Yas, Hola, me gustan mucho tus lecciones, estoy aprendiendo mucho y las estoy poniendo en práctica. Solo una pequeña recomendación y petición, podrías escribir más frases u oraciones como ejemplos y pronunciarlos varias veces, Braie Meharbani!!! GRACIAS desde México!!!
@cutehider Soon I hope! Been so busy during Xmas and New Years, then went away for a week and now I have exams, but I'll try to make it as soon as possible!
Hey Yasmin!! I'm learning from you! Please continue with these Urdu lessons! Its nice to learn in this way! looking forward for new videos to improve my Urdu!!! Thnx for the previous videoss!!
You're such a massive help! my mother is Pakistani, but my father is British.. i grew up learning English more than any of my mothers native languages... now i live in Canada where im constantly reminded of my heritage... i understand it, but just cant put sentences together myself. so I would love to learn Urdu. my new years resolution is to be fluent in Urdu by the end of this year. ahaha. Happy New Year Yasmin! :)
@Yaiyasmin Urdu is the most respectable language of the world....... It is full of love, warmth and respect that any other languages of the world lack, So it doesn't need any pleasing word's because Urdu is it self so sweet. I know the ppl who really love this language wili agree with me!
awesome work your doing. You are absolutly right there is no translitiration of the word please. However, there is a word "Meherbani" which actually means Favour, which can be used to mean please using the polite language you have talked about in the video. For example. "Aap meherbani ker key mujhay bataea." which means "Please tell me"
The word "Please" is usually translated into "Mehrbani farma kar". But ofcourse that is not used frequently because the addition of "iye" to the word already has an expression of politeness to it.
The 'bata' and 'ja' kind of words most people never use unless they're with their friends. It is mostly either batao or batain (or bataiye instead of batain). Batao for people younger than you and batain for older people, respected ones or when you wan't to be formal.
There is another interesting context when Batao is used with 'aap'. This is when you want to stay formal so you use 'aap' but at the same time you want to express a certain frankness so you use Batao. For example I used this a lot with my team-lead at work who was a very good friend but senior in rank. An Urdu professor wouldn't recommend its usage but its very commonly in use now, most probably because of the Hindi influence.
Bataie or Bataiye= formal, used strictly for people you call 'aap'. This is a bit uncommon to use these days unless your family background is from North-India and you are "urdu-speaking". Its one of those typical words that expresses that stands for the famous Luknow politeness. I highly doubt if this word is part of proper Hindi, maybe a student of Hindi could confirm it.
A much more common alternative of this is word "BatayeiN". Everyone uses it when the context is for formal usage.
Batao = informal, used with your friends and juniors, not with parents and elders. People you can call 'tum'
Batana = same as above. difference is you imply that just let me know quickly... and then you can do whatever u want to do. 'na' at the end of the verb is used mostly when u want no real effort from the person you ask. It also implies to the other person that it won't take you much effort to do it.
hi Yaiyasmin! im having a great time with your visitors. im trying to picky up my third language. i noticed you speak english/spanish and maybe urdu? just wondering what your nationality is? thanks! keep up the good work.
hindi and urdu are the exact same language with different scripts, infact the language together is call ed "hindustani" which goes back to pre british colonial times. sad to see partition split the same two groups up
@JagjeetMann I don't think it is fair to call Urdu and Hindi exact same languages. Yes they sound similar and have many words common but a native Hindi speaker would struggle to understand proper textbook Urdu which contains an overwhelming amount of Persian and Arabic words. Similarly a native Urdu speaker would also struggle to understand textbook Hindi which contains an overwhelming amount of Sanskrit and Hindi words that are not used in Urdu at all.
@imarsenalman Colloquial Hindi and Urdu are quite indistinguishable actually. In the pure form, they diverge somewhat but honestly, who amongst the present generation speaks the purer form (of either language) ? I believe colloquially, both languages have merged into a hybrid which gets called Hindi in India and Urdu in Pakistan.
thanks yasmin for cover you head... i am glad to see you like that.. i think you rememberd that what i told you.. am i right yasmin...? anyway thanks alot... and keep smile while you teach URDU... i also point your smile when i learn URDU.. thats bring smile on my face...
@piyush0anu Are you seriously giving me orders telling me what NEVER to do? There's no sign on my face saying "please tell me what I can and cannot do, as I'm unable to think for myself". I'm wearing a hoodie, how did this become a debate about hijab?
