Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Meanwhile, Anya decides to keep her rape story a secret. Daneen tries to strengthen her bond with her husband, Saif. Saif is going on a business trip to Murree and decides to take Daneen there too on a 'honeymoon' and Daneen is overjoyed. She sees this trip as an opportunity to make her marriage work but fails because Saif has no interest in ...
The story revolves around Hadi and Mahnoor, who are first cousins and married (Nikkah). Hadi is a simple man, with a limited earning but earnestly in love with Mahnoor. He lives in a rented room in a house owned by Ikhtiar Ali. Ikhtiar and his college-going daughter Uzma both hold Hadi in high regard due to his impeccable character and calm ...
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.
Humsafar (Urdu: ہم سفر, lit. 'Companion or Life Partner') [1] is a 2011 Pakistani television series based on the novel of the same name by Farhat Ishtiaq (who also wrote the screenplay) and directed by Sarmad Sultan Khoosat.
However, fate intervenes when Nausheen's father catches them together, leading to an impromptu marriage. As the family grows, Ahsan's mother, Mumtaz, pressures him to seek better opportunities abroad. Reluctantly, Ahsan leaves behind his wife, Zubeida, and daughter, Aimen, to work overseas, settling in Muscat.
In semi-arranged marriages, the first or second visit may include a formal proposal, since both the man and woman have already agreed to marriage prior - the proposal is more or less a formality. In love marriages, the man directly proposes to the woman. Once the wedding proposal is accepted, beverages and refreshments are served. Depending on ...
Much of the story unfolds in childhood flashback, though it begins with young adult Vincent Oliver (Taimoor “Mooroo” Salahuddin) reading letters sent to him from afar by his first love and ...
Mirat-ul-Uroos (Urdu: مراۃ العروس, The bride's mirror) is an Urdu language novel written by Indian author Nazir Ahmad Dehlvi, also popularly known as Deputy Nazir Ahmad, (1830–1912) and published in 1869. [1]