Academic literature on the topic 'Names, Urdu'

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Journal articles on the topic "Names, Urdu"

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UMAROVA, MOHIRA. "Realias about food names and their translations into Urdu and, Russian languages." Sharqshunoslik. Востоковедение. Oriental Studies 02, no. 02 (2022): 71–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.37547/os/vol-01issue-02-11.

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Non-equivalent lexicons are considered one of the issues of translation studies that attract the attention of representatives of translation schools of every country. This article also talks about the translation of words included in the list of non-equivalent lexicons - national specific words. The methods of translation of realities from Uzbek to Russian and Urdu languages ​​are considered. The examples are collected on the basis of "Starry Nights" by P. Kadirov, considered masterpieces of Uzbek prose, and its Russian and Urdu versions, and G. Ghulam's short story "Shum Bola" and its transla
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Ahmad, Rizwan, Vladimir Kulikov, and Noorin Iqbal. "Muslim personal names in Urdu: structure, meaning, and change." International Journal of the Sociology of Language 2023, no. 283 (2023): 161–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/ijsl-2023-0004.

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Abstract Based on an analysis of a corpus, in this study we examine: (a) the linguistic structure of Muslim personal names, (b) their etymological sources, and (c) some changing patterns among the younger generation. Firstly, we present a typology of the naming patterns by showing that there are four major types – one-part, two-part, three-part, and four-part names. While one-part names are formed from the given name only, the other three types are complex as they are composed of additional names containing honorific titles, caste titles, patronym, and husband’s names in case of married women.
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Jamil, Bushra, Saba Sultan, and Humaira Ijaz. "Design and Development of an Acoustic-Based Recongnition System Using DNN." Sukkur IBA Journal of Computing and Mathematical Sciences 8, no. 1 (2024): 32–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.30537/sjcms.v8i1.1400.

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Automatic speech recognition is a process of using computers to convert voice signals produced by human speech into reasonable format i.e. text or command that conveys the same meaning as the speaker intended to do. Many researchers are working on various languages including English and other European languages like Spanish, German, and French etc. to develop an automated system for speech recognition (ASR). However, researchers on the development of ASR for the Urdu language have put very little effort. We have developed an Urdu speech recognition system using Deep Neural Network (DNN) on our
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Iqbal, Yasar, Adeel Ahmed, Muhammad Riaz Gohar, and Sharjeel Ashraf. "Anglicization of Urdu Proper Names: A Corpus-Based Study." Journal of English Language, Literature and Education 2, no. 03 (2021): 79–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.54692/jelle.2021.020371.

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This paper aims to explore the impact of English on Pakistani names making them Anglicized. The local names are abbreviated in order to look modern or to show prestige on the part of the users. This phenomenon presents a discrete variety of Pakistani English (PE). The researcher conducted a corpus-based analysis (The Newspaper Analysis of 'The News', September 2017) to show the frequency of the Anglicized names. For the data analysis, the AntConc 3.2.1 was used to handle the corpus. The data were presented in the form of tables to show their frequency and percentage. The study proved that such
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Al-Jarf, Reima. "The Interchange of Personal Names in Muslim Communities: An Onomastic Study." Journal of Gender, Culture and Society 3, no. 1 (2023): 42–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.32996/jgcs.2023.3.1.5.

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This study investigates the interchange of personal names in nine Muslim communities to find out their linguistic, historical and cultural features. For that purpose, a corpus of personal names common in Arab countries, Turkey, Iran, Azerbaijan, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Indonesia, Bosnia-Herzegovina and Tatarstan was collected, analyzed and classified according to the Cultural, Ethnic and Linguistic (CEL) taxonomy and a text mining technique. Data analysis showed that Arabic names such as "Mohammed, Ali, Fatimah" were borrowed by Muslim communities but underwent phonological changes in the borro
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Dr Zafar Hussain Haral and Zaib-un-Nisa. "AN ANALYSIS OF TAZKARA HAZAR DASTAAN KNOWN AS KHUMKNANAE JAVEED BY LALA SRI RAM." Tasdiqتصدیق۔ 4, no. 2 (2023): 111–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.56276/tasdiq.v4i2.124.