Also if you are going to enter a discussion (which by all means you're welcome to do) you need to back it up with evidence, a simple statement is void.
thanks yasmin for cover you head... i am glad to see you like that.. i think you rememberd that what i told you.. am i right yasmin...? anyway thanks alot...
Good... Keep up the good work.... and ignore all the haters or psychopaths .... They will never learn anything from anywhere they think whole of the world is same and as insane as they are .....
anyhoo...The lack of the word PLEASE in its polite form in Urdu is quite interesting. Is this indicative of some sort of cultural passive aggressive attitude or sumthin? I wonder how many languages/societies don't use "please" as a polite imperative, and have to use workarounds to express politeness.
@BonaDun I know 1 other language that lacks "please": romani/romanés where the way you command/request something politely is by going up with your voice like posing a question, so instead of saying "Bring me some water!" you'd say "Bring me some water?" *puppy eyes & smile*
@Yaiyasmin Actually Urdu language does not lack the word for please, its just that its not common in usage probably because it is considered too formal. The word is Bara-e-Mehrbani (برائے مہربانی) or Barah-e-Karam (براہ کرم). You are more likely to hear these words from a customer service representative or read on public notices than hear them in a street, for example you will find it on a notice that says "please avoid walking on the grass | bara-e-mehrbani ghas per chalne se gurez kejiye".
urdu does have please (meharbani kar kay ) or (mehrabani hogi) depends, like if you want to say please come here you will say "meherbani kar kay idher aaiyayga" or if you want to be less polite "idher aain".if you want to be further less polite you will say "idher aaiyay", further less polite "idher aao", further less polite "idher ajao", further less polite "idher aaja" further less polite "idher aa" its not the present of please which make anything polite.
just correction in my about reply "its not JUST the presence of Please (meherbani kar kay/hogi) which make any sentence polite". you can be polite with it or with out it and there are degrees of politeness as well. Like in arabic you have two kind of plural one for two and one for more than two.
No brother, that doesn't indicate that. Pakistanis tend to be really polite in our everyday conversation. Infact half of the struggle by the parents to bring up their children nicely is focused on the politeness of conversation. I don't know how many times have i seen mothers insisting their children use the word bataiye or batain instead of batao.
@BonaDun Actually there is a word for please in Urdu (Yasmin doesn't know it yet probably :P). The word is 'Braie Meharbani'. It's literal meaning is the same as the Spanish 'Por Favor'.
134 views?LOL,previous 1 is 1616 views,& same for the ones b4 that..Why doesn't this girl take a clue & stop this nonsense instead of making a joke out of herself? You're not sweet 16 anymore dear to get a million views & you,quite surprisingly,look dull N dowdy now.Nowhere near the first videos.People want a cute,sexy face to jerk off to & nobody is interested in Urdu or travel..You ain't pretty no more so bow out in grace..And yes, THE OVERFLOWING LIPSTICK MAKES U LOOK LIKE A DESPERATE WHORE!
@IPsec100 It's quite flattering that someone who thinks I'm ugly and dowdy still finds me interesting enough to watch and comment on my videos, thank you
@Yaiyasmin Instead of wise-cracking, you would have made a better statement if you had simply ignored my remark.Well, you couldn't because you know what I said is the truth, hard fact that anyone beyond some desperate lover-boys can verify on his own,including you.No wonder it hit a raw nerve.Well, I made my point,no need to reply again.Continue to peddle your ware,lipstick & all.There'll always be a few HUNDRED bums to drop by & cheer you before reality hits hard..CHEERS!!
@Yaiyasmin, Please don't give such people the honor of your attention. You are an amazingly witty, beautiful and wonderful person. I would love to learn your mother language swedish/ Espaniol from you.
I wish you the best of health, wealth and prosperity in your journeys ahead, and it would be my pleasure to be a part of your journeys on youtube.
