI(CHEWS)= CHARWATI(SANSKRTI)
CHARNA(GRAZING)= CHARWATI
BHED(SHEEP)= BHEDR(SANSKRIT)
JAISA=YAADRSHA(SANSKRIT)
AISA= EDRSHA(SANSKRIT)
VARGAA,VARGEE(TYPE,KIND)(PUNJABI/HINDI/URDU)= VARGEEYA(SANSKRIT)(FROM VARG= CATEGORY)
SANNAATA(SILENCE)= SANNAAD(SANSKRIT)
MAST(CAREFREE,DRUNK,PASSIONATE,OVERJOYED) MATT(SANSKRIT)(UNMATT=PASSIONATE,INTOXICATED,DRUNK) FROM PROTO INDO EUROPEAN
MAZAA(FUN)= MAHAS(SANSKRIT) FROM PIA
MASKHARA= MAYASKAR(GIVING ENJOYMENT)RELATED TO MUSKURANA TO SMILE IN PERSIAN
PATAA(ADDRESS)= PATTRADESH(SANSKRIT)
JODNA( TO ADD)= JODADI(PRAKRIT), YOUTATI(SANSKRIT)
JOOTAA(SHOE)= JOOTAA(PRAKRIT),YUKTTAA(SANSKRIT)
MUNH(MOUTH) = MUKH, MUNH
AAGE(AHEAD) = AGR
PICHHE(BEHIND)= PRICHHALI
PICHLA= PRICHHALA
AISA(LIKE THIS) = AESHAHA
JIGAR(LIVER)(PERSIAN)= YAKRAT(SANS), AVESTAN (YAKAR)
BASTI(SETTLEMENT,TOWN,VILLAGE)= BASTI(PRAKRIT), VASATI(SANSKRIT)
BASTAA(BAG)= BHRASTAA(SANSKRIT) (PERSIAN BASTE)
BANAANA(TO MAKE, TO BUILD) = VINIRMAAN
SONA(TO SLEEP) = SHAYAN
JAAGNA(TO WAKE UP) = JAAGRAN,JAAGRITI
JEENA, MAARNA= JEEVAN, MARAN
KAAMPNAA(SHIVERING)= KAMPAN(SANSKRIT)
KANDHAA (SHOULDER) = SKANDHAAH
HAFTA= SAPTAAH
AAM(MANGO) = AAMRAM
AGLAA= AGRIM, AGGALAH
LIKHNA(TO WRITE) = LEKHAN
LIKHTA HAI= LIKHATI
PADHNA(TO READ)= PATTHAN(SANSKRIT)
AAJ= ADDYA
KAL= KALY
PARSON = PARSHWON
JAANTA HU = JAANAMI
GHADI(CLOCK) = GHATI
NADI(RIVER) = NADI
PAHAAD, PARVAT= PAHAAD
,PARVAT
DHIRE, DHIME(SLOW) = DHIRE, DHIME
GARM,GARAM = GHARM(SANSKRIT) ALSO IN PERSIAN GARAM, ENGLISH=WARM (PIE)
THAND(COLD)= STHAND(SANSKRIT),STHABDH(FROZEN) numbers ,fruits,vegetables , animals,trees,things
And many more are Sanskrit
😂
@@rishiatheist2362 Dekha bhai mene toh copy paste Kiya hai WhatsApp group se par sachai saamne as gayi na urdu phatichar language ki bhaade ki language
@@KohliVirat2025 sahi kha
aap ki profile pic bahut a66a laga
@@KohliVirat2025 you north indians have no manners
As a chinese speaker I understood all the words. We have the same words too. 😊
Is Chinese also an indo European language ?
@@saurabhkumar-cc2cx I don't think so, Mandarin is from the Tibetan Sino family, but it must be distantly related.
Interesting, I can’t understand Chinese whatsoever but I speak Urdu
liar ha ha
The only word in Hindi I know that is similar to a Chinese word is the Chinese word for tea. In Hindi, it is Chaa. I think it is there is a word that has similar speaking.