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Tazkara is a type of biography in Urdu literature. In Tazkara the researcher compiles the data and events of the lives of poets and other literary personalities. Tazkara Hazar Dastaan known as Khumkhanae Javeed was gathered by Lala Sri Ram. This biography consists of Six volumes. There are 689 pages in Volume 1 and a list of 634 poets according to the Urdu alphabet ا تا بby poetic names included in it. Volume 2 consists of 751 pages with a list of 485 poets by poetic names according to پ تا ح. Volume 3 consists of 737 pages with a list of 534 poets by poetic names according to خ تا ز. Volume 4
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Saleem, Muhammad, Mubashar Nadeem, and Muhammad Amjad Abid. "The Lost Glory of Urdu Medium Schools: A Socio-Academic Survey on White Collar Parents' Perceptions about English Medium Schools' Superiority." Global Social Sciences Review VI, no. I (2021): 57–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.31703/gssr.2021(vi-i).07.

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This article descriptively unfolds the socio-academic perceptions of white-collar parents about the superiority of English medium over Urdu medium schools. An opinionnaire containing twenty-five opinion items was administered to fifty parents who send their wards to popularly known as English medium schools. The results of the study show that the majority of parents are fearful about the socio- academic or professional future of the children if sent to Urdu medium schools, which are either in the public sector or known as Galli/mohallah schools having eye-catching names. The study unfolds that
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MOHD, TAHIR. "FOUNDATION, DERIVATION, AND EVOLUTION OF URDU LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE UP TO 1857." Kala : The Journal of Indian Art History Congress 27, no. 1 (2021): 7. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6567316.

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The core objective of this paper is to review the origin and evolution of Urdu as a language of influence. The debate of the origin of the Urdu language is very engaging and diverse. Various theories and arguments have been developed by different scholars and linguists throughout the study of the origin and history of the Urdu language and literature. Its origin from different dialects such as “Khari Boli” and “Baraj Bhasha” is also debatable. Apart from this unending discussion about its origin, the study of its advancement is also crucial. Historically, Urdu is associ
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Badar, Rukhsana, and Sadaf Naqvi. "Urdu-12 Persian Elements in Iftikhar Arif’s Religious Poetry: An Analysis." Al-Aijaz Research Journal of Islamic Studies & Humanities 5, no. 2 (2021): 157–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.53575/urdu12.v5.02(21).157-164.

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"Iftikhar Arif has beautifully presented the problems of the modern age in Nazm and Ghazal. He has coined nice Persian structures to depict contemporary sensibility, consciousness and internal emotions. These structures have the name of their creator stamped on them. He has extensively used Persian words and structures in his Nazms and Ghazlas. Many beautiful Persian structures are found in the verses of his Nazms, Ghazals and Couplets on the topics of Dua and Hamd. Iftikhar Arif’s attachment with Urdu Classic poetry and Persian language is also evident from the names of his books on poetry. E
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Dr. Muhammad Riaz Ahmad (Riaz), Dr. Farah Abid та Dr. Nadia Anjum. "احمد بشیر کی مکتوب نگاری". Taṣdīq 5, № 2 (2024): 125–35. https://doi.org/10.56276/zme02w16.

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Ahmad Bashir was a renowned journalist and a literary icon of Urdu. He wrote essays/articles and columns equally in English and Urdu. Among several of his journalistic and literary facets, sketch-writing, novel-writing, and editorial writing are worth mentioning. He got an education in filmmaking from America and started filmmaking and direction in Pakistan. He produced a few documentaries and made the first and last to date belly film of Pakistan "Chirree Kahaani" which achieved an award at the Belly Film Festival of Iran. He chose journalism to make his livelihood and learned journalism from
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Names, Urdu"

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Lim, Eugene. "The clash between trade mark law and freedom of speech in cyberspace : does ICANN's URDP strike the right balance?" 2004. http://link.library.utoronto.ca/eir/EIRdetail.cfm?Resources__ID=95111&T=F.

