Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Gulzar was born in a Sikh family as Sampooran Singh Kalra, to Makhan Singh Kalra and Sujan Kaur, in Dina, Jhelum District, British India (present-day Pakistan).In school, he had read translations of the works of Tagore which he recounted as one of his life's many turning points.
In India, the film earned 3.5–4 crore in the first week. [11] In the United States, the film earned ₹ 56.24 lakh (US$65,000) and ₹ 79.45 lakh (£75,000) in the UK. In total it earned ₹ 2.27 crore (US$260,000) at the international box office across its opening weekend.
Song Singer "Yeh Suhana Safar" (Male) Mohammed Rafi "Saari Khushiyan Hai" Mohammed Rafi "Paise Ka Kya Yakeen" Mohammed Rafi "Chudiyan Bazaar Se Mangwa De Re Pehle Saiyan"
Duolingo Inc. [b] is an American educational technology company that produces learning apps and provides language certification.Duolingo offers courses on 43 languages, [5] ranging from English, French, and Spanish to less commonly studied languages such as Welsh, Irish, and Navajo, and even constructed languages such as Klingon. [6]
"Do Deewaane Sheher Mein" is an Indian Hindi song from the Bollywood film Gharaonda. (1977). The film was directed by Bhimsain Khurana. The lyrics of the song was written by Gulzar, and the music was composed by Jaidev. [1]
Ganesh was born on 4 December 1962 to a Tamil brahmin family, in Kolar, Karnataka, to R. Shankar Narayan Aiyar and K. V. Alamelamma. [1] Ganesh picked up Tamil, Kannada and Telugu from his environment as a child. [11] Also in his childhood, he read Sanskrit and Kannada literature and was writing poetry at the age of sixteen. [11]
India's Lunar exploration probes Chandrayaan-1, Chandrayaan-2, Chandrayaan-3, Mars Orbiter Mission, solar research mission Aditya-L1 and space observatory XPoSat were also launched in SDSC. Originally called Sriharikota Range (SHAR), the centre was renamed on 5 September 2002 as a tribute to ISRO's former chairman Satish Dhawan with retaining ...
The poem was immortalised by Ram Prasad Bismil, an Indian freedom fighter, as a war cry during the British Raj period in India. [11] [12] [13] It has also been associated with the younger generation of inter-war freedom fighters such as Ashfaqullah Khan, Bhagat Singh and Chandrashekhar Azad.