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NROER hosts large number educational resources in many subjects and in different Indian languages for Primary, Secondary and Senior Secondary classes. Resources are available in different formats like Video, Image, Audio, Document and Interactive. Apart from this all NCERT books are available in Flip book format.
An online system named ePathshala, a joint initiative of NCERT and Ministry of Education, has been developed for broadcasting educational e-schooling resources including textbooks, audio, video, publications, and a variety of other print and non-print elements, [18] ensuring their free access through mobile phones and tablets (as EPUB) and from ...
List of political slogans; List of Philippine presidential campaign slogans; List of UK political slogans; List of U.S. presidential campaign slogans; List of slogans of the opposition to the U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War; List of North Korean propaganda slogans
Better dead than Red – anti-Communist slogan; Black is beautiful – political slogan of a cultural movement that began in the 1960s by African Americans; Black Lives Matter – decentralized social movement that began in 2013 following the acquittal of George Zimmerman in the shooting death of African American teen Trayvon Martin; popularized in the United States following 2014 protests in ...
3. “You cannot dream of becoming something you do not know about. You have to learn to dream big. Education exposes you to what the world has to offer, to the possibilities open to you.”
Somerset: Old English: Sumorsaete ealle (All the people of Somerset) Staffordshire: The knot unites; Suffolk: Opus Nostrum Dirige (Direct our work) Surrey: Sussex: We wunt be druv (Sussaxon dialect: We won't be driven) Warwickshire: United to serve; Westmorland: Yorkshire, East Riding: Tradition and Progress; Yorkshire, North Riding:
The word slogan is derived from slogorn, which was an Anglicisation of the Scottish Gaelic and Irish sluagh-ghairm (sluagh 'army', 'host' and gairm 'cry'). [3] George E. Shankel's (1941, as cited in Denton 1980) research states that "English-speaking people began using the term by 1704".