As a speaker of Spanish, I can understand most of the numbers, the color orange, tea and coffee....
son nuestros hermanos indo-europeos
@@DoctorDeath147 hasta el fin 💪
Indian languages gave birth to All european languages.
@@DoctorDeath147 lol, that Indo european nonsense again, Indo Europeans never existed. It's all Indian in reality.
@@bvedant wrong.
It's the same language, different written systems
Si, de acuerdo
No the languages have differences. Different ways to say things and pronunciation. For example there is a sentence ending that I don’t quite remember in Hindi but it’s not a word in Urdu. Also Urdu has 1 or 2 maybe more letters or sounds that aren’t in Hindi. For example the word for blood in Urdu is khoon but in Hindi it’s koon. The difference is that in Urdu the k is a very soft and in the back of your throat kind of k but in Hindi it’s pronounced like an English k. To sum it up Urdu and Hindi are somewhat similar but like any other language they have their differences and they are 2 different languages, just with many similarities.
@@wonderlandangel9834 the word for blood in Hindi is khoon!!"ख़ून" not koon "कून"
you need to hear how Hindi speakers pronounce it again. I don't know where you get koon from
@@wonderlandangel9834 There are words that are used in my dialect of English that other dialects don't use. Words can come into different dialects of a language based on contact with peoples from other cultures, peoples of different languages. Not all dialects of the same language will be exactly the same.
For instance. In my dialect of English, H is completely gone in pronunciation. There are also instances where the phoneme [t] has become [ʔ]. This make these three words sound almost identical:
A - [a]
At - [aʔ]
Hat - [aʔ]
Also, in my dialect, 'Water' is pronounced as: ['wɔ:.ʔa]. In Received Pronunciation, 'Water' is as follows: [wɔː.tə]. In General American English it's: [ˈwɔ.ɾɚ]
There are sounds in my dialect that don't exist in other dialects, and other dialects have sounds that don't exist in mine such as H. Look at the way they talk in Liverpool in England or in Scotland. There are words that exist in the Scottish dialect of English that don't exist in mine that come from Scottish Gaelic, which is a separate language spoken there.
I guess you guys are right. I’m sorry, I apologize for unintentionally spreading incorrect information😔
And there is a fact that some of you may have noticed:
except the name of the animals, most of the rest of the words are used in Farsi/Dari too.
for me, it is really easy to learn Hindi/Urdu and I'll be happy to hear some easy ways of that from you guys.😊
Hindi words from Sanskrit--
Sanskrit. Hindi.
Ekam. Ek (one)
Dvi. Do (two)
Trini. Teen (three)
Chatur. Chaar (four)
Punch. Paanch (five)
Shasht. Cheh (six)
Sapt. Saat (seven)
Asth. Aath (eigth)
Nava. Nau (nine)
Dash. Das. (ten)
Naarang. Naarangi (orange)
Peetala. Peela (yellow)
Harit. Hara (green)
Nila. Nilaa (blue)
Vatingana. Baingani (purple)
Kadala. Kela (banana)
Aaluka. Aalu (potato)
Dugdh. Dudh (milk)
Kukur. Kutta (dog)
Bidalika. Billi (cat)
Gau. Gaay. (cow)
Ghotaka. Ghoda. (Horse)
Bhaaluka. Bhaalu. (Bear)
Sarp. Saamp. (snake)
Hasti. Haathi (elephant)
Persian words--
Laal (red)
Jaamuni (purple)
Naaranj(orange), from Sanskrit naarang
Gullabi (pink)
Safed (white) cognate with Sanskrit svet
Sev (apple)
Paneer
Chai (tea), from chinese cha
English word--
Cofee
Portuguese word----
Ananas
Hearing the words one and one instead of speaking in sentences made me think of farsi/dari too! But once a person starts speaking hindi or urdu it sounds much more different.
@@mattihpbecause they don't speak Pure Hindi/Urdu they just used local words
@@khalnayak801 sanskrit is actually quite close to farsi
Sanskrit - oldest Indo European language.
This video is incorrect. If you want to compare Urdu and Hindu, then compare them with their literature not by words commonly used in daily life because in modern India most people speak Urdu, and they don't even know about it.
