Social Sciences, asked by kriti1990, 10 months ago

Which language was known as the camp language and why? ​

Answers

Answered by rajibsubarnas
17

Urdu is a ‘camp language’ or ‘lashkari zaban’ because it originated in the army camps of the Mughals. The reasoning — if it can be called as such at all — behind the so-called theory is that Urdu is a mixture of words taken from different languages such as Arabic, Persian, Turkish and Hindi. The soldiers who spoke these languages were recruited to the Mughal army and to communicate among themselves they used this new language, and thus Urdu was born. People holding this view cite the fact that ‘Urdu’ is a Turkish word and it literally means ‘lashkar’ or ‘army’ or ‘army camp’. Interestingly, there is hardly any language in the world that has not absorbed words from other languages.

Answered by rk4605513
7

Answer:

Urdu language was known as the camp language because this suggest that the language may have originally been spoken English at Re camps during the reason of the later

Mughals was widely used to write poems and biographies

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