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Books on the topic "Names, Urdu"

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Saʻīd, Hātif. Āp kā nām-i girāmī: Maz̤ī ḥāl ke āʾinah men̲ : panc hazār nāmon̲ kī tārīkhī, ʻadadī aur ḥurūf-i tahajjī ke mut̤ābiq tartīb. Dastiyār Pablīkeshanz, 1996.

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Saʻīd, Hātif. Āp kā nām-i girāmī: Māz̤ī aur ḥāl ke āʼīnah men̲. 2-ге вид. Faz̤lī Sanz, 2002.

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Saʻīd, Hātif. Āp kā nām-i girāmī: Māz̤ī aur ḥāl ke āʼīnah men̲ : pānc hazār nāmon̲ kī tārīk̲h̲ī, ʻadadī aur ḥurūf-i tahajjī ke mut̤ābiq tartīb. Dastiyār Pablīkeshanz, 1996.

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Karīm, Shambe. Shagāmʼu ragām vashīn̲ nām: Balocī nāmānī kitāb daptar. Balocī Ikaiḍamī, 2018.

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Ḥusainī, Sayyid Muḥammad ʻAlī, 1934-, ред. Sharḥ-i Javāmiʻulkalim: Majmūʻah-i malfūẓāt-i Ḥaz̤rat Sayyid Muḥammad Bandah Navāz Gesūdarāz. al-Faiṣal, 2006.

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Urdu Names for Boys. Independently Published, 2020.

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Urdu Names for Girls. Independently Published, 2020.

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Amrahs, Atina. Urdu Names for Boys and Girls. Independently Published, 2021.

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Urdu Names for Boys and Girls. Independently Published, 2020.

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Muslim baby names: (our 2,000 meaningful and beautiful names for boys and girls) : English-Urdu with Roman. Star Publications, 2008.

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Book chapters on the topic "Names, Urdu"

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Ullah, Fida, Ihsan Ullah, and Olga Kolesnikova. "Urdu Named Entity Recognition with Attention Bi-LSTM-CRF Model." In Advances in Computational Intelligence. Springer Nature Switzerland, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-19496-2_1.

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Ullah, Fida, Muhammad Zeeshan, Ihsan Ullah, Md Nur Alam, and Ahmed Abdulhakim Al-Absi. "Towards Urdu Name Entity Recognition Using Bi-LSTM-CRF with Self-attention." In Lecture Notes in Networks and Systems. Springer Nature Singapore, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-16-9480-6_38.

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Dhore, M. L., and P. H. Rathod. "Hindi and Urdu to English Named Entity Statistical Machine Transliteration Using Source Language Word Origin Context." In Applied Machine Learning for Smart Data Analysis. CRC Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1201/9780429440953-1.

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"Index of Names." In Urdu and Indo-Persian Thought, Poetics, and Belles Lettres. BRILL, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/9789004341579_015.

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"Unit 1. Names." In A New Course in Urdu and Spoken Hindi for Learners in Britain. Routledge, 1997. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203990117-7.

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"Unit 11. People’s names and ages." In A New Course in Urdu and Spoken Hindi for Learners in Britain. Routledge, 1997. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203990117-17.

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Peters, Pam. "Cultural Keywords in Indian English." In Exploring the Ecology of World Englishes in the Twenty-first Century. Edinburgh University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474462853.003.0005.

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Pam Peters’s paper on Indian English keywords presents a diachronic approach to identifying cultural keywords, in a combination of historical lexicography and 21st century data from the GloWbE corpus. She focuses on Arabic and Persian words with long histories of use from the Mughal regime (approximately 1600–1800), which managed both India and Pakistan through a Hindi-Urdu contact language (Hindustani), and continued to be used under the British Raj until the partition of India in 1947. A sample of the long-lived Persian and Arabic words show ongoing language–culture connections in references
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Razzack, Azra, and M. Atyab Siddiqui. "Celebrating a Legacy." In The School at Ajmeri Gate. Oxford University PressDelhi, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9788194831624.003.0006.

