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Yes all languages in Pakistan including Urdu use Persian script
Urdu script
Urdu is written right-to left in an extension of the Persian alphabet, which is itself an extension of the Arabic alphabet. Urdu is associated with the Nastaʿlīq style of Persian calligraphy, whereas Arabic is generally written in the Naskh orRuq'ah styles. Nasta’liq is notoriously difficult to typeset, so Urdu newspapers were hand-written by masters of calligraphy, known as kātib or khush-nawīs, until the late 1980s.[citation needed] One handwritten Urdu newspaper, The Musalman, is still published daily in Chennai.
Are the languages similar? If you speak Urdu, can you understand much Persian?Yes all languages in Pakistan including Urdu use Persian script
Urdu script
Urdu is written right-to left in an extension of the Persian alphabet, which is itself an extension of the Arabic alphabet. Urdu is associated with the Nastaʿlīq style of Persian calligraphy, whereas Arabic is generally written in the Naskh orRuq'ah styles. Nasta’liq is notoriously difficult to typeset, so Urdu newspapers were hand-written by masters of calligraphy, known as kātib or khush-nawīs, until the late 1980s.[citation needed] One handwritten Urdu newspaper, The Musalman, is still published daily in Chennai.
NopeAre the languages similar? If you speak Urdu, can you understand much Persian?
Right, you can understand it but you wouldn't be able to read it, correct?Nope
But if you speak Urdu, you can understand Hindi
Yes, as the below map shows, all major languages in Pakistan use the Perso-Arabic script (although some individuals in certain isolated pockets of the country might know older scripts, like Baltis and the Tibetan script). Recently the Kalasha language also got a new script based on the Latin alphabet. That language previously had no script.
Right, you can understand it but you wouldn't be able to read it, correct?
Yes all languages in Pakistan including Urdu use Persian script
Urdu script
Urdu is written right-to left in an extension of the Persian alphabet, which is itself an extension of the Arabic alphabet. Urdu is associated with the Nastaʿlīq style of Persian calligraphy, whereas Arabic is generally written in the Naskh orRuq'ah styles. Nasta’liq is notoriously difficult to typeset, so Urdu newspapers were hand-written by masters of calligraphy, known as kātib or khush-nawīs, until the late 1980s.[citation needed] One handwritten Urdu newspaper, The Musalman, is still published daily in Chennai.
CorrectRight, you can understand it but you wouldn't be able to read it, correct?
Are the languages similar? If you speak Urdu, can you understand much Persian?
Yes I can read and write little bit in Persian nearly 30 to 40% words are same. Same way Sindhi and Pashto also.Are the languages similar? If you speak Urdu, can you understand much Persian?
An Urdu reader can easily read Persian but might only be able to understand 30% of it if no Farsi education is involved. Urdu contains thousands of Persian and Turkish words which make you get a rough idea of whats being talked about. Urdu is a hybrid language built on about 7 other languages. The bridge between Urdu and Farsi is poetry, especially by Iqbal.
Yes I can read and write little bit in Persian nearly 30 to 40% words are same. Same way Sindhi and Pashto also.
That figure is quite wrong nearly all Pakistani (educated at least primary) can speak and understand Urdu. Fun fact is that our Punjabi language is quite close to Urdu and many mix words of Punjabi in Urdu and we call it Gulabi Urdu.someone posted that only about 8% of Pakistanis are fluent in Urdu
Yes I can read and write little bit in Persian nearly 30 to 40% words are same. Same way Sindhi and Pashto also.
Yes you can say that Pashtu, Sindhi, Punjabi (shahmukhi), Baluchi and Arabic you can write same way with minus or plus few alphabets.Is Pashto in Afghanistan also written in Persian script?
Nope
But if you speak Urdu, you can understand Hindi