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Urdu

Urdu is an Indo-Aryan language primarily spoken in Pakistan and India. It functions as a lingua franca in parts of both countries and as a major literary language. In Pakistan, Urdu is the national language and is widely used in administration and media; in India it is one of the 22 scheduled languages and is taught in schools in several states.

Urdu developed in the north Indian subcontinent during the medieval period as a register of Hindustani, influenced

Urdu is written right-to-left in the Perso-Arabic script, with much of its vocabulary drawn from Persian, Arabic,

Urdu has regional varieties, including Deccani Urdu in the Deccan and other urban forms in Pakistan and

Urdu has a rich literary tradition, notably in poetry (ghazals and nazms) and modern fiction and journalism.

Urdu is spoken by tens of millions in South Asia and by diasporic communities in Europe, the

by
Persian
and
Arabic
due
to
Mughal
rule.
It
emerged
from
the
Khariboli
dialect
around
Delhi
and
Lucknow,
gaining
prestige
in
Mughal
courts.
The
language
is
written
in
the
Perso-Arabic
script
called
Nastaliq.
and
Turkish,
alongside
native
Hindustani
words;
standard
Urdu
and
Hindi
diverge
mainly
in
script
and
lexical
emphasis.
northern
India.
Colloquial
speech
overlaps
with
Hindustani,
making
mutual
intelligibility
high
in
everyday
speech.
It
has
produced
renowned
poets
such
as
Mir,
Ghalib,
Iqbal,
and
Faiz.
The
language
is
central
to
South
Asian
cinema,
music,
and
theatre,
and
remains
a
symbol
of
cultural
identity
for
many
speakers
worldwide.
Middle
East,
Africa,
and
North
America.
It
is
studied
academically
and
supported
by
standard
orthography,
media,
and
publishing.