Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Phirphire (Nepali: फिरफिरे) is a 2016 novel by Nepalese writer Buddhi Sagar. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] It is published by FinePrint Publication. [ 3 ] It was launched on 23 January 2016 in Kathmandu, Nepal.
Department of Archaeology; Department of Co-Operatives; Department of Cottage and Small Industries; Department of Custom; Department of Immigration; Department of Industry; Department of Information and Broadcasting; Department of Information Technology; Inland Revenue Department; Department of Land Management and Archive; Department of Mines ...
At the time of 2011 Nepal Census, it had a population of 37,109. After addition of Thaprek, Raipur and Phirphire VDCs on 5 March 2017 population of Shuklagandaki Municipality 45456 as of 2011 census Demographics
The Public Service Commission (Nepali: लोक सेवा आयोग) of Nepal was established on 15 June 1951. It is the main constitutional body involved in selecting meritorious candidates required by Government of Nepal for Civil Service Vacancy. [1] It is regarded as one of the most credible modes of recruitment by Nepalis.
Phirphire is a ShuklaGandaki Municipality in Tanahu District in the Gandaki Zone of central Nepal. At the time of the 1991 Nepal census it had a population of 4130 people living in 762 individual households.
Buddhisagar was born on 2 June 1981 in Kailali district of Nepal. [2] Later his family moved to Katase Bazzar and finally Kalikot district. His debut and most popular novel Karnali Blues is also set in these locations. He was passionate about writing from an early age. From a very early age, his poems were played on radios.
The Nepal Institute of Standards was established in 1976, to develop national standards and to formulate concerning acts and rules. [20] In 1981, the Nepal Institute of Standards was renamed and restructured into the Nepal Bureau of Standards as a full-fledged department of the Ministry of Industry. [20]
The district lies in central Nepal, with Damauli as its district headquarters. It covers an area of 1,546 km 2 (597 sq mi) and has a population (2011) of 323,288. Previously the town of Bandipur was its district headquarter.