I seen ppl ask this for other languages and wanted to make one for my language as well

  • @MissJinx
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    1 month ago

    Well I don’t but you can teach me

  • @[email protected]
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    51 month ago

    I don’t but I wonder how close these two languages are? Since I sometimes watch Karl Rock on youtube, he apparently speaks both depending on where he is at the moment. Is it like “I understand nearly every word without even trying” or is it more like “If I focus hard enough I get the meaning of what the person is saying”?

    • @[email protected]OP
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      71 month ago

      They’re different languages yes, but for spoken they’re almost interchangeable. Anyone who speaks Urdu will understand spoken Hindi, but each language has specific words unique to their vocabulary. Their vastly different in written too, Hindi is written in sanskrit script and Urdu is written in Arabic script. I speak Urdu but can freely communicate with Hindi speakers and vice versa but cannot read Hindi

      • @[email protected]
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        11 month ago

        So the same language, but different writing systems. Like if English were written in binary, it’d still be English, but nobody would be able to read it like they could read English text.

        They say that the common definition of “a language” is by borders and military, rather than by any linguistic criteria! Lol

        See also: “the Chinese language”

        • @[email protected]OP
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          21 month ago

          I suppose but u also have to take the plethora of words that exist in one and not the other and different dialects E.g the word for family is “parivaar” in hindi and “khaandaan” in Urdu God is “bhagwan” in hindi and “Rabb” in urdu etc etc I’m not sure about Hindi but I think it derives from Sanskrit. but Urdu was called “Rekhta” before as it’s parent language . The word Urdu comes from the Turkish word for army “Ordu”. Urdu was formed after an amalgation of Arabic and Persian and over the years as soldiers from different ethnicities came under one banner in the subcontinent it picked up vocab from old Hindi as well and due to the centuries of living along side Hindi speakers, alot of words are understood between each other. If someone was to speak Rekhta or even “pure” Urdu today as how or is in old poetry, as it was in the beginning, I’m sure no hindi speaker will understand and even modern Urdu speakers will take a minute

  • @[email protected]
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    1 month ago

    I think there’s some Indian communities on Lemmy but not big one. haven’t seen any Pakistani ones

  • Syl
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    21 month ago

    I can communicate some basic stuff, but can’t really speak it.

      • Syl
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        41 month ago

        South Indian parents, born and grew up in the US.

        I can read and speak Telugu well, but know only a few words and phrases in Hindi.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      31 month ago

      That’s so cool! Hi!

      Mil ke bohat acha laga, aap urdu bolte ho ya hindi? Aap Kahan ke ho? Aur meri baatein samjh arhi ya English me hi theek tha?

      • whoareu
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        51 month ago

        me jyaada tar Hindi hi bolta hu, mujhe bhi app se milke acha laga, me India se hu :)

  • HubertManne
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    01 month ago

    is hindi also called urdu? I was unaware urdu was still spoken ans I thought it was like what they spoke in mesopotamia in ancient time or something. Its very possible im mixing up two very different things.

    • @denshirenji
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      51 month ago

      Urdu is spoken in Pakistan and is a sister language of Hindi. They are very similar and there is a high degree of mutual intelligibility. It has some Arabic and Persian influence as I understand it.

      Perhaps you might be thinking of the Ugaritic language. It was spoken in the Syria/Lebanon area.

      • HubertManne
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        21 month ago

        Thank you. You know I was looking it up and I think its just that there was so many names that began with U in like sumer that I just thought the language came from it. Like Ur and Uruk and Eridu (ok that last one does not start with U but has a very U feel :)