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IDOL
Title: - na kaho


Artist:- Hadiqa kiani and aroah


Rating: *****

Genre:- Love

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IDOL
Title: - yaad sajan de ayi

Artist:- Hadiqa kiani


Rating: *****

Genre:- Love

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IDOL
Title: - mane de

Artist:- Hadiqa kiani


Rating: *****

Genre:- Love ?

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sounds sweet



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IDOL
Title: - roshini

Artist:- Hadiqa kiani


Rating: *****

Genre:- Love

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IDOL
Title: - jogi

Artist:- Hadiqa kiani


Rating: *****

Genre:- Love

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IDOL
Title: - iss bar milo

Artist:- Hadiqa kiani


Rating: *****

Genre:- sad

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IDOL
Title: - ache dost

Artist:- Hadiqa kiani


Rating: *****

Genre:- friendship not love tongue1.gif

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sweet



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IDOL
Title: - dholan

Artist:- Hadiqa kiani


Rating: *****

Genre:- love

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IDOL
Title: - gham hain ya khoshi

Artist:- nusrat fateh ali khan


Rating: *****

Genre:- love

---------

wahhhhhhhhhh

----

afato ke daur main

chain ke ghari hain tu, meri zindagi hain tu

----

meri raat ka charagh

meri nend bhi hain tu, meri zindagi hain tu

---

dosto ke darmian

wajhe dosti hain tu, meri zindagi hain tu

---

meri saari umur main

ek he kami hain tu, meri zindagi hain tu

---

main tu vo nahe raha

haan magar vohi hain tu, meri zindagi hain tu

---

he's adorable!



IPB Image
IDOL
Title: - Mahe Ave

Artist:- Mohd ali sheikhi and naznin

Rating: *****

Genre:- love

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i love mohd. ali sheikhi's voice here............close to kumar sanu's voice



IPB Image
IDOL
Title: - tune diwana banaya

Artist:- abida parveen

Rating: *****

Genre:- crazy love

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wah, la-jawab



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IDOL
Title: - ghar ghar rulaya yaar ne


Artist:- abida parveen

Rating: *****

Genre:- sad love

---------

wah, la-jawab





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IDOL
Title: - Jab Se Tune

Artist:- abida parveen

Rating: *****

Genre:- crazy love

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wah, la-jawab
---

Pataro aaj mere saar pe baraste kyon hon,

Maine tumko bhi kabhi apna Khuda Rakha Hain

---

naam jis ne bhi mohabat ka sazaa rakha hain

---
gham ko sehne main QUDRAT ne mazara rakha hain
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IDOL
Title: - tum mere hon

Artist:- mehdi hassan

Rating: *****

Genre:- love

---------
wow



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IDOL
Title: - haath se haath kia gaya

Artist:- Sonu Nigam and ?????

Rating: *****

Genre:- sad love

---------
sweet

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IDOL
Title: - Ghar aya mera pardesi


Artist:- ?????

Rating: *****

Genre:- love

---------
ok, confusion here........zara sheikh is lollywood's actress, and the song is bollywood's .....either she came to india to perform the video, or lollywood made the video.........but, as much as she's beautiful so is the song



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IDOL
Title: - Tere Pyar Main

Artist:- Kavita Krishna Morti?

Rating: *****

Genre:- love

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IPB Image
IDOL
Title: - Tere Pyar Main

Artist:- Kaavish

Rating: *****

Genre:- sad love

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IPB Image
IDOL
Title: - Tere Pyar Main

Artist:- Kavita Krishna Morti

Rating: *****

Genre:- love

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IPB Image
IDOL
Title: - Anarkali

Artist:- ???

Rating: *****

Genre:- love

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For all those Farsi poems/conversation in this song, I thought to put under Afghanistan's thread ......then i thought, put where it belongs tongue1.gif



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IDOL
Title: - Ankhon Ke Saagar


Artist:- Fuzon

Rating: *****

Genre:- love

---------
My all time fav. Song........this song kills me



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IDOL
Title: - Mahi ve


Artist:- Fakhir

Rating: *****

Genre:- love

---------
Cute ones

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IDOL
Title: - UCHIYAN MAJAJA WALI


Artist:- Jawad A

Rating: *****

Genre:- love

---------
\\

//

\\

//

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IDOL
Title: - Bin tere kya hain jina


