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  1. Urdu literature originated sometime around the 14th century in present-day North India among the sophisticated gentry of the courts. Amir Khusrau, who lived in the thirteenth century, wrote and gave shape to the Rekhta dialect (The Persianized combination of Hindavi), which was the early form of Modern Standard Urdu.

  2. Aug 12, 2022 · Pdf_module_version 0.0.19 Ppi 360 Rcs_key 24143 Republisher_date 20220812085801 Republisher_operator associate-jonathan-balignot@archive.org Republisher_time 306 Scandate 20220811015213 Scanner station47.cebu.archive.org Scanningcenter

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  4. century CE, Arabic, Persian, Urdu, and Turkish authors in particular produced some of the most glorious manifestations of world literature. From prose to poetry, modern to medieval, elitist to popular, oral to lit-erary, this body of literature is in much need of a wide range of renewed scholarly investigation and lucid presentation.

  5. was a History of Urdu Literature also. The popularity of Urdu can be assessed from the fact that the translations of Ghalib's poetry and of a handful of other classics have been widely accepted in Hindi as well as in many other Indian languages. Urdu has to its credit the best of short story writers, the best of poets, the best of songsters, as ...

  6. mash‘iskhs in the evolving and development of Urdu is the most significant. The objective of this paper is to briefly review their role in this connection. KEY WORDS: Urdu language, Sufia and Mashaikh, India, Culture and civilization, genres of literature Introduction The Muslim entered in India as conquerors with the conquests of Muhammad Bin

  7. URDU LANGUAGE, LITERATURE, AND POETRY. Urdu is a language whose exceptionally complex linguistic and cultural history reflects the special position of Islam in the Indian subcontinent of South Asia. While linguistically related to Bengali, Hindi, Punjabi, and the other languages of the Indo-Aryan family (whose classical representative is ...

  8. In the 18th-19th centuries, South Asian communities experienced and participated in a major restructuring of the languages of the subcontinent. Urdu and English were institutionalized as governmental languages and utilized in new literary productions as Persian was gradually marginalized from the centre of literary and governmental polities.

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