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اردو for English speakers

  1. Flashcards
  2. What is Urdu?
  3. Core Vocabulary
  4. Essential Grammar
  5. Pronunciation & Nastaliq
  6. Common Mistakes
  7. Learning Resources
  8. Culture & Context
  9. Related Guides

1. Flashcards

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2. What is Urdu?

Urdu (اردو) is an Indo-Aryan language, the national language of Pakistan and an official language in several Indian states, with well over 200 million speakers. It is written right-to-left in the Perso-Arabic Nastaliq script and carries a celebrated tradition of poetry.

At the spoken level Urdu and Hindi are the same language ("Hindustani"): shared grammar, shared everyday vocabulary. The differences are the script (Nastaliq vs Devanagari) and the formal vocabulary — Urdu draws its higher register from Persian and Arabic, Hindi from Sanskrit. Learn one and you can largely understand the other in conversation.

Why learn Urdu?

3. Core Vocabulary (1–83)

Useful high-frequency Urdu words in the Urdu script (right-to-left) with a romanization and English translation. This is the exact deck used by the flashcard trainer above. Use the search box to filter.

#اردوEnglish

4. Essential Grammar

Urdu shares its grammar with Hindi (Hindustani): Subject–Object–Verb, postpositions, grammatical gender, and the ne-ergative.

Postpositions and the ne-ergative

Urdu (romanized)LiterallyEnglish
ghar mẽhouse inin the house
maĩne roṭī khāīI-ne roti ate(f.)I ate roti

In the perfective of a transitive verb the subject takes ne and the verb agrees with the object — exactly as in Hindi.

Gender and respect

Nouns are masculine or feminine, and adjectives and verbs agree. Pronouns mark politeness: (intimate), tum (familiar), āp (respectful).

If you already know Hindi, the grammar here is essentially free — focus your energy on the Nastaliq script and the Persian/Arabic vocabulary.

5. Pronunciation & Nastaliq

Urdu is written right-to-left in Nastaliq, an abjad where short vowels are usually unwritten. Alongside the Indo-Aryan sounds, Urdu keeps several Persian/Arabic consonants.

SoundNotesExample
q قa deep "k" from the back of the throatqalam (pen)
kh خ / gh غthroaty sounds from Persian/Arabickhudā (God)
f ف / z زkept distinct (Hindi often merges these)māf (pardon)
retroflex ٹ ڈ ڑtongue curled back, vs dental ت دlaṛkā (boy)
aspirated kh gh bh…a puff of air is meaningfulbhāī (brother)

6. Common Mistakes

7. Learning Resources

8. Culture & Context

The language of the ghazal

Urdu's literary prestige rests on its poetry — the ghazal, the nazm, and giants like Mir, Ghalib, Iqbal, and Faiz. Even casual speech is sprinkled with couplets (sher).

Adab and courtesy

Urdu culture prizes adab (refined courtesy). Elaborate, gracious greetings and respectful pronouns (āp) are part of speaking well.

One tongue, two scripts

That Urdu and Hindi are one spoken language split by script and register is a vivid lesson in how identity shapes what we call a "language."