My Village
📝 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 village in English is one of the most beautiful topics a student can explore. A village is not just a place - it is a feeling. It is quiet mornings, open fields, old trees, and the people who have been there your whole life. In this paragraph, Ali describes his village near Gujranwala - where his grandparents live and where his father was born - in simple English with full Urdu and Hindi translation.
The best my village essay compares the village to the city, describes what it looks and feels like, and ends with a personal memory or feeling. Ali does all three above. He contrasts Lahore with the village, describes the fields, trees, mosque, morning smells, and bird sounds, and ends with a beautiful image: closing his eyes in the city and thinking of the village to find calm. This structure works for any class level and any village in Pakistan or India.
Notice how Ali uses sensory details - things you can see, hear, and smell - to bring the village to life. The air smells of earth and fresh grass. Birds sing before the sun comes up. Dadi Amma cooking fills the whole house. These details are simple but powerful. They make the reader feel like they are there.
One of the most interesting parts of this essay on village life is the contrast between city and village life. In Lahore: tall buildings, busy roads, noise, rush. In the village: open fields, old trees, quiet, slow. Ali does not say one is better than the other. He lives in the city and studies there. But the village gives him something the city cannot - peace. This balanced view makes the essay more mature and more interesting than a simple list of village features.
Here is a 10-line my village essay you can adapt for your own village:
1. My village is located near blank, about blank hours from the city by road. 2. This is where my grandparents live and where my family has its roots. 3. The village is very different from city life in every way. 4. There are no tall buildings or heavy traffic - only open fields and old trees. 5. In the morning, the air is fresh and birds sing before sunrise. 6. Everything moves slowly and quietly, and that is one of its greatest gifts. 7. I visit the village two or three times a year and always look forward to it. 8. When I arrive, my grandmother is always waiting at the door to welcome us. 9. In the evenings, we sit outside under the open sky and listen to old stories. 10. When city life tires me, I close my eyes and think of the village - and feel calm again.
Here are the key English words from this paragraph with Urdu meanings:
fields (کھیت) - large areas of open land used for farming | mosque (مسجد) - a place of worship for Muslims | earth (مٹی) - the soil or ground | rush (بھاگ دوڑ) - a state of hurry and fast movement |
In this paragraph, Ali uses where three times in a row to describe the village: this is where my grandparents live. This is where my father was born. This is where I spend some of the happiest days of my life. In English, where is used as a relative pronoun to connect a place with what happens or happened there. This is a very natural and beautiful sentence structure. Practice it by describing a place that is important to you: this is where blank. This is where I blank. This is where my family blank. This pattern will make your written and spoken English sound more connected and confident.