Self Introduction
📝 Some names may sound slightly different. Focus on sentence rhythm.
💡 Tip: Note your paragraph number or press Ctrl + D to bookmark — next day continue from where you left off!
Read • Listen • Speak • Write — Practice all 4 skills with one paragraph
📝 Some names may sound slightly different. Focus on sentence rhythm.
💡 Tip: Note your paragraph number or press Ctrl + D to bookmark — next day continue from where you left off!
Congratulations! You have finished all Basic level paragraphs.
🏅 Basic English — Done!Knowing how to introduce yourself in English is one of the most useful skills you can learn. Whether you are a student, a job seeker, or someone who simply wants to speak English with confidence, a good self introduction is your first step. On this page, you will find a simple self introduction example in English with full Urdu and Hindi translation — sentence by sentence.
The best introduction lines about yourself are short, clear, and honest. They tell the listener three things: your name, your background, and your goal. For example, saying "My name is Ali. I am a university student. I want to speak English confidently." is a perfect beginner-level self introduction. It is easy to remember, easy to say, and sounds natural in English.
In the paragraph above, you will notice that every sentence follows this rule. The sentences are short (usually 6 to 12 words). The grammar is simple present tense. And the vocabulary is everyday English that you already know from Urdu or Hindi.
Most English learning websites show self introduction examples for American or British people. But if you live in Pakistan or India and speak Urdu or Hindi at home, those examples feel very far from your real life. That is why this paragraph uses names, cities, and situations that are familiar to you — like studying at a university in Lahore, or wanting to work in a good company one day.
This makes it much easier to remember the English sentences, because the meaning connects to your real life. When you practice this introduce yourself paragraph, you are not just repeating words — you are telling your own story in English.
Here are some important English words from this self introduction paragraph, with their Urdu meanings so you can learn them easily:
university (یونیورسٹی) — a place where you study after college | field (شعبہ) — your area of study or work | practice (مشق) — doing something again and again to get better | confidently (اعتماد کے ساتھ) — without fear or hesitation | important (اہم / ضروری) — very necessary | introduce (تعارف کرانا) — to tell someone who you are | step (قدم) — one part of a journey or process.
When you know these words, you can use them in many different English sentences — not just in a self introduction.
All the sentences in this paragraph use simple present tense. This is the most important grammar tense for beginners. It is used to talk about facts, habits, and things that are true right now. For example: "I live in Lahore" (fact), "I try to speak English every day" (habit), "English is very important" (general truth).
Urdu and Hindi speakers find simple present tense easy because it is similar to how you speak in your own language. Compare: "میں ہر روز انگریزی بولنے کی کوشش کرتا ہوں" and "I try to speak English every day" — the sentence structure is very close. This is why self introduction is the best starting point for learning English grammar.
This single paragraph helps you practice all four English skills at the same time. Here is how to get the most out of it:
Reading: Read the English paragraph slowly. Focus on each sentence. Try to understand the meaning without looking at the Urdu translation first.
Listening: Press the audio button and listen carefully. Notice how each word is pronounced. Repeat after the audio, sentence by sentence.
Speaking: After listening two or three times, close your eyes and try to say the paragraph yourself. Do not worry about mistakes — every mistake is a step forward.
Writing: Copy the paragraph into your notebook by hand. This trains your brain to remember the sentence patterns. Try to write it from memory the next day.
Once you are comfortable with the basic self introduction above, you can start making it more professional. A professional self introduction includes your full name, your job or study field, your experience or goal, and one personal detail. For example, a student introducing himself at a job interview might say: "My name is Ali. I am a final year computer science student. I am looking for an internship where I can use my English and technical skills."
This website will help you reach that level step by step. Start with this basic paragraph, then move to intermediate and advanced levels as your confidence grows.
This platform is built especially for people in Pakistan and India who want to learn English but find it difficult because all the resources are in English only. Here, every paragraph comes with a full Urdu translation and Hindi translation so you always understand what you are reading. The audio uses your browser — no app download needed, completely free.
Whether you are a school student preparing for exams, a university student improving your spoken English, or a working adult who needs English for your job — this is the right place to start. One paragraph a day, practiced properly, will change your English in 30 days.