For example: You will never hear a Hindi speaking student calling a Book as Pustak, does that mean BOOK is a Hindi word? OfCourse not.
friend --Mitr--Dost. But commonly Indians use the word dost, though it is an Urdu word, but if you ask them if it is an Urdu word, they will disagree.
Hindi and Urdu are like Ice creams with toppings ! Both have same ice cream flavour (Sanskrit) which forms the base on top of that they have different toppings . Hindi has less Persian influence (chocolate sauce) and Urdu has extreme Persian and Arabic influence (Triple chocolate sauce) . However, Hindi is served in a cone(Devanagari script) and Urdu in a cup( Perso-Arabic script)!!
Beautifully put together 💯👍🏼
@@ammaraslamhirai6549 Thanks
Woww... This is the best explanation ever of Hindi/Urdu. Beautiful and on point analogy.
@@garimakilledar5810 Thanks a lot! I made this by myself
@@saharsharun9703 but urdu is persian derived which is a semite language not indo-european , they've just been together for hundreds of years THATS why there are so much similarities
I am Urdu speaker in 🇮🇳 and the colour thru me of
How did u make difference
I think Indians speaks mix hindi-urdu while makeing a sentence 😂
@@anmolsundriyal6804 mostly 😆
@@Kokapaoo
Yes Urdu is more borrowed language...But most beautiful language after Arabic....
@@Kokapaoo yes urdu itself is a turkish word which means ( lashkar ) meaning group
@@Kokapaoo Tu chutiya hi rehna !
Aisay mein bhi bol sakta hon ke tu Jo Hindi bol raha hai wo asal mein Urdu hai !
Dekho asal baat hai yea hai jo language hum log aaj bol rahay hain wo mixture hai Urdu aur Hindi kui ke hum log itna time sath rahay hain tw words adopt kar liay hain
Baqi rahi baat pure urdu aur Hindi ki tw na tum pure Hindi (Derived from Sanskrit) bol saktay ho aur na mein pure Urdu( Persian+ Turkish+ Arabic) bol sakta hon
🇦🇷🇺🇾🍍: Ananá , 🇨🇱🇨🇴🇧🇴🇪🇨🇪🇸🇳🇮🇵🇦🇵🇪🇲🇽:Piña
In Japanese has the same pronunciation I think
same in Filipino pineapple is pina(pinya)
In Brazilian portuguese it's "abacaxi"
Dude everyone says ananás.
www.theguardian.com/news/datablog/interactive/2013/nov/14/pain-in-the-ananas-etymology-maps
orven pamonag *piña in Spanish
Also in Italian , ananas (pineapple) and chavi (keys) remain the same
Indo European language family
Urdu and Hindi are in Indo European language family
@@damnsk85 ananas is the word for pinneapple in many languages not just indo european
Also in russian it is ananas
Malay word in Malaysia using nanas (pineapple) kuda ( horse)
Also in Tamil words pineapple (Annachi) key (Saavi)..
Common thing is that both language Hindi and Urdu was invented in India but the difference is
Hindi is third most spoken language on the earth with 615 million speakers as compared to urdu
Yes i agree
Is It the same language? But with diferent alphabets?
Well, the alphabets of hindi is Very beautiful.
Hindi letters/characters/akshar*
Hindi isn't considered an alphabet but an Alphasyllabary/Abugida
Two slightly different types of writing system
The alphabet's script is called Devanagari
Muchas gracias por sus cumplidos 😃
@- king- Bangladeshis don't write in Arabic script. Nor do Turkish, Azerbaijanis, and Indonesians. I'm sure there are other examples.
