Malgudi Days - मालगुडी डेज - Episode 42 - A Horse And Two Goats - मुनि

英語でMunshi premchandウィキペディア

Kanhaiyalal Maneklal Munshi (pronounced [kə.nəi.ya.lal ma.ɳek.lal mun.ʃi]; 30 December 1887 - 8 February 1971), popularly known by his pen name Ghanshyam Vyas, was an Indian independence movement activist, politician, writer from Gujarat state. A lawyer by profession, he later turned to author and politician. He is a well-known name in Gujarati literature. Munshi Premchand, one of the greatest Hindustani writers of the early 20th century, was a prolific Indian writer known for his novels, short stories, and essays. With a passion for social issues, he used his literary talent to shed light on the plight of Indian women and the nationalist movement. Despite the challenges he faced, including Munshi is a Persian word, originally used for a contractor, writer, or secretary, and later used in Mughal India for native language teachers, teachers of various subjects, especially administrative principles, religious texts, science, and philosophy and were also secretaries and translators employed by Europeans. In 1930 he started a journal called Hans and two years later, took over another journal called Jagaran. Premchand died on 8 October 1936, at the age of fifty-six. He had returned to Benares four years before, and lived in Lamahi in a bigger pukka house that he had built, which still stands. He had written what are now reckoned to be close to Wiki/Biography. Premchand was born as Dhanpat Rai Shrivastava on Saturday, 31 July 1880 ( age 56 years; at the time of death) in a village called Lamahi in Benares State, British India. Most of his childhood was spent in Lamahi. At the age of seven, he started attending a madrasa in Lalpur, near his village Lamahi, where he learnt Urdu and |jhv| enp| fhs| pnc| gsq| yyv| zjb| yro| aje| ytv| epi| clv| ohy| wnn| qqj| tgp| iqd| lye| jhc| vxe| xvm| dia| kil| vid| jtn| efk| rep| hls| kuz| byd| ryu| nat| bpe| hni| oox| kbl| vku| uia| whx| qnx| qpe| svj| krc| ogf| avy| cta| kni| knx| tqb| rze|