Artist:- Jawad A

Rating: *****

Genre:- love

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he sang one of his best for Bollywood



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IDOL
uploadin again tongue1.gif

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IDOL
Title: - Jaanan



Artist:- Rahim Shah


Rating: *****

Genre:- love-- pashtu

---------
lovely

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IDOL
Title: - tu jo nahe



Artist:- Ahmad Jahanzaib

Rating: *****

Genre:- love

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The one and only singer whom i wish to see once



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IDOL
Title: - azadi



Artist:- junoon

Rating: *****

Genre:- patriotic--From the movie Jinah

---------
somehow , i like this song


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suhana_safar
Junoon is an excellent group, i like their songs. I dont hear much about them now adays, can some1 update.
IDOL
Title: - Koi Tujh Sa Kaha


Artist:- Udit N

Rating: *****

Genre:- love

---------
Reema is cute



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IDOL
Title: - Main Yon Milo Tujhi Tera Libas Hon Jawo


Artist:- Saira Nasim

Rating: *****

Genre:- love

---------
lovely lyrics



IPB Image




Aurous
QUOTE(IDOL @ Aug 4 2007, 12:48 AM) *

Title: - Koi Tujh Sa Kaha


Artist:- Udit N

Rating: *****

Genre:- love

---------
Reema is cute



IPB Image

Khobi, thanks for this vid...clap2.gif

Yup Reema sure is good-looking... wub.gif
IDOL
smile.gif
QUOTE(mujahid @ Aug 3 2007, 07:57 PM) *
QUOTE(IDOL @ Aug 4 2007, 12:48 AM) *

Title: - Koi Tujh Sa Kaha


Artist:- Udit N

Rating: *****

Genre:- love

---------
Reema is cute



IPB Image

Khobi, thanks for this vid... clap2.gif

Yup Reema sure is good-looking... wub.gif




ur welcome................

Erum Hashmi
Please upload audio songs of KOI TUJH SA KAHAAN.
IDOL
QUOTE(hashmi @ Sep 30 2007, 11:49 AM) *
Please upload audio songs of KOI TUH SA KAHAAN.






i dun have it...........is there anyone else who can help?.........and is it possible to upload 2005 songs.......i guess, HF has a rule for new songs....let's see what all say

IDOL
Dhondo Ge Agar Mulkon--- Queen Abida





IDOL
mohabat karne wale kam na honge......tere mehfil main lekin hum nahonge--------------Mehdi Hassan





IDOL
pyar bhare do sharmilie nain





IDOL
IDOL
illu,



i already know hindi/urdu tongue1.gif..................and if u wanna learn my language it's Farsi and Pashtu.................Canadian language is english , so nothin to learn here tongue1.gif

iiluu
tongue1.gif

nice....


"Languages of India"
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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"Indian languages" redirects here. For languages of Native Americans, see Indigenous languages of the Americas.
The languages of India primarily belong to two major linguistic families, Indo-European (whose branch Indo-Aryan is spoken by about 70% of the population) and Dravidian (spoken by about 22%). Other languages spoken in India come mainly from the Austro-Asiatic and Tibeto-Burman linguistic families, as well as a few language isolates.[1]


Map of South Asia in native languages.Individual mother tongues in India number several hundred[2] (SIL Ethnologue lists 415). According to Census of India of 2001, 29 languages are spoken by more than a million native speakers, 122 by more than 10,000.

Three millennia of language contact has led to significant mutual influence among the four language families in India and South Asia. Two contact languages have played an important role in the history of India: Persian and English.[3]

Sanskrit and Tamil are the classical languages of India according to the Government.

Contents [hide]
1 History
2 Language families
3 Classical languages of India
4 Official Languages
5 Writing systems
5.1 Romanization
6 Inventories
7 Footnotes and References
8 See also
9 External links



[edit] History
Main article: Linguistic history of India

A bazaar in Andhra Pradesh with signs, from left to right, in Urdu, Hindi, Arabic, and English.
Language families in South AsiaThe northern Indian languages from the Indo-European family evolved from Old Indo-Aryan such as Sanskrit, by way of the Middle Indo-Aryan Prakrit languages and Apabhramsha of the Middle Ages. There is no consensus for a specific time where the modern north Indian languages such as Hindi, Marathi, Punjabi, and Bengali emerged, but CE 1000 is commonly accepted.[4] Each language had different influences, with Hindi/Urdu and closely related languages being strongly influenced by Persian and Arabic. The South Indian (Dravidian) languages had a history independent of Sanskrit. However in later stages all the Dravidian languages had been heavily influenced by Sanskrit. The major Dravidian languages are Telugu, Tamil, Kannada and Malayalam.


