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    • 1837

      • In 1837, Urdu became an official language of the British East India Company, replacing Persian across northern India during Company rule; Persian had until this point served as the court language of various Indo-Islamic empires.
      en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Urdu
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  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › UrduUrdu - Wikipedia

    From the 13th century until the end of the 18th century; the language now known as Urdu was called Hindi, Hindavi, Hindustani, Dehlavi, Dihlawi, Lahori, and Lashkari.

  3. Urdu ( اردو, trans. Urdū, historically spelled Ordu) is an Indo-Aryan language of the Indo-Iranian branch, belonging to the Indo-European family of languages.

  4. According to the popular myth, Urdu is a ‘camp language’ or ‘lashkari zaban’ because it originated in the army camps of the Mughals. The reasoning — if it can be called as such at all — behind...

  5. Nov 12, 2011 · The puzzle the author seeks to solve is the following: from the 13th to the 18th century the name used for the language now called Urdu was mostly Hindi, though other names were also used. When and why did it become Urdu? He gives two explanations: pristine Hindi was not the same language as modern Hindi; languages change over time.

  6. The name Urdu for language seems to have begun its life from as “Zaban-e-Urdu-emu’alla-e-Shahjahanabad” (the language of the exalted city of Shahjahanabad). It soon became shortened to “Zaban-e-Urdu-e mu’alla”, then to “Zaban-e- Urdu” and then to “Urdu”.

  7. Urdu, also known as Lashkari, [8] or the Lashkari language (لشکری ‍زبان) [9] is the national language of Pakistan and a recognized regional dialect in India. Urdu is an Indo-Aryan language, which means that it came from Proto-Indo-Aryan, a language that was spoken northeast of the Caspian Sea in the second millennium BCE. [10]

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