Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
It is published simultaneously from Karachi, Lahore, Faisalabad, Gujranwala, Multan, Quetta and Sargodha. One 'Urdu Newspapers Online' website calls this newspaper a 'Popular Urdu daily newspaper from Pakistan'. [1] [2] [7] It is owned by Mian Amer Mahmood who is also the owner of Dunya News and Lahore News HD TV channels. [8]
Daily Asas: Rawalpindi, Lahore, Karachi, Faisalabad, Muzaffarabad: 1995 63 Daily Awam: Islamabad, Quetta, Hub. 1989 Defunct in 2018 64 Daily Awami Awaz: Sindhi Karachi – 65 Daily Din [4] Urdu Karachi, Lahore, Faisalabad, Islamabad, Rawalpindi: 66 Daily Imroze: Lahore, Karachi pre 1947 67 Daily Inqilab: Lahore 1927 Defunct in 1949 68 Daily ...
Dunya is an Arabic word referring to the temporal world. ... (newspaper), a Turkish newspaper; Dunya News, ... Daily Dunya, a newspaper in Pakistan; People
Daily Jang - original flagship newspaper of the Group in the Urdu language. Group Editor: Mehmood Sham in Karachi. Newspaper editions are issued in Karachi, Lahore, Rawalpindi, Peshawar, Multan and London, with the largest daily circulation in Pakistan among Urdu newspapers [5] The News International - daily newspaper in English started in 1991
Dunya News HD (Urdu: دنیا نیوز) is a 24 hours Urdu language news and current affairs television channel from Pakistan. It is governed and operated by the National Communication Services (NCS) Pvt. Ltd.
Dünya (Turkish: The World) is a Turkish newspaper founded in 1981 by Nezih Demirkent , who was also its editor-in-chief in his lifetime. The newspaper covers mainly business news and has a circulation of around 55,000.
This Lahore-based daily was started in December 1997 by Akbar Ali Bhatti. This was the first newspaper of Pakistan that came in a colored form. He suffered many hardships and was put behind the bars due to some clashes with the government for some time. The newspaper was then handed over to Mujeeb ur Rehman Shami.
"Dunya" is an Arabic word that means "lower or lowest", [1] or "nearer or nearest", [2] which is understood as a reference to the "lower world, this world here below". [3] The term "dunya" is employed to refer to the present world "as it is closest to one’s life as opposed to the life of the Hereafter". [4]