@IPsec100 you sounds like you are suffering from some psychological disorder like bipolar disorder or depression....which makes you weak, desperate,sad, pathetic, useless, illiterate piece of inbred shit
& tum & app thing, definitely if we say AAP so we r supposed to say BATAYE. & TUM with BATAO, it would b pretty awkward to sya AAP BATAO & even more awkward if we say TUM BATAIYE, the person your talking to will start laughng if u say TUM BATAIYE LOL.....
just like in english we would say DO IT, so its order, & PLEASE DO IT, thats kinda request all though it means the same thing, so DO IT in urdu would b YE KARO, & PLEASE DO IT would b YE KIJIYE, i hope u got my point, i'm from pakistan & if you dont know, URDU is the national language of pakistan so if you need any kind of help regarding URDU you can ask me any time.... & your urdu accent is pretty cute though :) where did learn all that urdu from?
bataiye or batao depends on who r u talking to, for example if i'm talking to my teacher or parents i would say, mujhy bataiye, idhar aiye, mujhy call kijiye.. but if we r talking to our friends or some kids we would say mujhy batao, idhar aao, mujhy call karo.. but we can also use bataiye thing with kids just to show some manners, we would look more mannerable if we use bataiye to kids & strangers.. this is just to b respectful to anyone. in short, BATAIYE is request, & BATAO is order...
Please stop... with your urdu... please... its a request. and you get so out of control if i give you a suggestion, it seems like you hate listening to your fans.
@arushbhai You have given me the same suggestion/request several times and I am still rebelling against you so maybe you should just accept that I am aware of what you think, but not doing anything about it. So my request for you is that you unsubscribe from my channel and save yourself the pain of watching my videos that you don't like.
@arushbhai ur just a hater nothin better to than chat shit. if u dnt want to chek her vids get the fuk of tha page.its 1 bullshit of a opinion frm u which has no value against the 13000 Subscribers she got. i bet ur momma isnt even a fan of u . so SHUT!!! up man.
All very interesting my dear. If Urdu and Hindi grammar are the same, then here are some irregular ones that may interest you. For the verbs karna (to do), dena (to give), lena (to take), and pina (to drink), the semi-polite commands are karo (do), do (give), lo (take), and piyo (drink). The polite commands are kijie (please do), dijie (please give), lijie (please take), and pijie (please drink). I hope that’s of use to you. I'm looking forward to learning the Urdi script one day.
@Yaiyasmin My pleasure. Maybe you should attack it from the Hindi side, as the grammar and vocabulary seems to be pretty well the same as Urdu ?. Look at the channel for CrazyLassi on here, and especially her website learnhindifree (dot) blogspot (dot) com . She has many lists of verbs, adjectives etc on there. I really like Rupert Snell's books too. The info that I gave you came from his "Teach Yourself Beginner's Hindi" book. I learned the script from one of his books too. Angus.
@ous13nesta Hindi basically is completely different language then urdu, but in india they usually speak mixture of hindi & urdu, indians dont speak pure urdu, they use grammer & all basics of urdu but put in some hindi vocabulary here & there, plus indians dont pronounce urdu correctly cuz thats not their national language, you'll find pure urdu in pakistan, cuz urdu is the national language in pakistan, & i'm from pakistan so if u need any help with urdu u can ask me......
I don't think its situation based I think mostly it depends on who you are talking to. You are more polite to your elders or people you are not too familiar with. Less polite form is more common when you are talking to people of same age group and your friends.
Yas, Hola, me gustan mucho tus lecciones, estoy aprendiendo mucho y las estoy poniendo en práctica. Solo una pequeña recomendación y petición, podrías escribir más frases u oraciones como ejemplos y pronunciarlos varias veces, Braie Meharbani!!! GRACIAS desde México!!!
rocioflaka27 1 month ago
Hi Yasmin i really learn in this way urdu. Pls continue posting more videos. Thanks.!!
safiyahfarrukh 1 month ago
Best of luck for exams *o*
cutehider 1 month ago
17th?? *.*
cutehider 1 month ago
@cutehider Soon I hope! Been so busy during Xmas and New Years, then went away for a week and now I have exams, but I'll try to make it as soon as possible!
Yaiyasmin 1 month ago
Blow job lips
scottyd19831 1 month ago
Hey Yasmin!! I'm learning from you! Please continue with these Urdu lessons! Its nice to learn in this way! looking forward for new videos to improve my Urdu!!! Thnx for the previous videoss!!
MissyMusicForLife 1 month ago in playlist Learn Urdu with Yaiyasmin
waiting for lesson 17 anxiously.... LOL
You're such a massive help! my mother is Pakistani, but my father is British.. i grew up learning English more than any of my mothers native languages... now i live in Canada where im constantly reminded of my heritage... i understand it, but just cant put sentences together myself. so I would love to learn Urdu. my new years resolution is to be fluent in Urdu by the end of this year. ahaha. Happy New Year Yasmin! :)
KandiieBabesz 1 month ago
"brai mehrbani" means please in urdu.
