These particular posters are actually not in Urdu but in ‘Sindhi’. If however, you can read Urdu then you can pretty much read most of the Sindhi characters too.
use of Urdu banners, signboards and posters in Pakistan is widespread. It has truly been the lingua-franca for Pak. When people of different regions and provinces in Pakistan cannot communicate with eachother, they use Urdu or its variants as written and spoken communication.
While All Things Pakistan has remained alive and online, it has been dormant since June 11, 2011 - when, on the blog's 5th anniversary, we decided that it was time to move on. We have been heartened by your messages and the fact that a steady traffic has continued to enjoy the archived content on ATP.
While the blog itself will remain dormant, we are now beginning to add occasional (but infrequent) new material by the original authors of the blog, mostly to archive what they may now publish elsewhere. We will also be updating older posts to make sure that new readers who stumble onto this site still find it useful.
We hope you will continue to find ATP a useful venue to reflect upon and express your Pakistaniat. - Editors
for water treatment filter plant
These particular posters are actually not in Urdu but in ‘Sindhi’. If however, you can read Urdu then you can pretty much read most of the Sindhi characters too.
use of Urdu banners, signboards and posters in Pakistan is widespread. It has truly been the lingua-franca for Pak. When people of different regions and provinces in Pakistan cannot communicate with eachother, they use Urdu or its variants as written and spoken communication.