My Room
📝 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!Writing an essay on my room gives you a chance to describe the most personal space in your home. Your room is not just furniture and walls - it is where you study, where you sleep, where you think, and sometimes where you say things you cannot say anywhere else. In this paragraph, Ali describes the room he shares with his brother Usman - what is on each side, what they argue about, and what happens after the light goes off at night. All in simple English with full Urdu and Hindi translation.
The best my room essay starts with the size and location of the room, then describes what is in it, and ends with what the room means to you personally. Ali does this above: he tells us the room faces the street, there are two beds, a desk with a shelf, and a family photograph. Then he shows Usman messy side with the cricket bat and the bag on the floor. These specific details make the room feel real. Anyone who has shared a room with a sibling will immediately recognise this description.
The most powerful part of this my bedroom essay is the ending: in the dark, it is easier to say things. Ali and Usman talk after the light goes off - about their day, their plans, their worries. And Ali has told Usman things in that room that he has never told anyone else. This is what makes a shared room more than just a place to sleep. It becomes a space of trust. That small room has heard more of my real thoughts than any other place in the world. This ending is what separates a memorable essay from a simple description.
Here is a 10-line my room essay you can adapt for your own room:
1. My room is a blank-sized room with one window that faces blank. 2. I share my room with blank, and we each have our own side. 3. My side is near the window and has a desk where I study at night. 4. Above my desk, I have a shelf with my books and a few special things. 5. The other side of the room belongs to blank, and it is a little messier than mine. 6. We sometimes argue about who should clean the room and never agree. 7. But at night, when the light goes off, we talk. 8. We talk about our day, our plans, and the things that are on our minds. 9. In the dark, it is easier to say things that are hard to say in the light. 10. That small room has heard more of my real thoughts than anywhere else in the world.
Here are the key English words from this paragraph with Urdu meanings:
medium-sized (درمیانے سائز کا) - not too big and not too small | faces (سامنے ہونا) - is directed towards something | shelf (شیلف) - a flat board fixed to a wall for storing things | messier (زیادہ بے ترتیب) - more untidy and disorganised | leans (ٹیکا ہوا) - rests against something at an angle | worries (فکریں) - anxious thoughts about problems | darkness (اندھیرا) - the absence of light | real thoughts (اصل خیالات) - true and deep feelings that you do not always share.
In this paragraph, Ali uses comparatives to compare his side of the room with Usman side: Usman side is a little messier than mine. In English, we form comparatives by adding er to short adjectives: clean becomes cleaner, small becomes smaller, messy becomes messier. For longer adjectives, we use more: more organised, more comfortable, more beautiful. And we always follow the comparative with than: messier than mine, bigger than his, quieter than before. Practice this by comparing two things in your own room or home: my side is blank than his side. My room is blank than my sister room. This pattern will improve both your writing and speaking immediately.