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This taluk was created from a division of Ponneri taluk, Tiruvallur district. On 4 January 2018, Chennai district was expanded by annexing Ambattur taluk. [1] The RTO code for Ambattur taluk is TN-13. The revenue villages in Ambattur taluk are : Ambattur Firka: Ambattur, Athipet, Kakapallam, Mannur, Mogappair, Padi, Adayalampattu
Ambattur is a northwestern part of Chennai, India. It is located in Ambattur taluk of the Chennai District, surrounded by Avadi, Anna Nagar, Korattur, Padi, Mogappair, Kallikuppam, Surapet, Ayappakkam, Athipet and Thiruverkadu. It covers an area of 40.36 km 2 (15.58 sq mi). The neighbourhood is served by Ambattur railway station.
Ambattur is a state assembly constituency in Tamil Nadu, India that was newly formed after the 2008 constituency delimitation. [2] Its State Assembly Constituency number is 8. Located in Chennai district , it consists of a portion of Ambattur taluk and part of Chennai corporation .
Ambattur division is a revenue division in the Chennai district of Tamil Nadu, India. It comprises the taluks of Ambattur, Aminjikarai, Ayanavaram, ...
Along with Avadi, Ambattur, Sembium, and Ennore, Tiruvottiyur is part of the "auto belt" in the city's industrial north and west regions that developed when the automobile industry developed in Madras during the early post-World War II years. In earlier days, Tiruvottiyur was known as Ottriyur since it was near the center of Chennai city. [1]
Maduravoyal taluk is a taluk of the city district of Chennai in the Indian state of Tamil The centre of the taluk is the neighbourhood of Maduravoyal . The headquarters of the taluk is Ambattur division .
Ambattur is a neighbourhood of north-west Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India. Ambattur may also refer to these related to the Chennai neighbourhood: Ambattur (state assembly constituency), is a state assembly constituency. Ambattur division, a revenue division; Ambattur taluk, a subdistrict of Chennai; Ambattur Lake
Although all the dialects of Marathi are mutually intelligible to one another up to a great extent, each dialect can be distinctly identified by its unique characteristics. Likewise, Varhadi replaces the case endings lā (ला) and nā (ना) of standard Marathi with le (ले), a feature it shares with neighboring Khandeshi language.