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Following is the list of recipients of Bal Sahitya Puraskar for their works written in Konkani. The award comprises a cash prize of Rs . 50,000 and an engraved copper plaque. [ 1 ]
As per order of the Delimitation Commission in respect of the Delimitation of constituencies in the West Bengal, Bhangar Assembly constituency is composed of the following: [1]
In the 1980s, a Roman script Konkani paper called Novem Goem folded in large part due to financial difficulties and alleged mismanagement in spite of being set up with enthusiasm and even a drive to collect funds for it through a 'padyatra' (foot-march) across Goa. Sunaparant was a Devanagari Konkani daily published which functioned from 1987 ...
Konkani Wikipedia is the Konkani language edition of Wikipedia, run by Wikimedia Foundation. It was started in July 2015. [1] Prior to this, it had been in incubation since 2006. [2] Currently, there are 3,605 content articles in the project. The total number of edits on this Wikipedia is 212,689. [3]
The Bhangar I CD block is located at It has an average elevation of 9 metres (30 ft). The Bhangar I CD block is bounded by the Bhangar II CD block in the north, the Minakhan CD block in the North 24 Parganas district in the east, the Canning II CD block in the south and the Sonarpur CD block in the west.
World Konkani Centre (Konkani: विश्व कोंकणी केंद्र, ವಿಶ್ವ್ ಕೊಂಕ್ಣಿ ಕೇಂದ್ರ್; Kannada: ವಿಶ್ವ ಕೊಂಕಣಿ ಕೇಂದ್ರ) was founded by Konkani Bhas Ani Sanskriti Prathistan at Konkani Gaon, Shakti Nagar, Mangalore, to serve as a nodal agency for the preservation and overall development of Konkani ...
Raknno is a Konkani weekly magazine published in Kannada script from the Indian city of Mangalore. [1] It is the largest circulated periodical in Konkani in Kannada script. It is edited by Rev Fr Valerian Fernandes.
The roots of the Konkani Language agitation lay in the denial of Konkani as an independent language and the attempts to merge Goa into Maharashtra. Konkani was not taken seriously as a potential official language except by a few Goans. By 1960, pro-Konkani and pro-Marathi groups started a propaganda war through distribution of pamphlets.