Its because the persians conquered that part of india that we nowadays call Pakistan
When the persian empire falled
The monarchs that were ruling across the persian empire splitted
And formed their own kingdom
Thus why urdu seem to use arabic script
When its actually farsi(persian)(even if the persians changed alphabets to the Arabian one)
The similarities in term of speaking is flagrant
Even in term of ethnicity the proof are there
For me urdu is a mixture of farsi and hindi
- king- not arabic its persian script
We Bangladeshi rejected Urdu in 1952 and saved our Bengali language. Now, Bengali is the 6th most spoken language in the world. And Bengali Speaking people have the power to understand some languages like Assamese, Odia, Hindi, Punjabi, Bhojpuri, Urdu and Nepali. Because, the Bengali language has the potential and mutual relations with those languages I included. A Bengali man can easily understand and speak hindi but Hindi educated people may find 5% similarities between the two languages. 🇧🇩♥️🇧🇩♥️
1) shikshak(hindi)- Shikkok(Bengali).
2) Kela (hindi)- Kola (Bengali). 🍌
3) Adhyapak- Odhdhapok.
4) Rang( color) - Rong (Bengali)
5) Prashna - Proshno
Etc..........
Literally they add ओ in every words of Hindi lol 😆
@@osteoarthritis122 So???
@@rupshaghosh146 सो नहीं ओ
@@osteoarthritis122 if they add 'o' , so what's your problem in that? Why r u laughing? And I'm a Bengali myself
@@rupshaghosh146 you are Bengali,,, SO???
Hindi : बहन (cousin)
Urdu : بیوی (wife)
😂
@@bheemboyharish3263 😁
😂😂😂
Lmao 😂
The fact is our elders use mostly urdu words in villages.And I like it ...because the words reflect a different kind of experience.🥰
Naarangi is called both naarangi(mostly) and naaranji in Urdu. Haraa is also called both haraa(mostly) and sabz in Urdu.
To conclude, it is the single language "Hindustani" originated in northern Indian region of UP and Delhi , now having two major dialects known as Hindi and Urdu.
Actually that's not true there was never such language as Hindustani (or anything similar) Urdu is the descendant language of Persian which borrows a few words and grammar from sanckrit due to the influence..... on the other hand Hindi is the descendant language of Prakrit (descendant of sanckrit) which is only spoken by the native people of UP, Bihar, Rajasthan, Jharkhand and MP.....the so called Hindi that you hear these days or khari Hindi to be specific is further example of Persian influence over Hindi and people starting to use both languages in a mixed manner just like we use English words these days...
@@adityendrapratapsingh4628 that is not true. They are indeed different registers of the same language that people call Hindustani. They share the same standard grammar except for loanwords from Arabic and Sanskrit.
@@ranjodharora6592 see language sounding similar can have similarities but aren't the same until there is an extensive reason why they sound similar... now if I go by your opinion then there are several other languages that would be merged into pseudo Hindustani even if they are not the part of it! Eg Punjabi which shares 80% same word and grammar yet is differentiated by script and accent. Actual Hindi is what you hear in the villages of North India (braj, bhoj Puri, banarasi, awadhi, haryanvi etc) khari boli itself is that one dialect of Hindi which got influenced by Urdu because if the language shared comman ancestry all the dialects should have experienced it as for the similar words in this vid they are practically the urdu lone words or foreign words which ended up being the same in both languages if you make Punjabi stand next to them it would sound similar too
@@adityendrapratapsingh4628 What you are saying is factually incorrect. Standard Hindustani (Hindi and Urdu) is based on the way Khariboli was spoken in Delhi. Punjabi shares so much vocabulary with it because both of them are descendants of Shauraseni Prakrit and form a dialect continuum with Haryanvi in the middle of them. But Punjabi is classified differently mainly because of two reasons: it has a standard form with a radically different grammar, and it has a distinct phonological thing going on. What I am saying is not an opinion. These are stone cold facts. Hindi doesn't have Urdu loan words, it has Persian and Arabic loanwords from the time Persian was the language of prestige in North India.
