Quote:
Originally Posted by Spock
So they should give up on their language because you think it sounds crude and rough. I am sure non-Urdu speakers feel the same way about Urdu too. And what advice do you have to give to Sindhi, Baluchi, Pushto speakers, oh great one.
The People of Punjab, like the people of Sindh, Baluchistan, or NWFP will continue to speak their own language - the language of their ancestors, no one can force them to change. Aap ney urdu boolni hai tu bolain, no ones stopping you.
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Oh dear lord, You're a very silly person aren't you. Utterly distorting the context of my post just to be able to have a go. You've assumed too many things in your reply for me to even bother addressing.
I'm not a native urdu speaker, my mother tongue is koshur (which is very different to urdu), and my urdu is not that great. If you read the post again, I was stating my 'opinion' which I am entitled to, I did not issue any advice, nor do I wish to. If you also look at the punctuation used in my previous post, you will notice a 'full stop' preceding the statement 'It sounds so rough and crude' indicating that it was a statement on its own, and not linked to the other sentences and thus can not be associated to be taken as 'reasoning' of the previous sentence.
Punjabis are the largest ethnic group in Pakistan, so it is understandable, but in my opinion more effort wouldn't hurt.
You totally pulled a Fox news on that one.