OMER1QAZ 2 months ago
This has been flagged as spam show
Yasi here's an imperative of the verb 'to be' that you can use: ho...
Compounded with dafa (a forceful 'to go [away]'
Dafa ho! GO AWAY. Get the hell out [of here]. LOL
manimgoindowndown 2 months ago
Comment removed
manimgoindowndown 2 months ago
Less polite form is Batao and polite form is BATAIN
sahilsila 2 months ago
hey there is a world for Please
it is '' Meharbani ''
Please = meharbani
Please Come Here = Merharbani Ker Ke edher Ayain
sahilsila 2 months ago
@Yaiyasmin Urdu is the most respectable language of the world....... It is full of love, warmth and respect that any other languages of the world lack, So it doesn't need any pleasing word's because Urdu is it self so sweet. I know the ppl who really love this language wili agree with me!
hirakabli 2 months ago 2
AAP NAY ZABARDAST KAAM KIYA HAI !!
Hats off to you.
Superb.
drtahir76 2 months ago
bhohat khoob!
Kingoflove007 2 months ago
You are so very cute. And you are doing a great job. I love watching your videos.
huswaj 2 months ago
Salams Again,
As a new learner of urdu, I would suggest that you just learn the polite version, you can't go wrong with that :).
dildilpakistan111 2 months ago
Salams Yaiyasmin,
awesome work your doing. You are absolutly right there is no translitiration of the word please. However, there is a word "Meherbani" which actually means Favour, which can be used to mean please using the polite language you have talked about in the video. For example. "Aap meherbani ker key mujhay bataea." which means "Please tell me"
dildilpakistan111 2 months ago
oh come on grany you look like one of tha ugly horible urdu teacher she was caring all day her nail ... Hahhaha cop on
livelilly 2 months ago
hahah! Yasmin your a genius yaar! and this video is tooo cute! I randomly bumped into it and I was like dayem! are you half white half paki?
mmm187 2 months ago
@mmm187 Based on your comment, you are certainly a half wit, full trash. Sorry if I offended you, it was certainly intended.
piyush0anu 2 months ago
Comment removed
mmm187 2 months ago
great job!!!!!! keep rolling the stone.
naeem52000 2 months ago
keep up the great work:) love the end, where you said please please..lolz
shak182002 3 months ago
The word "Please" is usually translated into "Mehrbani farma kar". But ofcourse that is not used frequently because the addition of "iye" to the word already has an expression of politeness to it.
The 'bata' and 'ja' kind of words most people never use unless they're with their friends. It is mostly either batao or batain (or bataiye instead of batain). Batao for people younger than you and batain for older people, respected ones or when you wan't to be formal.
hammadahmad100 3 months ago
Hej Yasmin tack för ännu en bra video. Jag undrar om du möjligtvis kan hjälpa mig med hur man säger "får" alltså typ "får jag?" Tack på förhand
Labinful 3 months ago in playlist Learn Urdu with Yaiyasmin
Hey
u got Urdu 16 up, a bit short, but interesting
ur clips are great,
very good,
keep up the effort
just ignore all the pricks, commenting on ur page,
lol ---- Pretty Please --- ayey ayey ayey ---- LMAO ----
786Ykhan 3 months ago
please be more motivated!!!!! smile and laugh, it waz boring to learn this lesson and i almost fell asleep.
naeem52000 3 months ago
There is another interesting context when Batao is used with 'aap'. This is when you want to stay formal so you use 'aap' but at the same time you want to express a certain frankness so you use Batao. For example I used this a lot with my team-lead at work who was a very good friend but senior in rank. An Urdu professor wouldn't recommend its usage but its very commonly in use now, most probably because of the Hindi influence.
imarsenalman 3 months ago
Bataie or Bataiye= formal, used strictly for people you call 'aap'. This is a bit uncommon to use these days unless your family background is from North-India and you are "urdu-speaking". Its one of those typical words that expresses that stands for the famous Luknow politeness. I highly doubt if this word is part of proper Hindi, maybe a student of Hindi could confirm it.
