Gujarati mirror embroidery, India, by monjimajewel


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Gujarati mirror embroidery, India, by monjimajewel

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— Chaniyacholi and oxidised jwellery are love!! ˖ ᡣ𐭩 ⊹ ࣪ ୧🦚୨
Choorma Ladoo
Forever grateful for being Gujju Imagine being with someone who doesn't know..
happy (belated) 36th birthday dev patel

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By the way, I worked with the LanguageCrush creator add a whole bunch of external dictionaries for South Asian languages, including, of course, Marathi.
I wanted to add IIT Bombay's Marathi Wordnet, but unfortunately, their site doesn't have a search URL I could use.
I also went ahead and did the research to find and add dictionaries for: Hindi, Urdu, Gujarati, Punjabi, Bengali, Tamil, Kannada, Telugu, and Malayalam.
This makes LanguageCrush one of the most robust vocab-reading platforms out there for South Asian languages.
We provide a platform where you can meet and share your language learning experiences with other learners, free tools to help with your stud
In Marathi, both दिवस (divas) and दिन (din) mean “day,” but दिवस is the everyday word, and दिन is mostly used for public holidays like Independence Day. This is pretty much the opposite in Hindi and Nepali, in which दिन is the everyday word, and दिवस (divas/diwas) is used for public holidays. I suppose it’s the same case in Bengali for দিন (din) and দিবস (dibôs) and in many other Indo-Aryan languages. In Konkani, Gujarati and Sinhala, both purposes seem to be fulfilled by दीस/ದೀಸ್ (dīs), દિવસ (divas) and දිනය (dinaya), respectively.
The irony of salt being called meethu in Gujarati -