Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
children's magazine Chandamama India Limited Grihshobha (गृहशोभा) 1979 [1] monthly women's magazine: Delhi Press India Today (Hindi) (इंडिया टुडे) weekly newsmagazine: The India Today Group Kadambini (कादंबिनी) monthly literary magazine Hindustan Times Media Sarita (सरिता) fortnightly
Bint Al Nil (Arabic: Daughter of the Nile) was a feminist magazine which was founded and edited by Doria Shafik, a well-known Egyptian woman journalist and activist, from 1945 to 1957 in Cairo, Egypt.
Children's World (magazine) Cine Blitz; Civil Lines (magazine) Cochin Herald; Coldnoon: Travel Poetics; Comix India; Competition Success Review; Complete Wellbeing; Covert magazine; CTO Forum; Currentweek
Hindustan (IAST: Hindustāna) is an Indian Hindi-language daily newspaper.According to WAN-IFRA, it ranked 13th in the world by circulation in 2016 and per the Audit Bureau of Circulations was 6th in India in 2022.
It is distributed free all over North America. The H.O. is located in Mississauga, Ontario, Canada. It covers a wide range of news and articles related to India, Indians and international readers. It features Bollywood, Hollywood, sports, stories, and horoscopes. It was the first Punjabi weekly to be online, with the launch of its web portal in ...
[4] [5] Soon, it became a prominent magazine of North India, [6] and flourished through the 1980s, and along with magazines like Dharmyug and Sarika, allowed Hindi-language media to acquire a character of their own. [7] The magazine also awards, the annual "Kadambini Prizes", given after on-the-spot essay and short story competitions. [8]
Safari (magazine) Sakhi (magazine) Samakalin; Sandesh (magazine) Saogat; Sapthagiri (magazine) Saraswati (magazine) Satyaprakash; Sawad-e-Azam (magazine) Science Reporter; Shabdasrishti; Shama (magazine) Shanibarer Chithi; Sigappu Nada; Sikh Phulwari; Slum Jagathu; Society (magazine) South Scope; Sri Ramakrishna Vijayam; Sruti (magazine ...
In October 2016, Down To Earth launched a Hindi edition of the magazine, with exclusive coverage as well as repurposed content from DTE English edition. The Hindi edition was launched to serve a long-standing need to serve the large Hindi-speaking audiences in the country, especially in the Hindi speaking heartland, and to begin a conversation ...