there is always been a debate that either Punjabi is mother of Urdu or not , in vocabulary Punjabi is very vast and comprehensive and on other hand Urdu is very adaptive and this is it's beauty in future we may see a Urdu with more of Punjabi words in it and it will be interesting ,, and stylish too,
Urdu is mainly a mixture of Punjabi (Muslim version) and Dari (Eastern Farsi.)
The most beautiful version of Urdu is that which is closest to its Dari, like that in poetry.
Eventually, poets like at the level of Allama Iqbal left Urdu completely for Dari.
As for Punjabi, the beauty is in comedy, pure simplicity, and making everyday magical which Punjabi people are gifted in.
I don’t think there are any funnier people in the whole world than Punjabi people speaking their mother tongue, and sometimes blunt truth strikes sharpest.
Same can be said of Seraiki and Hindko, which are dialects of Punjabi.
If you have exposure to both Punjabi and Urdu, you will notice that both meld very organically with each other.
Punjabi is very fluid and to the point with many dialects, while Urdu is more rigid and verbose.
You should move to Indian Punjab they speak pure Punjabi language.
Their Punjabi is different. I wouldn’t say it is pure.
There is plenty of Teht (Pure) Punjabi speakers in Pakistan too.
Punjabi is a great language.. and a complete language.. Urdu can't compete with Punjabi..
and I am a Urdu speaker.. who wants to learn Punjabi..
Urdu is still evolving.. and will continue to evolve for the next 500 years (if day of judgement doesn't approach us by then).
I have noticed Pukhto words entering Pakistani Urdu recently, which is a welcome addition to the language.
PTI victory in the center has resulting in Pukhtoonization of many aspects of Pakistani culture, with the best part being the intense loyalty and patriotism which Pukhtoons spread throughout Pakistan.
N league has had a very demoralizing effect on Punjab and this era has bred a lot of open traitors and hypocrites among us.
It is always good for us Pakistanis to celebrate our native tongues. We need to unite politically, linguistically, and culturally on deeper levels.