Aurat are culturally distinct set of women of certain specific Asian descent, with varied linguistic backgrounds of Azerbaijani & Iranian Azeri, Sorani Kurdish, Punjabi Sindhi and Urdu, sharing Hindi and Bengali to an extent
Cultural life and distinctiveness
In South Asia word Aurat is more often used to mean woman or wife in Urdu and Hindi languages. With Islamic conceptual leanings believing in entire physical being and existence of a woman to be "Aurat" needs to be covered and restricted from stranger male gaze, the concept developed requisitioning "Aurats" to follow elaborate customary protocols which included "Aurat" had to be hidden with utmost body covering from public and public spaces as much as possible; and many women believing the narrative that it is divine injunction to be followed and hence internalizing religious and customary expectations adopted clothing styles like Chunri, Pallu, Ghunghat stoles that could be adjustable and helpful in hiding their hair, breasts and even eyes if needed; the kurta and the gharara, shalwar kameez or Saris; Nikab or Burqas for more conservative Muslim women, besides curtains called Purdah which not only to segregate and being invisible from men at home but historically purdah custom could accompany in public spaces if needed for example a woman would walk behind Mard so chance of getting stranger male gaze will be lesser or in transport or recreation facilities or courts a physical Purdah would be maintained to segregate them from stranger males; but given the fact that female voice also being "Aurat" for extreme conservative usually a Purdahnashin "Aurat" need not go or interact in public spaces as much as possible, even their name need not be mentioned but be referred as daughter, sister, wife, mother of so and so. The honor of being izzatdar would be reserved for "Aurats" who followed strict Purdah seclusion system along with strict modesty etiquette and also moral codes of chastity demanding strict loyalty to one's own husband. In this social construct by default, an Aurat has to be Pak Aurat and not being so is demeaned as 'Napak. Another side of the same coin would be those "Aurats" who would not come upon expectations of all the strict social distancing with 'stranger men' of Purdah system, would likely be demeaned and many times punished in various ways considering them to be too independent or shameless.
Metaphores
In Traditional Hindu culture Aurat is called as Ghar ki Lakshmi
Feminist view
Mona Hassan at The Nation has objected to the use of the word due to its etymology, saying south Asian men equate women to honor and shame connecting ultimate reference to woman's breasts and vagina and attempt to control the same as part of their honor other wise they feel shamed, Islamic interpretations and practices widely differ in how much part of Aurat body constitute to be intimate, liberal interpretations limiting to best possible to conservative interpretations can even include woman's voice and social existence, this process of thinking leads to culture of women seclusion from public life and subjugation and violation of their human rights. According to Anjali Bagwe, in south Asia women are distinguished as "Aurat Jat" in an internalized patriarchal sense which presumes women can't be equal to men and tend to be inferior. Those women who attempt any course other than misogynist patriarchal expectations are labeled stereotyped as 'Napak Aurat' and discriminated against. Hindi language author Rajendra Yadav criticizes limitations of Indian social construct wherein, on one hand, Indian society remembers and respects woman's upper body as a mother - 'Naari' - even to a level of a goddess, but when thinks of lower part sexualizes as Aurat and attempts to control that sexuality.