Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
This article relies excessively on references to primary sources. Please improve this article by adding secondary or tertiary sources . Find sources: "List of magazines in Hindi" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR ( January 2014 ) ( Learn how and when to remove this message )
The magazine covered all disciplines, including literature, art, fashion, culture, fiction, science and comics. [13] [14] (although the name may imply Dharm = faith/duty, yug = age) Serialised stories of many Hindi popular writer and poets were published in the magazine.
The school magazine - The Jyoti Magazine - covers events organized by the schools and also features students' articles, poems, and jokes. It is published in English, Hindi, Sanskrit, and French. The school E-newsletter - Impact- is made by the students and edited by the editorial board of the school.
The English Wikipedia presents a number of List-type articles that survey subjects and individuals appearing in the covers of specific magazines; see for example: List of stories on the cover of National Geographic; List of individuals on the cover of Rolling Stone; List of people/stories on the cover of Time magazine;
Mayapuri is the oldest and largest circulated Hindi magazine weekly in India, with a circulation figure of over 3,40,000 per week and a readership of 30,60,000. [1] It was first published in 1974 by the publication group also known by the same name i.e. Mayapuri Group.
The magazine is published by the Divya Yog Mandir Trust. [2] It covers yoga, pranayama, ayurveda, culture, rituals and spirituality. [3] The magazine published in only two languages, including Hindi and English, . [4] It has a monthly readership of more than a million in India and abroad.
Kadambini was a noted Hindi-language literary monthly magazine from Delhi-based Hindustan Times Media. [1] Established in 1960, [2] it covers a wide range of subjects including literature, science, history, sociology, politics, films and sports. [3]
The company's first magazine was Caravan in 1940, and its flagship magazine was the Hindi-language Sarita (magazine) launched in 1945. Vishwanath was known for his stable of low-priced magazines that were aimed to the masses, such as Sarita, Saras Salil, Woman's Era, Champak, and Grihshobha. [1] Vishwanath was a proponent of simple Hindi.