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Nalî (Kurdish: نالی ,Nalî), also known as Mallah Xidir Ehmed Şawaysî Mîkayalî (Kurdish: مەلا خدر (خضر) کوڕی ئەحمەدی شاوەیسی ئاڵی بەگی میکایلی) [2] (1800 Shahrizor - 1856 in Constantinople), was born in Khakoo Khol, a village of Sulaymani province.
Nali may refer to: Nalî (1797–1869), Kurdish poet; Náli, a Dwarf of J. R. R. Tolkien's Middle-earth legendarium; Nali, a dwarf of Norse mythology; Nali, an alien race in the video game Unreal; Nali language, an Oceanic language of Papua New Guinea; Mirza Nali (1784–1860), Mughal crown prince; Nali Sauce, Malawian hot sauce made from Bird ...
She married Kanuparthi Hanumantha Rao in 1909. Her husband supported in her activities wholeheartedly, as stated by of Varalakshmamma by Polapragada Rajyalakshmi in her Biography of Kanuparti Varalakshmamma (Sahitya Akademi). Starting at the age of 12, she was involved in the Indian freedom movement and a follower of Mahatma Gandhi. She worked ...
Subbarao's literature is a mixture of Telugu Indian culture and Western ideas.He brought Western romanticism especially English lyric style to Telugu literature.However, he followed classical Sanskrit and Telugu meter in his writings and he didn't abandon Sanskrit Telugu form common language.
Papineni Sivasankar; Potturi Vijayalakshmi; Potana Bammera; P. Lalita Kumari (Volga) Perugu Ramakrishna; Puranam Subrahmanya Sarma; Rajaram Madhurantakam
Reddy's first published work was a poetry collection Navvani Puvvu (The Bashful Flower) in 1953 and later went on to publish several other works like Vennela Vada (The Monnlight Town, 1959), Jalapatham (The Waterfall), Divvela Muvvalu (Candle Bells, 1959), Rutu Chakram (Cycle of Seasons, 1964), Madhyatharagathi Mandahasam (The Smile of the Middle Class, 1968), and Mantalu Manavudu (Flames and ...
Tikkana (or Tikkana Somayaji) (1205–1288) was a 13th century Telugu poet. Born into a Telugu-speaking Niyogi Brahmin family during the golden age of the Kakatiya dynasty, he was the second poet of the "Trinity of Poets (Kavi Trayam)" that translated Mahabharata into Telugu.
N. Gopi (Telugu: ఎన్.గోపి; born 25 June 1948) is an eminent Indian poet, and literary critic in Telugu and Sahitya Akademi Award recipient. [1] He has also been in the University system as a professor and Dean since 1974, until retiring in 2008.