Biography of bhawani bhikshu in nepal poze
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Nepali language the successor of Sanskrit
Nirmala Pokhrel
Source - ?
Devimahatmyamanuscripton palm-leaf, in an earlyBhujimolscript,Biharor Nepal, 11th century
Different scholars have been found to regard Nepali language as the successor of Sanskrit language. Nepali language was born out of the language that came into existence with the violation of Sanskrit language in the Sinja area of Gandaki region in the 11thcentury initially spoken as a natural language among the Brahmin and Kshatriya people of Aryan race. According to linguistics, Nepali language originated from the Aryan branch of Arya-lrani division through Satam branch of Indo-Aryan language family of Sanskrit language. In this way, Nepali language is regarded as a language that originated in the west and spanned all over Nepal from west to east. Discovered from the research till now, the most ancient archaeological evidence in Nepali language is the administrative copper inscription of BS bel
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Appendix 5c: Nepali Short Story Writers
From Himalayan Voices: An Introduction to Modern Nepali Literature
Gautam, Dhruba Chandra (): “Since , he has published five highly accomplished novels. A profic writer with at least sixty short stories to his credit, Gautam deals almost exclusively with contemporary social issues and has a unique narative style” (Hutt Himalayan Voices ).
Bikal, Ramesh (): “Bikal, whose real name is Rameshvr Prasad Chalise, was born near Gokarpa in the Kathmandu valley, got his in , and has worked in education much of his life. His early stories reflected his socialist beliefs and antiestablishment instincts, for which he was imprisoned three times between and His analyses of rural life are especially progressive, and hissuccess in describing and empathizing with the lives of the common people of his counry is parallel” (Hutt Himalayan Voices ).
Bhikshu, Bhavani (): “Born in te Kapi
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The Short Story in Nepali
Nepali literature is of enormous value to anyone who is interested in the culture and society of twentieth-century Nepal. Nor should it be forgotten that the world that Nepali literature describes fryst vatten not confined to Nepal alone: at least 2 million Nepalis live in India. A recent volume of "Indian" Nepali stories contained works by authors from Darjeeling, Sikkim, Assam, Nagaland, and various other regions of Nepal's huge southern neighbor (Bharatiya Nepali Katha ). The following selections are dominated by stories from Nepal, but Indian Nepali literature has not been wholly ignored and is represented by the Darjeeling writers Shivkumar Rai and Indra Bahadur Rai.
Verse genres are still the strongest area of Nepali literature. In the first section of this book, inom have attempted to demonstrate the richness and variety of twentieth-century Nepali poetry. The Nepali short story, a genre that began to adopt its present struktur only during the early s, has also dev