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Kalnirnay (lit. ' timely decision ') is a calmanac (Calendar + Almanac) published in India. The almanac gives information about the Panchang, auspicious days, festivals, holidays, sunrise and sunset. It has recipes, stories on health and education, monthly Bhavishya and articles on Hindu astrology. [3]
2 December 2024 Aai Ani Baba Retire Hot Aahet! [4] 11 October 2024 Ude Ga Ambe [5] 4 September 2023 Premachi Goshta: Hindi TV series Yeh Hai Mohabbatein [6] 16 December 2024 Lagnanantar Hoilach Prem: Tamil TV series Eeramana Rojave 2 [7] 18 March 2024 Gharoghari Matichya Chuli: Hindi TV series Kahaani Ghar Ghar Kii [8] 5 December 2022 Tharala ...
The highest worldwide gross of 2024 Rank Title Studio(s) Worldwide gross Ref 1 Nach Ga Ghuma: Hiranyagarbha Manoranjan ₹ 27.13 crore (US$3.1 million) [1] [2]2 Navra Maza Navsacha 2
23 September 2024 Savlyachi Janu Savali: Bengali TV series Krishnakoli [3] 12 February 2024 Paaru: Telugu TV series Muddha Mandaram [4] 23 December 2024 Lakshmi Niwas: Kannada TV series Lakshmi Nivasa [5] 12 February 2024 Shiva: Odia TV series Sindura Bindu [6] 8 July 2024 Lakhat Ek Aamcha Dada: Tamil TV series Anna [7] 18 March 2024 Navri Mile ...
Salgaonkar completed tenth grade. He had a keen interest in astrology from childhood. He wrote Kalnirnay in 1973, selling over 10 million copies in nine languages. [citation needed] Kalnirnay is a yearly almanac of all religions containing details of auspicious dates, festivals and celebrations of Farsi, Jews, Muslims, Christians, Hindu and others. [2]
In 2008, Mugdha first auditioned for Sa Re Ga Ma Pa Marathi Li'l Champs, a competitive music reality show produced Zee Marathi television channel. She became one of 50 finalists chosen from among several thousand age 8 to 14 children from Maharashtra, and ended as one of the top 5 finalists overall. On the show she was known as "The Little ...
The solar months are named differently in different regional calendars. While the Malayalam calendar broadly retains the phonetic Sanskrit names, the Bengali and Tamil calendars repurpose the Sanskrit lunar month names (Chaitra, Vaishaka etc.) as follows: The Tamil calendar replaces Mesha, Vrisha etc. with Chithirai, Vaigasi etc.
The Marathi language has a long history of literature and culture. The first Marathi newspaper, Darpan, was started on 6 January 1832 by Balshastri Jambhekar. The paper was bilingual fortnightly also published in English as The Bombay Darpan and stopped publishing in 1840.