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Lakkoju Sanjeevaraya Sharma (1907–1998) Sarvadaman Chowla (1907-1995) Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar (1910–1995) Subbaramiah Minakshisundaram (1913–1968) P Kesava Menon (1917–1979) S. S. Shrikhande (1917–2020) Prahalad Chunnilal Vaidya (1918–2010) Anil Kumar Gain (1919–1978) Calyampudi Radhakrishna Rao (1920–2023) Mathukumalli V ...
Robot Shalu is a homemade social and educational humanoid robot [1] [2] developed by Dinesh Kunwar Patel, [3] [4] an Indian Kendriya Vidyalaya Computer Science teacher from Mumbai. [5] [6] It was built using waste materials [7] [8] and can speak 47 languages, including 9 Indian and 38 foreign languages.
Telugu is a Unicode block containing characters for the Telugu, Gondi, and Lambadi languages of Indian states of Andhra Pradesh and Telangana.In its original incarnation, the code points U+0C01..U+0C4D were a direct copy of the Telugu characters A1-ED from the 1988 ISCII standard.
The language of mathematics has a wide vocabulary of specialist and technical terms. It also has a certain amount of jargon: commonly used phrases which are part of the culture of mathematics, rather than of the subject.
Sharma playing his violin and answering arduous math questions instantly in a convention held in Nellore, Andhra Pradesh. Lakkoju Sanjeevaraya Sarma (Telugu: లక్కోజు సంజీవరాయ శర్మ) (27 November 1907 – 2 December 1998) was an Indian mathematician. [1]
Satyam Rajesh, Jabardasth Appa Rao, Chatrapathi Sekhar, Shalu: Srilakshmi Arts [149] Arjun Suravaram: T. N. Santhosh: Nikhil Siddharth, Lavanya Tripathi, Tarun Arora, Vennela Kishore: A MOVIE DYNAMIX LLP PRODUCTION [150] Raja Vaaru Rani Gaaru: Ravi Kiran Kola: Kiran Abbavaram, Rahasya Gorak, Rajkumar Kasireddy, Yazurved Gurram, Snehamadhuri ...
Telugu script (Telugu: తెలుగు లిపి, romanized: Telugu lipi), an abugida from the Brahmic family of scripts, is used to write the Telugu language, a Dravidian language spoken in the Indian states of Andhra Pradesh and Telangana as well as several other neighbouring states.
Bhāskara (c. 600 – c. 680) (commonly called Bhāskara I to avoid confusion with the 12th-century mathematician Bhāskara II) was a 7th-century Indian mathematician and astronomer who was the first to write numbers in the Hindu–Arabic decimal system with a circle for the zero, and who gave a unique and remarkable rational approximation of the sine function in his commentary on Aryabhata's ...