Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Poetry: 2013: Bhotu Pradhan: Total Contribution to Children's Literature [2] 2014: Munni Sapkota: Junkiri: Stories [3] 2015: Mukti Upadhyay: Malati [4] [5] 2016: Shankardeo Dhakal: Bal Sudha Sagar: Stories: 2017: Shanti Chettri: Total Contribution to Children's Literature: 2018: Bhim Pradhan: Baal Koseli: Short Stories [1] 2019: Bhabilal ...
Pinjada Ko Suga (Nepali: पिंजडाको सुगा; lit. ' The Parrot in the Cage ' ) is a 1917 Nepali-language Hindu allegory poem by Lekhnath Paudyal . [ 1 ] [ 2 ]
He has read his poems in SAARC Festivals of Literature in 2009, 2010, 2011, 2013 and 2015. He read his poem in SAARC Charter Day Celebrations on 8 December 2013, in New Delhi, India as an especial invitee. He recited his poems in Nepali during a monthly two-poet poetry recital program in Kathmandu in March 2015. He read his poems at the All ...
Parijat – (1937–1993) – Nepali novelist, poet. First woman to win Madan Puraskar [53] Phatte Bahadur Singh – (1902–1983) – poet, jailed for life for publishing a volume of poetry, before being released four years later [54] [55] Prema Shah – (1945–2017) – poet, novelist and short–story writer [56] Ramesh Kshitij – (born ...
Epic poems in Nepali (6 P) This page was last edited on 10 March 2024, at 22:04 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4. ...
Dharanidhar Koirala was born in 1893 in what is now Sindhuli District into a Hindu Brahmin family. [3] He studied Sanskrit and English from Banaras, British India. [4] In Banaras, he saw Indian people promoting their mother tongue which inspired him to "think about Nepal and the Nepali language".
The names of famous poetry collections such as Umang, Ragini, panchhi, Neelima, Himalaya ne Pukara etc. are notable in their important works. He also wrote collections of Nepali poem as 'Kalpana'. [4] He was also a journalist and edited at least four Hindi magazines, namely, Ratlam Times, Chitrapat, Sudha, and Yogi. [2]
Gadul Singh Lama was born on 15 June 1939 in Gangtok, in the Northeast Indian state of Sikkim to Chandraman Ghising and Phulmaya Ghising. [1] After matriculating from the Sir Tyashi Namgyal High School (present day Tashi Namgyal Academy) in 1956 and, getting selected for the education initiative as a part of the 7 Year Development Programme of the government, secured a diploma in Engineering ...