Dialogue

Lesson Notes

Unlock In-Depth Explanations & Exclusive Takeaways with Printable Lesson Notes

Unlock Lesson Notes and Transcripts for every single lesson. Sign Up for a Free Lifetime Account and Get 7 Days of Premium Access.

Or sign up using Facebook
Already a Member?

Lesson Transcript

Hi everyone! I’m Alisha.
Welcome to Conversational Phrases!
We’ve found that the best way to learn a language is to speak it from day one! And the best way to start speaking is to learn phrases that you’ll use in real conversations.
In this lesson, you’ll learn conversational phrases to answer the question, "What's your favorite number?" After watching this video, you’ll be able to say many numbers and ask someone their favorite number.
Now, let’s take a look at some conversational phrases!
Listen to the dialogue.
آپ کا پسندیدہ نمبر کون سا ہے؟
(Aap ka pasandidah number kaun sa hai? )
یہ سات ہے.
(Yeh saat hai.)
Once more with the English translation.
آپ کا پسندیدہ نمبر کون سا ہے؟
(Aap ka pasandidah number kaun sa hai? )
“What's your favorite number?”
یہ سات ہے.
(Yeh saat hai.)
“It's seven.”
First of all you'll need to learn how to say “What's your favorite number?”
That's:
آپ کا پسندیدہ نمبر کون سا ہے؟
(Aap ka pasandidah number kaun sa hai? )
Listen to it again:
آپ کا پسندیدہ نمبر کون سا ہے؟, آپ کا پسندیدہ نمبر کون سا ہے؟
(Aap ka pasandidah number kaun sa hai? , Aap ka pasandidah number kaun sa hai? )
This Urdu sentence literally means “Your favorite number what is?”
But it means “What's your favorite number?”.
Now, how do you answer this question?
The pattern is:
یہ [number] ہے.
(Yeh [number] hai.)
This Urdu sentence literally means “This [number] is.”
But it means “It's [number].”
For example:
“It's seven.”
یہ سات ہے., یہ سات ہے.
(Yeh saat hai., Yeh saat hai.)

Comments

Hide