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Koha Jonë was the largest paper in Albania with a circulation of 34,000 copies in 1992. [5] In 1995 the daily was the second most read newspaper in the country with a circulation of 30,000 copies. [6] The circulation of the paper was 7,833 copies in 2002. [7]
YWAM Koha is a New Zealand-registered Medical Aid Ship, built in 1968 as the buoy tender Konrad Meisel for the German Government and later owned in South Africa as Isibane. As the Claymore II she provided the essential transport links to the remote Pacific territory of Pitcairn Island from New Zealand and French Polynesia , part-funded by the ...
Kohavision (shortened to KTV, previously also Koha Vision) is a Kosovan free-to-air television channel launched on September 21, 2000. [2] It was founded by politician and journalist Veton Surroi as part of KOHA Group, a media house currently led by Flaka Surroi .
In 2016, Library was fully automated with Koha FOSS Library Management Library System with a consultancy of Open University of Sri Lanka. In 2017, The Digital Libraries Project was launched at Colombo Public library by the Information Communication Technology Agency of Sri Lanka (ICTA) in collaboration with National Library and Documentation Services Board. [4]
Koha may refer to: Koha (custom), a New Zealand Māori custom of gift giving; Koha (software), an open-source integrated library system; Koha, Iran, a village; Kalju Koha, Estonian politician; Koharu Kusumi, a Japanese pop singer; KOHA-LD, a low-power television station (channel 27) licensed to serve Omaha, Nebraska, United States
The Sacred Books of the East is a monumental 50-volume set of English translations of Asian religious texts, edited by Max Müller and published by the Oxford University Press between 1879 and 1910. It incorporates the essential sacred texts of Hinduism , Buddhism , Taoism , Confucianism , Zoroastrianism , Jainism , and Islam .
The definition of taonga has potential constitutional significance in New Zealand because of the use of the word in the second article of the Treaty of Waitangi (Māori: te Tiriti o Waitangi). The English-language version of the treaty guaranteed the Māori signatories "full exclusive and undisturbed possession of their Lands and Estates ...
The catchword "דילמא" is found at the bottom of the Talmud text (center), and the commentaries of Rashi (center left) and the Tosafot (center right) as the word will begin each text on the next page, 2b. A catchword is a word placed at the foot of a handwritten or printed page that is meant to be bound along with other pages in a book. The ...