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Abstract Chapter V titled Celebrating a Legacy presents what can be considered to be the legacy of this school. Over the years the school has contributed in many ways but the three areas which stand out and are discussed in this chapter are—outstandingly the game of football, personalities associated with the institution, and the Urdu language. Interesting aspects of the affinity of the institution with the game of football and its magical heroes which have made a name at the highest level has been highlighted. Some of the well-known teachers, students, and Urdu poets affiliated with the schoo
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Zaidi, Nishat. "Introduction." In Karbala. Oxford University PressDelhi, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190132637.003.0001.

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Abstract This chapter focuses on Dhanpat Rai Srivastava better known by his pen name, Premchand, who had the extraordinary privilege of being located in the interstitial space between the two dominant strands of North Indian culture, Hindi and Urdu. It discusses how Premchand is credited with the unique distinction of launching both Hindi and Urdu literature into their modernist phase, and how his life and works reveal the complexities of nation-making processes. It also analyzes Premchand’s writings that embody literary aesthetics attuned to his environment, the sociopolitical upheavals of hi
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Blecher, Joel. "Lost in Translation." In Said the Prophet of God. University of California Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/california/9780520295933.003.0011.

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This chapter examines two case studies in the translation of hadith commentary in South Asia. In the first section, I analyze the making of an English translation of Fad al-bari (“Bounty of the Creator”) by Shabbir Ahmad ‘Uthmani (d. 1949), a Deobandi hadith commentator, from the master’s lips in Arabic and Urdu to a book printed in English. This section grapples with ‘Uthmani’s fraught relationship with Western audiences and Western influence in India, which he appeared simultaneously to embrace and resist. In the second section, I examine the work of a contemporary Urdu commentator on prophe
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Conference papers on the topic "Names, Urdu"

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Hussain, Sarmad, and Nadir Durrani. "Urdu Domain Names." In 2006 IEEE International Multitopic Conference. IEEE, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/inmic.2006.358181.

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Qasim, Muhammad, Sohaib Nawaz, Sarmad Hussain, and Tania Habib. "Urdu speech recognition system for district names of Pakistan: Development, challenges and solutions." In 2016 Conference of The Oriental Chapter of International Committee for Coordination and Standardization of Speech Databases and Assessment Techniques (O-COCOSDA). IEEE, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icsda.2016.7918979.

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Malik, Abbas, Laurent Besacier, Christian Boitet, and Pushpak Bhattacharyya. "A hybrid model for Urdu Hindi transliteration." In the 2009 Named Entities Workshop: Shared Task. Association for Computational Linguistics, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.3115/1699705.1699746.

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Riaz, Fatima, Muhammad Waqas Anwar, and Humaira Muqades. "Maximum Entropy based Urdu Named Entity Recognition." In 2020 International Conference on Engineering and Emerging Technologies (ICEET). IEEE, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/iceet48479.2020.9048203.

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Ioaneș, Gabriela‑Sînziana. "Nicknames from three villages situated on the Mara river." In International Conference on Onomastics “Name and Naming”. Editura Mega, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.30816/iconn5/2019/14.

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This paper aims to identify and classify the nicknames from three villages (Sat-Şugatag, Giuleşti, Berbeşti), which are situated along the Mara river. The corpus consists of approximately two hundred nicknames which were registered during field research in the aforementioned settlements. The study will analyse the endurance of the nicknames across generations, as well as the reason behind their appearance. It must be noted that a considerable number of nicknames pertain to Roma ethnics, which make up an extended community in Sat-Şugatag, or to the Jewish people, very numerous in Berbesti, wher
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Reports on the topic "Names, Urdu"

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Huizenga, Cornie, and Stefan Bakker. NAMAs in the Transport Sector: Case Studies from Brazil, Indonesia, Mexico and the People's Republic of China. Inter-American Development Bank, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.18235/0008653.

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This report is adapted from the forthcoming Climate Instruments for the Transport Sector (CITS) report written by Cornie Huizenga, convener of the Partnership for Sustainable Low Carbon Transport (SLoCaT), and Stefan Bakker, from the Energy Research Center of the Netherlands. Under the CITS project, studies were carried out in two Asian and two Latin American cities to explore how NAMAs, a new financial mechanism being developed under the UNFCCC, may support emissions reductions from urban transport policies and programs. The authors received valuable input from: Dario Hidalgo, from EMBARQ/Wor
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