@@ranjodharora6592 let's make this even simpler..... If Hindi and Urdu are standard Hindustani as you said then how do you address the absolute zero resemblance between the 100s of dialects which can't be ignored if you are referring to Hindi and not just one of its dialects (khari boli) all of your points are legitimate at one condition which is if you are referring only and only to khari boli which is just a dialect itself but If you are referring to the entire Hindi language the argument completely falls down. Now considering khari boli as the Standard Hindi is yet another assumption from your side just because it's widely spoken these days which is against the fact that there is no standard Hindi you might term it as official dialect purely because majority speaks it today though it doesn't make it standard. As for Punjabi Idk where did you learn this radically different grammar cuz my Punjabi lessons were filled with topics and functionings which a hindi speaker might find familiar as for phonology we face that difference in dialects too remember? But what differentiates Punjabi is the script only and it didn't develop from shauraseni but from paishachi... you keep pointing my factual knowledge as incorrect without any evidence yet forgot to check your own facts..... just to let you know my facts and theory is what they teach the people who graduated with ancient Languages and a specialization in Indo Aryan branch I'm a student. These are not my opinion but what they teach me in India
good to see the video of our countries. all time i see videos on different accent of english like uk vs us etc. we Pakistani and Indian should be proud of our languages like others do. love this
Urdu sounds soooo royal to me I love their conversation idk why!!😭♥️
LOVE AND RESPECT FOR PAKISTAN AND PAKISTANI PEOPLE AND THEIR CULTURE FROM BANGLADESH..❤🤍💚🇵🇰🇧🇩🇵🇰🇧🇩🇵🇰🇧🇩🇵🇰🇧🇩🇵🇰❤🤍💚
@@nazmoonnahar2489
Love you too Bangladesh ♡
-🇵🇰
@@prasadbhosale7837 isme proud hone ki kya baat hai 😒🙄
@@prasadbhosale7837 sabse pehle to sanskrit khud proto-indoeuropean se evolve hui hai. dusri baat sabse oldest sumerian language hai.
@@prasadbhosale7837 tamil is the oldest "still widely spoken language. sabse purani to sumerian hi hai.
I am so proud that Hindi is more related to sanskrit the oldest language in the world. 🙏🙏🇮🇳🇮🇳
it is not the oldest language sumerian and old egyptian and akkadian are older
but Urdu is more older than Hindi lol
@youcometome9 sumerian is 5000 years old. We have old egyptian texts 2400 BC. In Egyptian we can obeserve the evolution of the language in a time span of 3000 years
Tamil is a oldest language and still alive
@@pospos3418 there is no "oldest language" this is bullshit. but there is the oldest written language at this is sumerian and old egyptian more than 4000 years old.
Same language divided by religion. Good job!
Divided by England .
@@Hardie_Boi Nope, united by England. Before the Brits , India was a collection of countries just as Europe today.
@OuiBoi Naka Patel prevented further dislocation of India after independence .India was already united by the Brits ! Some were even forced to join the Union by force .
No neither Urdu is the language of muslims nor Hindi is the language of Hindus.
@@hillclimbracingofficial4105 I agree
When teacher gives you multiple choice question for your teat
The multiple choice question:👬
🇮🇳♥️🇵🇰always and forever. People , their language, their culture is so similar to each other. Don't let those politicians destroy the love we have for each other
Yes ,i am indian but i also love pakistan
when indian say love you,we must consider are they want to invade your land,northeast india and kashmir million of indian move to there
@@PakistanChinaFriendship what r u saying dear , plz don't spread hate thoughts among us
@@PakistanChinaFriendship not everyone is same love, Bad people are everywhere. All we have to do is ignore them.
@The silentWHISPERerror dude u just think that uRdU is ur language then i think u should shutup because when urdu was made there was no freaking india, pakistan and india was together that time also urdu was made before hindi so yea hindi is a copy of urdu
They're literally the same language, but they splited because of the religion.
Lol no, languages are not related to religion!!!
No. Urdu took birth in and around what today is known as Delhi. Hindi and Sanskrit were two popular languages before the beginning of Delhi sultanate in subcontinent. When these people came to the subcontinent they adopted a language which had words from Sanskrit, Hindi and Persian. But they wrote them in a script that they brought with them from outside. Hence, same words but different scripts.
@@tomorrowisanotherday12 hindi and urdu originated at the same time Give and take a century. Pali prakrit sanskrit and other Dravidian languages were present in the sub continent. Hindi is not as old as you claim. It's a product of mughal invasion. It's one of the youngest indian languages.