A much more common alternative of this is word "BatayeiN". Everyone uses it when the context is for formal usage.
imarsenalman 3 months ago
Batao = informal, used with your friends and juniors, not with parents and elders. People you can call 'tum'
Batana = same as above. difference is you imply that just let me know quickly... and then you can do whatever u want to do. 'na' at the end of the verb is used mostly when u want no real effort from the person you ask. It also implies to the other person that it won't take you much effort to do it.
imarsenalman 3 months ago
ok yasmin, understood
thank you for your last lesson
alfredo72 3 months ago
hi Yaiyasmin! im having a great time with your visitors. im trying to picky up my third language. i noticed you speak english/spanish and maybe urdu? just wondering what your nationality is? thanks! keep up the good work.
cfh99nyc 3 months ago
hindi and urdu are the exact same language with different scripts, infact the language together is call ed "hindustani" which goes back to pre british colonial times. sad to see partition split the same two groups up
JagjeetMann 3 months ago
@JagjeetMann I don't think it is fair to call Urdu and Hindi exact same languages. Yes they sound similar and have many words common but a native Hindi speaker would struggle to understand proper textbook Urdu which contains an overwhelming amount of Persian and Arabic words. Similarly a native Urdu speaker would also struggle to understand textbook Hindi which contains an overwhelming amount of Sanskrit and Hindi words that are not used in Urdu at all.
imarsenalman 3 months ago
@imarsenalman Colloquial Hindi and Urdu are quite indistinguishable actually. In the pure form, they diverge somewhat but honestly, who amongst the present generation speaks the purer form (of either language) ? I believe colloquially, both languages have merged into a hybrid which gets called Hindi in India and Urdu in Pakistan.
Altafzaman 2 months ago
i like that hoodie
BonaDun 3 months ago
great job,i'm learning from u :)
LiLyyolyz 3 months ago
@LiLyyolyz I'm glad :)
Yaiyasmin 3 months ago
thanks yasmin for cover you head... i am glad to see you like that.. i think you rememberd that what i told you.. am i right yasmin...? anyway thanks alot... and keep smile while you teach URDU... i also point your smile when i learn URDU.. thats bring smile on my face...
khan...
MsKhan4u 3 months ago
@MsKhan4u Yasmin, NEVER cover your head. It has nothing to do with Hijab; this head-covering nonsense is a cultural and incorrect insertion.
piyush0anu 2 months ago
@piyush0anu Are you seriously giving me orders telling me what NEVER to do? There's no sign on my face saying "please tell me what I can and cannot do, as I'm unable to think for myself". I'm wearing a hoodie, how did this become a debate about hijab?
Also if you are going to enter a discussion (which by all means you're welcome to do) you need to back it up with evidence, a simple statement is void.
Yaiyasmin 1 month ago
thanks yasmin for cover you head... i am glad to see you like that.. i think you rememberd that what i told you.. am i right yasmin...? anyway thanks alot...
khan...
MsKhan4u 3 months ago
Good... Keep up the good work.... and ignore all the haters or psychopaths .... They will never learn anything from anywhere they think whole of the world is same and as insane as they are .....
TheAARSAA 3 months ago
please bring me...uh...my toilet paper holder
anyhoo...The lack of the word PLEASE in its polite form in Urdu is quite interesting. Is this indicative of some sort of cultural passive aggressive attitude or sumthin? I wonder how many languages/societies don't use "please" as a polite imperative, and have to use workarounds to express politeness.
BonaDun 3 months ago
@BonaDun I know 1 other language that lacks "please": romani/romanés where the way you command/request something politely is by going up with your voice like posing a question, so instead of saying "Bring me some water!" you'd say "Bring me some water?" *puppy eyes & smile*
Yaiyasmin 3 months ago 2
@Yaiyasmin Actually Urdu language does not lack the word for please, its just that its not common in usage probably because it is considered too formal. The word is Bara-e-Mehrbani (برائے مہربانی) or Barah-e-Karam (براہ کرم). You are more likely to hear these words from a customer service representative or read on public notices than hear them in a street, for example you will find it on a notice that says "please avoid walking on the grass | bara-e-mehrbani ghas per chalne se gurez kejiye".
imarsenalman 3 months ago
@Yaiyasmin and Bonadun .
urdu does have please (meharbani kar kay ) or (mehrabani hogi) depends, like if you want to say please come here you will say "meherbani kar kay idher aaiyayga" or if you want to be less polite "idher aain".if you want to be further less polite you will say "idher aaiyay", further less polite "idher aao", further less polite "idher ajao", further less polite "idher aaja" further less polite "idher aa" its not the present of please which make anything polite.
asiantiger04te64 2 months ago
@asiantiger04te64
just correction in my about reply "its not JUST the presence of Please (meherbani kar kay/hogi) which make any sentence polite". you can be polite with it or with out it and there are degrees of politeness as well. Like in arabic you have two kind of plural one for two and one for more than two.
