Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Humaira, secretly in love with Khalil, convinces Shano to give up Khalil to save her father’s health, which improves after Shano’s sacrifice. The tragic backstory of Khalil’s illegitimacy is revealed—his mother, Inayat, was pregnant with another man’s child when she married Abdul Rehman, further complicating the families’ relationship.
Ghazal poets frequently use this story as a simile or reference point to portray their love as similarly obsessive and pure. [40] Urdu ghazal is a form of lyrical poetry that originated in the Urdu language during the Mughal Empire. It consists of rhyming couplets, with each line sharing the same meter. [42]
Sara was born on 31 October, 1954 in Gujranwala, Pakistan in a lower-class family. Her family had migrated to Karachi from Punjab during the partition of India in 1960s. [1] Her father had remarried, so her mother was responsible for her and her siblings’ upbringing.
Prior to adaptation Shehr-e-Zaat was a story of comprises no more than 70 to 88 pages and was published in Ahmad's book Meri Zaat Zara-e-Benishan along with two more stories in first edition. Moreover, it was also published in Umeras another book Main Ne Khwabon Ka Shajar Dekha Hai with five other stories, but as for 2010s editions of Umera's ...
Most of Shakir's ghazalyaat contain five to ten couplets, often - though not always - inter-related. Sometimes, two consecutive couplets may differ greatly in meaning and context [For example, in one of her works, the couplet 'That girl, like her home, perhaps/ Fell victim to the flood' is immediately followed by 'I see light when I think of you/ Perhaps remembrance has become the moon'].
Although he was a loyal and hard-working husband, falling in love was their fate. But to get married was beyond their control, and now the only common thing between both the women is their husband. In season 2 of Dusri Biwi, Hassan marries a woman whom he met on a business trip. Hassan again hides the truth from his first and second wives.
Articles about Urdu poetry. Subcategories. This category has the following 4 subcategories, out of 4 total. P. Poems in Urdu (6 P) Poetry by Mirza Ghalib (1 P)
Hala, a British-Pakistani girl, is left alone in Pakistan at a young age by her father, Nafees, because his new European wife did not want to raise his daughter from a previous marriage. Brought up with a lot of love by her father but then abandoned, Hala is mistreated by her uncle Raees, aunt Shah Jahan, and younger aunt Sofia.