rollindays
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- Aug 6, 2011
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I agree that both language have common origin and was infact the same language(Hindustani Language). But to say that Hindi didn't exist until 1950 is wrong. Hindustani language was known Hindwi, Hindavi and later on Zuban-e-Urdu.
You don't understand, there is no 'both' languages. The history we are talking about is Urdu, because colloquial Hindi/Hindustani does not have a separate, independent history from Urdu. We are talking about one language, & that is Urdu. Urdu was referred to as Hindvi by Khusro. Urdu also had other names, such as Lucknawi, Dakhnvi, Rekhta, Lashkari & others. Most Urdu poetry by Khusro (which he refers to as 'Hindvi') is incomprehensible to most Hindi speakers today, because the language spoken is Urdu.
Again, this is not the language spoken by most Indians in India today, this isn't colloquial Hindi/Hindustani. The link you sent me is not Hindi literature, but actually literature written in Avadhi and Brij Bhasha forms, which doesn't have Khari Boli in it, hence it is NOT Hindi. Urdu has a good portion of Avadhi and Brij Bhasha in it too. You've already admitted that there was Sanskritization of the language post 1950, which led to Hindi being formed. Even the Shudh Hindi/Hindi uses Khari Boli today, which means it isn't like the Avadhi and Brij Bhasha excerpts you referred to as 'Hindi literature'. Shudh Hindi/Hindi is a post 1950 creation by Sanskritizing Urdu, but still retaining much of its Khari Boli, making it different from the Avadhi & Brij Bhasha literature in the 1100s & before.