A1Kaid
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Urdu is 90% farsi - I'm always suprised by some Pakistanis who say that they do not speak or understand farsi -- If one reads and writes urdu, one reads and writes farsi and Dari and Pashto for that matter.
"Urdu is 90% farsi"-Muse
No Urdu is not 90% Farsi, though Urdu does contain a lot of vocabulary and words from Farsi. If Urdu was 90% Farsi, this could mean that Hindi speaking people could also understand Farsi because Urdu and Hindi have similar words and we can both understand each other...So think about that repercussion of what you said about Urdu being 90% Farsi...
Now let's do a live cross-examination.
Below, is a video of news coverage conducted in Farsi/Persian in Iran.
Now below here is a video of Zahid Hamid (a wonderful articulate Urdu speaker) speaking Urdu on News 1.
Clearly Urdu is not 90% Farsi, I'm sure most Urdu speakers listening to the first video in Farsi have difficulty understanding the Farsi language...
Though I find this debate a very interesting debate, that Urdu should be replaced with Farsi.
You know if Pakistan had adopted Farsi, we would be culturally closer to the Persians, in fact there would have been a "Farsi Speaking belt", Iran-Afghanistan-Tajikistan-Pakistan. Some of the pros of this move would mean we would have access to a world of Persian news, books, articles, literature, poetry, songs, and more.
Currently Pakistan is officially a dual-language state, using both Urdu and English (as official languages) (yes there are other languages spoken...) but if Pakistanis decide not to ditch Urdu than perhaps Pakistan should work toward adopting a new language (perhaps Persian) and yet maintaining Urdu. Finally, it should also be taken unto consideration that Pres.Gov. and Founder of Pakistan, Muhammad Ali Jinnah desired Urdu to be the official language of Pakistani people, so replacing Urdu with Farsi would contradict and go against Quaid e Azam's aspiration and desire.
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