@amitkilhor A genuine doubt. If someone with a passport & visa goes to another country, and while they're away, the Indian Govt decides they're not a citizen then where do they go once visa expires? What that foreign country should do? They came as Indian, but suddenly, they're stateless.
@Javedakhtarjadu A genuine doubt. If someone with a passport & visa goes to another country, and while they're away, the Indian Govt decides they're not a citizen then where do they go once visa expires? What that foreign country should do? They came as Indian, but suddenly, they're stateless.
@amitmalviya Wait what? "Sylheti is bangladeshi and incomprehensible to Indian Bengalis".
Sorry but you don't know bangla, neither history nor Geography of India. Millions of people in assam, meghalaya & tripura speak sylheti for more than 100 yrs. Btw Every other bengali understands sylheti.
@AsimSuarMuneer@cpimspeak@grok@AskPerplexity Clearly you don't have the word knowledge in your dictionary. Do you know how many dialects of bangla is heavily used in india itself?
Do you know the dialect of bangla that is used in Silchar (Assam) or Agartala (Tripura). Let alone dialects of birbhum, Coochbehar. First learn.
@GoenkaHimmat@v_flanker@cvkrishnan@Indrani1_Roy No foreign country will ever give you jet engine technology. France hasn't even shared the source code of rafale for integrating indian missiles and you expect them to share everything about advanced jet engine.
Even Coca-Cola doesn't share their formula with anyone.
@gareebscientist It's better if isro publish this clarifications from the official X (twitter) handle, because these misinformations are mostly shared in this platform.
Can you recognize the physicist standing between Dirac and SN Bose in this picture?
She is Purnima Sinha, one of the first women PhDs from India. Sinha was Bose's PhD student. Although Bose was famous for his theoretical work(Bose statistics), he was also a keen experimenter.
Sinha's project was experimental, it involved X-ray analysis of clay. Buying an X-ray machine was unthinkable in the budget available to Indian universities in the 1950s. But Bose had learned the DIY approach to building instruments from his teacher, the legendary J.C. Bose. He passed it on to Sinha.
Together, they built a X-ray machine from WW2 surpluses which were being sold as scrap in the footpaths of Kolkata. After successfully completing her PhD, Sinha joined a biophysics project in Stanford university on the origin of life.
On her return, she had a long and distinguished career in research in places including Geological Survey of India and JC Bose Institute.
Sinha also wrote on music, played a musical instrument herself, painted, sculpted and translated books. Her daughters Supurna Sinha and Sukanya Sinha, and her niece Sudeshna Sinha are all physicists.
Purnima Sinha passed away in 2015.
@TheBengalIndex@kmc_kolkata@GoWestBengal 450 cr for 900 car seems way too much. Practically 50 lac per car.
Other than spending so much money, they could have bought multiple old buildings and built a multilevel parking on that plot.
@RafaleDown001 @SurrbhiM Abey tum pakistani kis baat pe khush ho rahe ho? Lagatar 3 din itna maar khane ke baad vi pata nhi kaise tumhara govt tumhe itna gadha bana raha hain.