asiantiger04te64 2 months ago
@BonaDun
No brother, that doesn't indicate that. Pakistanis tend to be really polite in our everyday conversation. Infact half of the struggle by the parents to bring up their children nicely is focused on the politeness of conversation. I don't know how many times have i seen mothers insisting their children use the word bataiye or batain instead of batao.
hammadahmad100 3 months ago
Comment removed
BonaDun 3 months ago
@BonaDun The word you are looking for is "Meherbani"
piyush0anu 2 months ago
@BonaDun Actually there is a word for please in Urdu (Yasmin doesn't know it yet probably :P). The word is 'Braie Meharbani'. It's literal meaning is the same as the Spanish 'Por Favor'.
siddiquemadnan 1 month ago
This has been flagged as spam show
134 views?LOL,previous 1 is 1616 views,& same for the ones b4 that..Why doesn't this girl take a clue & stop this nonsense instead of making a joke out of herself? You're not sweet 16 anymore dear to get a million views & you,quite surprisingly,look dull N dowdy now.Nowhere near the first videos.People want a cute,sexy face to jerk off to & nobody is interested in Urdu or travel..You ain't pretty no more so bow out in grace..And yes, THE OVERFLOWING LIPSTICK MAKES U LOOK LIKE A DESPERATE WHORE!
IPsec100 3 months ago
@IPsec100
dude, why are you even focusing any energy on her if you actually feel this way?
Did she turn down your marriage proposal?
BonaDun 3 months ago 12
@IPsec100 It's quite flattering that someone who thinks I'm ugly and dowdy still finds me interesting enough to watch and comment on my videos, thank you
Yaiyasmin 3 months ago 20
This has been flagged as spam show
@Yaiyasmin Instead of wise-cracking, you would have made a better statement if you had simply ignored my remark.Well, you couldn't because you know what I said is the truth, hard fact that anyone beyond some desperate lover-boys can verify on his own,including you.No wonder it hit a raw nerve.Well, I made my point,no need to reply again.Continue to peddle your ware,lipstick & all.There'll always be a few HUNDRED bums to drop by & cheer you before reality hits hard..CHEERS!!
IPsec100 3 months ago
@Yaiyasmin, Please don't give such people the honor of your attention. You are an amazingly witty, beautiful and wonderful person. I would love to learn your mother language swedish/ Espaniol from you.
I wish you the best of health, wealth and prosperity in your journeys ahead, and it would be my pleasure to be a part of your journeys on youtube.
bilalbutti 2 months ago
@IPsec100 Haha you can´t be serious
neuroleptika 3 months ago
@IPsec100 if u wanna jerk off man watch a porno man what tha fuk u doin ere. i think u sexually fustrated pal nt been gettin have u :(
SAHARACAFE 3 months ago
@IPsec100 you sounds like you are suffering from some psychological disorder like bipolar disorder or depression....which makes you weak, desperate,sad, pathetic, useless, illiterate piece of inbred shit
SHAUNZONE123 2 months ago 3
@SHAUNZONE123 i agree. guy is a nutjob
innocuoushunter 2 months ago
@IPsec100 fuck you indian pigturd
innocuoushunter 2 months ago
@IPsec100 You need serious medical intervention. Please seek help.
piyush0anu 2 months ago
& tum & app thing, definitely if we say AAP so we r supposed to say BATAYE. & TUM with BATAO, it would b pretty awkward to sya AAP BATAO & even more awkward if we say TUM BATAIYE, the person your talking to will start laughng if u say TUM BATAIYE LOL.....
sshhaammiiiiiiiiii 3 months ago
@sshhaammiiiiiiiiii Ok thanks!