@@pagoda-r8f Indian history is much more than invasions.
north Myanmar,north Vietnam,north laos,many people speak chinese,Russian Tuvas kazakhstan kyrkzstan all speak one language
Hello this lock like how Russian. 😮
1 - odin
2 - Dwa
3 - tri
4 - chetire
5 - pjati
6 - shesti
7 - sem
8 - vosem
9 - devjati
10 - desjati
Red - krasniy
Orange - oranjeviu
Yellow - jeltiu
Green - zeleniu
Blue - siniu
Yellow - fioletoviu
White - beliu ( safite - light from the theater )
Dog - sobaka ( cuttenok - pappy)
Horse - kone
Bear - medwed ( bayoun - bear how cant going to sleep)
Hindi and Urdu are Registers of one language called Hindustani written in two different scripts.
Yes
only u got some point bcz other indian saying that hindi is very old language and urdu is not that old like that they dont know that it was called hindustani not hindi
@@terox9022 Exactly
Both hindi and urdu are broken version of Persian, brought to indian subcontinent by mogul invaders. hindi and urudu are one and the same.
No
Hindi and Urdu have lots of difference
And nowdays most of the people of india choose to speak urdu vocabulary instead of hindi vocabulary
I don't know who is using pure hindi and urdu
But usage of urdu vocabulary is much in hindustani language...
I also don't know
Pure urdu is so difficult to speak.Nowdays pakistanis are speaking language which is mixture of hindi,urdu,punjabi,sindhi,pashto etc
سیب/saib
سفید /safed
Are not hindi wordz, these r Persian/urdu words.
@@EZIOGAMER333 you r wrong, I from Gilgit Baltistan every educated person can speak urdu coz urdu is simple and sweet language. In our schools we speak urdu.
@@EZIOGAMER333 Yes, that's right ... People in Pakistan's Punjab don't speak Urdu, I think they urdu speak in Karachi.
And in india it is spoken by most of the muslim
The best urdu spoken near Lucknow ...
I m from there...
**spoken hindi and urdu are 90-95% same** only difference is urdu being more focused(specially in technical words) towards persian and hindi being more focused towards sanskrit. Else both are basically same language with different names because both derive words from Arabic, persian, sanskrit, turkish, Portuguese, english and some other indian regional dialects.
And language is never of any religion but region. This is our language call it urdu or hindi it's your wish.
I think the difference would be something like that between standard Received Pronunciation of English and Scots (or Scots English if you call it a dialect). Both 'languages' had their histories as languages of royal courts, but eventually Scots ceased to be called a language after 1713 due to political reasons. If Scotland had remained independent, we probably would be calling English and Scots separate languages. Urdu and Hindi are just examples of a common language split up for political reasons. I'm sure there are dialectal extremes of either variety that are completely unintelligible to the other, however, whereas any dialect of English doesn't really have this (unless you were to count Jamaican patois or Tok Pisin as dialects of English).
Words like nila, seb, dood, belli, gai, have different meanings in Egyptian Arabic:D. Great video :) Waiting for Semitic languages comparison.
People saying Urdu Hindi are same
Sir Syed : Hold my two nation theory.
@The silentWHISPERerror still do. More than 50% speak Punjabi.
I'm Tamilan...I thought Urdu is so different to Hindhi...But most re same...also in Tamil Pineapple (Annachi),Key (Saavi)..
Yes brother both languages are same just like British English & American English. And even Punjabi Language is very Similar.
That's why People in North Can Communicate very Easily in Hindi.
Most people from Bengal, Assam, Gujarat, Maharashtra and other North, East & Western State Can Easily Understand Hindi.
Completely Different!!!
Hindi: Humen shudh Hindi me vaartalap karne ki kshamta prapt hain.
Urdu: Hum khalis Urdu me guftgu ki gunjaaish rakhte hain.
