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Etymology of the word "Urdu"
[edit]Hi. In literature "Urdu" means "Camp" and it's an Old Persian word. Urdu=اردو( Persian) as a verb, it is Urdu zadan=اردو زدن(Persian), as a place, it is Urdu guah= اردو گاه (Persian). This language has been formed during King Nader Afshar the conquer who, accupied India. This language was a tool in the army camps to communicate between Persia and Noerth Indians. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Hirealthing (talk • contribs) 05:33, 12 September 2014 (UTC)
- @Hirealthing:I was not the one who reverted your edit at Urdu. That was someone else, an anonymous IP editor. I'm not expert enough to know whether your edit was superior to what was already at the article, so I left your edit unreverted when I reverted most of what the IP editor had written,
partly because you had not given an explanation in an edit summary, if I recall correctlyI see that you did give an edit summary. Given the contentious nature of editing that article at the moment, I suggest you start a discussion on the article Talk page, if you want to push for the change. I can transclude this discussion onto the Talk page, unless you want to reformulate your arguments. I note that you have not given any reference for your etymology of "Urdu". My Encyclopedia Britannica, under Hindustani Languages, says that Urdu was first used by Indian recruits in the army of the Mughal emperor; so, "camp" certainly sounds plausible. Dhtwiki (talk) 22:25, 13 September 2014 (UTC)
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