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Hamro Patro Listen ⓘ is a freemium Nepali calendar app for smartphones. [1] As of 2024, it had been downloaded more than ten million times. It provides additional features including news, horoscope, foreign exchange rates, podcasts and Nepali FM radio stations.
Hamro Lok Sanskriti (Nepali: हाम्रो लोक संस्कृति, lit. 'Our Folk Culture') is a 1956 book by Satya Mohan Joshi. It is about the folk culture of Nepal. The book won the Madan Puraskar, Nepal's highest literary honour.
Newspapers in all these four languages are available in the Darjeeling Hills region. Of the largely circulated Nepali newspapers Himalay Darpan, Swarnabhumi and some Sikkim-based Nepali newspapers like Hamro Prajashakti and Samay Dainik are read most. [76] The Tibet Mirror was the first Tibetan-language newspaper published in Kalimpong in 1925.
Nepali Times (stylized as NEPALI Times) is an English weekly newspaper that provides reporting and commentary on Nepali politics, business, culture, travel and society in 16 pages. The weekly is aimed at the expatriate, diplomatic and business communities in Kathmandu , and through the internet for the Nepali diaspora .
Satya Mohan Joshi (Nepali: सत्यमोहन जोशी; 12 May 1920 – 16 October 2022) was a Nepalese writer and scholar. [1] Joshi is known for his research on the history and culture of Nepal. [2] He also served as the chancellor of the Nepal Bhasa Academy. [3]
Hamro Party Nepal Dalit Party Hamro Party Nepal Yuva Nepal Party Nepal Loktantrik Janata Congress Party Nepal Samajwadi Janata Dal Left-wing: Nepal Bahudal Party: Ambika Rana Prajatantrik Shakti Party: Centre-right: Ganesh Bahadur Shrestha Nepali Jantantra Party: People's Progressive Party: Centre-left: Jukti Jung Lamichhane Unnat Loktantra ...
Himalmedia publishes three premium periodicals: Himal Khabarpatrika, a Nepali-language fortnightly newsmagazine, Nepali Times, an English-language weekly newspaper, and Wave, also an English-language magazine aimed at teenagers.
Gorkhapatra (Nepali: गोरखापत्र) is the oldest Nepali language state-owned national daily newspaper of Nepal. [1] It was started as a weekly newspaper in May 1901 and became a daily newspaper in 1961. [2] It is managed by the Gorkhapatra Sansthan. [3] The Rising Nepal is an English-language sister newspaper of Gorkhapatra.