*************
Urdu to Hindi
*************
Peer - Somwar
Mungal - Mangalwar
Budh - Budhwar
Jumarat - Guruwar
Jumma - shukrwar
Hafta - Shaniwar
Itwar - rabiwar
Orat - Mahila
Bivi - Patni
Shohor - Pati
Asman/falak - Akash/gagan
Zammen - Pritwi
Parinda - Pakshi
Khat - patr
Khush - prasanna
Khafa - Nirash
Dil - Hridya
pagal - vikshipth
Wada - Vachan
Azeem - Wishal
Pyaar - Preem
Khubsoorat - Sundhar
badsoorat - badda
bardaasht - sahen
kambakht - abhaga
Rishte - Sambandh
Yaqeen - Vishwas
namumkin - Asambhav
aadmi - vyakti
Lafz - Shubd
Matlab - arth
Shukriya - Dhaynevad
Malumat - Jankari
Waqt - Samay
Mareez - Rogi
aasan - saralta
mushkil - Kathin
Acha - Barhiya
bura - ashub/hanikark
nazdeek - nikaṭ
chahna - eccha
mazaydar - swadish
badtameez - ashabiye
wazeh/Saaf - prakat
shandaar - vismikari
naqaabile yaqeen - ashrejanak
hairat angaiz- Adbud
dilkash - manoram
umeed - Asha
Imtihaan - Pariksha
Mustaqbil - Bhavishya
Quwat /Taqat - Shakti
Taqatwar - Shaktishali
Jang - Yudh
qabool - swikar
Darkhast- vinti
Mazaq - Uphas
Subh bakhair - Shub prabat
Seh pehar bakhair - Shubh Madhyanh
Raat bakhair - shubh raatri
Alwida - Vidah ki samay ki ram ram
Barhae mehrbani - Kyrapa krana
Zabardast - Vishaal
Mujhe afsos hai - Mujhe khed hai
khush aamdeed - Swagat
95% Bollywood k Movies, Dialogues, song’s Lyrics, Movie titles Urdu main hi hote hai. Jese k:
Urdu: Don ko pakadna mushkil hi nahin ... namumkin hai
Hindi: Don ko pakadna kathin hi nahi ….Asambhav hai
Urdu: Mugambo Khush hua
Hindi: Mugambo prasanna hua
Urdu: Rishte me hum tumhare baap lagte hain…naam hai Shehenshah
Hindi: Sambandh me to hum tumhare pita lagte hain ….naam hai Samraat
Urdu: Kitne aadmi the
Hindi: Kitne vyakti the
Me as a south indian only see difference in their alphabets
Hindi is more sanskrit
Urdu is more arabic
That's all😂
And our languages are like jilebi👍🙂
I am from Hyderabad of India. My mother tong is Urdu 💖. Proud to be Urdu Wala. Urdu hv sweet words in it that causes bollywood film industry Urdu word to make song. I like hindi also bcz i am 100℅ perfect in it. Who like Urdu & Hindi?
learn hindi it is spoken by majority of INDIANS
Tumhra hoga
But mostly Hindi hai
Urdu and Hindi are literally the same lol. Also, Urdu is a North Indian language not hyderabadi or South Indian.
It's basically hindustani vs hindustani
@hyat hyat nope it's also a part of Indian sub continent
@hyat hyat same to you
But your country not get independence its can say birthday of your country 😂
@hyat hyat you need some knowledge
en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indian_subcontinent watch this
@fiya fiya Lol Urdu Originated from Lucknow. It has nothing to do with Pakistan
@fiya fiya Pakistani Should Speak Language such as Punjabi Sindhi etc
Urdu was imposed on you by Muhazirs
Watching this for the third time now just to hear their pronunciation! Didnt realize how pretty both languages are growing up 😻 Looking forward to a comparison vid with Bengali next, 😊
Do you want to learn this language
@@shaikhsadiq565 honestly I kinda know a lot of both already, thanks to Bollywood LOLLLL
Really that's amazing , what's your native language.
Fact: Hindi speaker is actually a Pakistani TH-camr: (Umer Saleem) but I'm not sure if the girl is Pakistani or Indian.