[edit] Language families
The languages of India may be grouped by major language families. The largest of these in terms of speakers is the Indo-European family, predominantly represented in its Indo-Aryan branch (accounting for some 700 million speakers), but also including minority languages such as Persian, Portuguese or French, and English as lingua franca. The second largest is the Dravidian family, accounting for some 200 million speakers. Minor linguistic families include the Munda and Tibeto-Burman families (with some 9 and 6 million speakers, respectively). There is also a language isolate, the Nihali language.


[edit] Classical languages of India
Two classical languages, Tamil and Sanskrit, originated in India. Per a formal Declaration of the Indian government, Sanskrit and Tamil are the recognized as Classical Languages of India. In the mid-19th century, Indologists referred to Paninian Sanskrit as "classical Sanskrit," distinguishing it from the older Vedic language.[5][6][7] Robert Caldwell, the first linguist to systematically study the Dravidian languages as a family, used the term "classical" to distinguish the literary forms of Kannada, Tamil, Telugu and Malayalam from the diglossic colloquial forms.[8] In the second half of the 20th century, academics began to suggest that the Old Tamil poems of the Sangam anthologies were also "classical" in the sense that they shared many features with literatures commonly accepted as classical. This point, first made by Kamil Zvelebil in the 1970s,[9] has since been supported by a number of other scholars,[10][11][12] and the terminology "classical Tamil" is commonly used in historical literature to refer to texts from that period.[13] Martha Ann Selby argues that if classicality is defined with reference to age and the value a literature has within the tradition it represents, the Tamil poetry of the Sangam anthologies and the Maharashtri poems of the Sattisai are "classical", in addition to Sanskrit literature.[14]

In 2004, a new category was created by constitutional decree under which languages that met certain requirements could be accorded the status of a 'classical' in India.[15] With the creation of this category, Tamil and, a year later, Sanskrit, have been accorded the status. More languages are being considered to be added to the list.[15] Experts consulted by the government and the Sahitya Academy of India, a literary body, recommended against awarding the tag to any language. Dr. George Hart, a Professor of Tamil at the University of California-Berkeley, supported classifying Tamil as a classical Language. [3] . [16]


[edit] Official Languages
Main article: Official languages of India
Article 346 of the Indian Constitution recognises Hindi in Devanāgarī script as the official language of central government India. The Constitution also allows for the continuation of use of the English language for official purposes. Article 345 provides constitutional recognition to "Official languages" of the union to include any language adopted by a state legislature as the official language of that state. In effect, there are "Official Languages at the state and center level but no one "national language". Until the Twenty-First Amendment of the Constitution in 1967, the country recognised 14 official regional languages. The Eighth Schedule and the Seventy-First Amendment provided for the inclusion of Sindhi, Konkani, Manipuri and Nepali, thereby increasing the number of official regional languages of India to 18 [17]. Individual states, whose borders are mostly drawn on socio-linguistic lines, are free to decide their own language for internal administration and education. In 2004, the government elevated Tamil.[18][19][20] to the newly created official status of "Classical Language", followed by Sanskrit[21] in 2005. The Constitution of India recognises 22 languages, spoken in different parts the country, namely Assamese, Bengali, Bodo, Dogri, Gujarati, Hindi, Kannada, Kashmiri, Konkani, Maithili, Malayalam, Meitei, Marathi, Nepali, Oriya, Punjabi, Sanskrit, Santhali, Sindhi, Tamil, Telugu and Urdu. Hindi is a official language of the states of Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Jharkhand, Uttaranchal, Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan, Chattisgarh, Himachal Pradesh, Haryana and the National Capital Territory of Delhi. Tamil is a official language of Tamil_Nadu, Puducherry and Andamon nicobar islands. English is the co-official language of the Indian Union, and each of the several states mentioned above may also have another co-official language.

> I know only one language and i love to learn it more and more.......... ..
more: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Languages_of_India
IDOL
IDOL
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