Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Bhanwar Singh Samaur (born 15 August 1943) is an Indian writer, poet, historian, and social worker from Rajasthan. [1] Samaur is the recipient of the Sahitya Akademi Award 2020 (in Rajasthani language) for his work Sanskriti ri Sanatana Deeth. [2]
A. Aatre; Abhisheki; Abrol; Achari (surname) Achrekar; Adajania; Adapa (surname) Adarsh; Adhikari; Adiga; Adithan; Advani; Adyanthaya; Agarkar; Agashe; Agrahari Sikh ...
Vidushi Shashikala Dani (Kannada: ವಿದೂಷಿ ಶಶಿಕಲಾ ದಾನಿ, Hindi: विदूषी शशिकला दानी) is an Indian Hindustani classical Jal Tarang artist. She is one among the few musicians and presently the only All India Radio-graded female exponent of the Jal Tarang.
Chuhra, also known as Bhanghi and Balmiki, [1] [2] is a Dalit caste in India and Pakistan. [3] [4] [5] Populated regions include the Punjab region of India and Pakistan, as well as Uttar Pradesh in India, among other parts of the Indian subcontinent such as southern India.
Bangi may refer to: Bangi (surname), an Indian surname; Bangi, Afghanistan; Bangi, Iran (disambiguation) Bangi, Nepal; Bangi, Malaysia. Bangi Komuter station, Malaysia; Bandar Baru Bangi, Malaysia; Bangi (federal constituency), a federal constituency in Selangor, Malaysia; Bangi Station on the Seoul Subway in Seoul, South Korea; Bangui, Central ...
Kautilya mentioned four Upayas - Sama, Dana or Dama, Danda and Bheda as ways to solve state politics to avoid conflicts and war situations (Arthashastra 2.10.47). [5] This phrase is also commonly used when you need to find a solution to a problem anyhow. Sāma, the first step, means conciliation or alliances.
Poems written before 1905, the year Iqbal left British India for England. These include nursery, pastoral, and patriotic verses. "Tarana-e-Hindi" ("The Song of India") has become an anthem and is sung or played in India at national events. "Hindustani Bachon Ka Qaumi Geet" (National Anthem for Indian Children) is another well-known song.
[10] Tessitori explains the archaic vocabulary of Dingal poets as follows: "The bards have been more conservative in the matter of lexicon than in the matter of grammar , and most of the poetical and archaic words which were used by them five hundred years ago, can still be used by the bards of the present day, though their meaning may be no ...