From the accent, she sounds very Pakistani Punjabi
this is like comparing lemon and lime (99.1% same) 😃
It's not same. I'm half Pakistani and half Indian. I can only understand about 75% of each language. Urdu has more Persian and Arabic words compared to Hindi and Urdu is also written in the Persian script but has 8 more words added too.
I can write or read both the scripts
Proud to be an Indian Muslim
@Volintine Ander why
Makes sense. Both languages are Indian-born after all. Which is something that not even most Pakistanis may know, let alone the rest of the world.
Maybe at 6th class ur school taught u Sanskrit too
@@gautambh375 Yes they did.
1:08 🇹🇷Narenci (turuncu) = Orange (colour)
2:04 🇹🇷Ananas = Pineapple
2:15 🇹🇷Peynir = Cheese
2:25 🇹🇷Çay = Tea (Ç = ch)
2:32 🇹🇷Kahve = Coffé
@fiya fiya Türkçede hangi seviyedesin ?
Narenc is an old word nobody would use that, "turuncu" is the one for color
Narenciye = Citrus
Portakal is orange (fruit)
I wrote that so nobody confuses "portakal" and "turuncu"
What you said was not incorrect but I wanted to write common used words so it'll be better for people learning :v
Because in the past these two countries were united (India, Pakistan, Bangladesh), so the words are the same but the difference is the writing.
Both languages are mutually intelligible in everyday colloquial language but once you start to hear Hindi news or Urdu news, they become mutually unintelligible
Well not really unintelligible but intelligible to a less extent.
I agree, I have trouble understanding Hindi news
I'm an iranian kurd & I speak kurdish & persian .some of the word are same or close in my languages to this language .specialy numbers and foods are very close .
Ofc its same dummies
My uncle is Kurdish and yeah he told me some words and I noticed the word for "cheese" is the same. And as a French I hear some words that are pretty similar too. That's fascinating to know that half of humans speak a language that comes from there.
Yeah bcz Urdu is derived from many languages and one of them is Persian
Which Kurdish dialect do you speak Heval
@@aimansyahmi8711 no need to be a dick
Hindi Urdu 99% Sam ha bhai mujhe Hindi Urdu donon se mohabbat Hai
I am from India uttar Pradesh Muzaffarnagar 🇮🇳❤️🇵🇰
Mujhe Hindi Urdu juban aati Hai
भाई मैं पकिसतान से हूं ओर मुझे भी اردو ओर हिंदी दोनो आती हैं
@@hamzaqureshi6418 एक दम बढ़िया|
@@spy1545 shukria 🙂❤
Ak jesi to hai
@@hamzaqureshi6418 mujhe samaj ati h Urdu pr boli nhi jati ,only hindi hi bol pata hi
Sanskrit in Hindi
Arabi and Farsi in Urdu
big difference
Urdu is beautiful because of Arab i and Farsi
Dear Pakistanis, let's just speak in a more similar language, screw them politicians always trying to divide us. I speak Punjabi and Hindi so I am sure I am able to communicate with 90% Pakistan easily. Let's focus on similarities rather than differences.
Well yeah we are quite similar and especially with indian punjabis
😃
@@Hahahasuiiiii are bete tuhi haina jo insta pe sabhi indian page mein comment karta hai,.
you speak punjabi which have many urdu words, that's why you think hindi is similar to urdu, beta hindi is much more pure and advanced then urdu , it was created before both urdu and punjabi.
@@nycbk9043 You were inattentive in yr English classes beta, Thats why you haven’t understood...
fun fact: more than half of the words in this video, like paneer, chay, seeb, narenji/narengi, sefid etc. are used in Persian as well!
Chay in slovak language is čaj,in czech,russian,ukrajinian and other slavic languages too.
From persian urdu or hindi came .
Persian is the origin .
@@DrStrange234 hindi comes from prakrit bhasha and hindi mother is Sanskrit not Persian ok
@@Sanatani_kattar But Hindi is influenced by Persian, Persian was official language of Mughals.
@@cspian9754 shudh Hindi is purely influenced by Sanskrit and urdu is influenced by Hindi, Sanskrit farsi arabic etc