Yaiyasmin 3 months ago
just like in english we would say DO IT, so its order, & PLEASE DO IT, thats kinda request all though it means the same thing, so DO IT in urdu would b YE KARO, & PLEASE DO IT would b YE KIJIYE, i hope u got my point, i'm from pakistan & if you dont know, URDU is the national language of pakistan so if you need any kind of help regarding URDU you can ask me any time.... & your urdu accent is pretty cute though :) where did learn all that urdu from?
sshhaammiiiiiiiiii 3 months ago
bataiye or batao depends on who r u talking to, for example if i'm talking to my teacher or parents i would say, mujhy bataiye, idhar aiye, mujhy call kijiye.. but if we r talking to our friends or some kids we would say mujhy batao, idhar aao, mujhy call karo.. but we can also use bataiye thing with kids just to show some manners, we would look more mannerable if we use bataiye to kids & strangers.. this is just to b respectful to anyone. in short, BATAIYE is request, & BATAO is order...
sshhaammiiiiiiiiii 3 months ago
OMG your urdu is pretty good, aap ki urdu kafi achi hy lol,
sshhaammiiiiiiiiii 3 months ago
Please stop... with your urdu... please... its a request. and you get so out of control if i give you a suggestion, it seems like you hate listening to your fans.
arushbhai 3 months ago
@arushbhai You have given me the same suggestion/request several times and I am still rebelling against you so maybe you should just accept that I am aware of what you think, but not doing anything about it. So my request for you is that you unsubscribe from my channel and save yourself the pain of watching my videos that you don't like.
Yaiyasmin 3 months ago
@arushbhai ur just a hater nothin better to than chat shit. if u dnt want to chek her vids get the fuk of tha page.its 1 bullshit of a opinion frm u which has no value against the 13000 Subscribers she got. i bet ur momma isnt even a fan of u . so SHUT!!! up man.
SAHARACAFE 3 months ago
All very interesting my dear. If Urdu and Hindi grammar are the same, then here are some irregular ones that may interest you. For the verbs karna (to do), dena (to give), lena (to take), and pina (to drink), the semi-polite commands are karo (do), do (give), lo (take), and piyo (drink). The polite commands are kijie (please do), dijie (please give), lijie (please take), and pijie (please drink). I hope that’s of use to you. I'm looking forward to learning the Urdi script one day.
ZenerSmytok 3 months ago
@ZenerSmytok Thank you! That is exactly what I needed, I cant find much about urdu verbs anywhere, so that is really useful :)
Yaiyasmin 3 months ago
@Yaiyasmin My pleasure. Maybe you should attack it from the Hindi side, as the grammar and vocabulary seems to be pretty well the same as Urdu ?. Look at the channel for CrazyLassi on here, and especially her website learnhindifree (dot) blogspot (dot) com . She has many lists of verbs, adjectives etc on there. I really like Rupert Snell's books too. The info that I gave you came from his "Teach Yourself Beginner's Hindi" book. I learned the script from one of his books too. Angus.
ZenerSmytok 3 months ago
will you marry me!!!!!!!!
bigrahizzle 3 months ago
Actually know a days all Hindi movies or people in all over world speaking urdu..
9211vk 3 months ago
please yasmin tell me i'm confused about urdu and hindi
if i learn urdu i'll be able to understand totally hindi ?
ous13nesta 3 months ago
@ous13nesta Hindi basically is completely different language then urdu, but in india they usually speak mixture of hindi & urdu, indians dont speak pure urdu, they use grammer & all basics of urdu but put in some hindi vocabulary here & there, plus indians dont pronounce urdu correctly cuz thats not their national language, you'll find pure urdu in pakistan, cuz urdu is the national language in pakistan, & i'm from pakistan so if u need any help with urdu u can ask me......
sshhaammiiiiiiiiii 3 months ago
@ous13nesta most of it with the normal, everyday usage, yes
although there might be some grammatical difference and hindi will be way less formal
but if some one speaks proper pure hindi you wont understand a thing
TheAdilasgharali 3 months ago
Yaiyasmin you said "Build me a house and buy me a car, situation based questions". These give Doubel meanings.............haahahhahaha.
Just kidding.....nice videos.
aliabideen 3 months ago
This has been flagged as spam show
Usstani sahibba is back :) Love your videos, keep coming them. App ka shukriya............lol
aliabideen 3 months ago
Comment removed
aliabideen 3 months ago
مجھ پر مہربانی کریں Please help me
coachbefcoachbef 3 months ago
Mehrbani is please in urdu. ( Please help me - Mujh per Mehrbani kero.)
coachbefcoachbef 3 months ago
@xMutlaq :) Shukria to you for watching
Yaiyasmin 3 months ago
I don't think its situation based I think mostly it depends on who you are talking to. You are more polite to your elders or people you are not too familiar with. Less polite form is more common when you are talking to people of same age group and your friends.
WiseGuyFTW 3 months ago
Thank you Yaiysamin its very easy :-)
sasa1010ism 3 months ago
Pehla :)
WiseGuyFTW 3 months ago