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In 2009, the remains of the two adult members of the family were discovered by experienced hikers, Les Walker and Tom Mahood, who were carefully searching a remote area for evidence of the fate of the tourists, and conclusive proof of the fate of the male adult was later established. [2] [3]
Mahood is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: Alan Mahood (born 1973), Scottish football player; Alex B. Mahood (1888–1970), American architect from West Virginia; Beverley Mahood (born 1974), Northern Irish/Canadian country music singer; Hattie Mahood (1860–1940), British Baptist deacon and women's suffragist
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Technically, a direct one-to-one script mapping or rule-based lossless transliteration of Hindi-Urdu is not possible, majorly since Hindi is written in an abugida script and Urdu is written in an abjad script, and also because of other constraints like multiple similar characters from Perso-Arabic mapping onto a single character in Devanagari. [7]
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Please be mindful of this. As I had noted, Tamil, for instance, is much more like English. Aspiration is not utilized for phonemic distinctions and retroflex-dental divides are less strict. Punjabi on the other hand often eliminates aspiration and uses tonality instead to differentiate words. --Hunnjazal 04:53, 24 December 2010 (UTC)
Molly Maureen Mahood (17 June 1919 – 14 February 2017) was a British literary scholar, whose interests ranged from Shakespeare to postcolonial African literature.She taught at St Hugh's College, Oxford (1947–1954), the University of Ibadan in Nigeria (1954–1963), the University of Dar es Salaam in Tanzania (1963–1967), and the University of Kent at Canterbury (1967–1979).
Thomas Hood (23 May 1799 – 3 May 1845) was an English poet, author and humorist, best known for poems such as "The Bridge of Sighs" and "The Song of the Shirt".Hood wrote regularly for The London Magazine, Athenaeum, and Punch.