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- books?vid=ISBN9780191533082 accessdate "2014-11-21".
- books?vid=ISBN9780191533082 chapter "Hong Kong".
- books?vid=ISBN9780191533082 date "2007-08-30".
- books?vid=ISBN9780191533082 editors "Andrew Simpson".
- books?vid=ISBN9780191533082 first "Andrew".
- books?vid=ISBN9780191533082 isCitedBy Hindi-Urdu_vocabulary.
- books?vid=ISBN9780191533082 isCitedBy Sino-British_Joint_Declaration.
- books?vid=ISBN9780191533082 isbn "9780191533082".
- books?vid=ISBN9780191533082 last "Simpson".
- books?vid=ISBN9780191533082 location "Oxford; New York".
- books?vid=ISBN9780191533082 page "62".
- books?vid=ISBN9780191533082 pages "168‒185".
- books?vid=ISBN9780191533082 pages "62–63".
- books?vid=ISBN9780191533082 publisher Oxford_University_Press.
- books?vid=ISBN9780191533082 publisher "Oxford University Press".
- books?vid=ISBN9780191533082 quote "Considered from a historical point of view, the Hindustani-Hindi-Urdu complex developed out of a common boradly-spoken lingua franca that came to be used through much of north and central India from the late twelfth and early thirteenth centuries during the dynasties of Muslim rulers that pre-dated the Mughal rule. During this time, Persian was in force as the official language of administration and writing but was supplemented by a mixture of the speech of the Delhi area together with many Persian loanwords as very general means of oral communication among different parts of the Muslim-controlled territories. In the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, this form of speech was patronized by the rulers of various southern kingdoms and resulted in the growth of an early literature in a language known as Dakhini or southern Hindi-Urdu.".
- books?vid=ISBN9780191533082 quote "In their formal spoken and written forms, Hindi and Urdu share a common grammar and much basic vocabulary. When Hindi and Urdu are spoken informally by most of the population, the differences present and clearly discernible in formal language tend to disappear to a very significant extent, and the two varieties become both mutually intelligible and often difficult to tell apart. This frequently used, colloquial form of Hindi and Urdu used in everyday conversation by the majority of speakers has in the past regularly been referred to with the term 'Hindustani'. It is also the form of language standardly used in Bollywood films, which are widely enjoyed by speakers of both Hindi and Urdu.".
- books?vid=ISBN9780191533082 title "Language and National Identity in Asia".
- books?vid=ISBN9780191533082 url "http://books.google.com/books?id=F3XvBbdWCKYC&pg=PA62".
- books?vid=ISBN9780191533082 year "2007".