(1) "Whether Jain or Sikh or Buddhist or Sufi or Zoroastrian or Jewish or Muslim or Baptist or Hindu or Catholic or Baha'i or Animist or any other mainstream or minor religion or movement, we are taught as a tolerant society to accept a diversity of ideologies.
(2) It's what you do around that which is just as interesting," Jain said.
(3) Jain said it was impossible to quantify the additional demands that watchdogs might place on banks as regulatory efforts continued.
(4) Jain yesterday announced plans to cut 1,900 jobs – largely outside Germany – and clean up the culture of banking.
(5) Today sees the first day of the schedule, with sessions featuring channel controllers including BBC2's Janice Hadlow , Channel 5's Jeff Ford , ITV digital channels chief Angela Jain , BBC3's Zai Bennett and Channel 4 chief creative officer Jay Hunt .
(6) Then someone rings up and says ‘do you want to have your own TV show?’ Yes, of course.” ITV commissioning editor Kate Maddigan, who commissioned the show with digital and acquisitions chief Angela Jain, said it would “supersize” what O’Reilly had done on Facebook and Vine (sample quote: “Show her your penis.
(7) Laser-assisted microvascular anastomoses can be performed with the most diverse types of laser (Dujovny et al: 4th Annu Gen Sci Meet LANSI, 1986; Godlewski et al: World J Surg 10:329-333, 1986; Gomes et al: Rev Hosp Clin Fac Med Sao Paulo 37:255, 1982; Quigley et al: Laser Surg Med 5:357-367, 1985; Quigley et al: Lancet 1:334, 1985; Quigley et al: Neurosurgery 18(3):292-299, 1986; Jain: J Microsurg 1:436-439, 1980; Jain: Lancet 2:816-817, 1984; Krueger and Almquist: Lasers Surg Med 5:55, 1985; Neblett et al: Neurosurgery 19(6):914-934, 1986; Schober et al: Science 232:1421-1422, 1986; Ulrich et al: 2nd Annu Gen Sci Meet LANSI, 1984; Ulrich and Bock: Optoelectronics in Medicine, Spring-Verlag 418-423, 1986).
(8) In this paper we show that the dynamics of segregation of the nacently produced products of hydrolysis in zwitterionic bilayers can be readily followed by monitoring the fluorescence intensity of the cationic dye NK-529 (Yu and Jain (1989) Biochim.
(9) Another factor is binding of the enzyme to the phospholipid surface, which has recently been addressed using vesicles of an anionic phospholipid, dimyristoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphomethanol (DMPM) to which some extracellular PLA2s were shown to bind with a very high affinity (Jain, M. K., and Berg, O. G. (1989) Biochem.
(10) The kinetic data of P. glumae lipase have been analyzed in terms of the scooting and hopping models for the action of lipolytic enzymes [Upreti, G.C., & Jain, M.K.
(11) The Limbachia and Jain communities had the lowest prevalence of and mean values for coronary heart disease risk factors and the Bhatia and Patel communities had the highest.
(12) The model was first applied to a homogeneous, alymphatic tumor, with no extravascular binding (Baxter and Jain, 1989).
(13) For example, lysophosphatidylcholine added to dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine vesicles activates the action of pig pancreatic phospholipase A2 (Jain and DeHaas (1983) Biochim.
(14) There was no significant correlation between HBsAg and blood group antigens and a relatively higher incidence of HBsAg among the Jain community was observed.
(15) The aim is to put pressure on law enforcers, lawmakers, the media, to get real change," Jain said.
(16) The joint CEO Anshu Jain told analysts on Monday that the fresh capital would also help it meet "unforeseen challenges".
(17) "With the exception of Angela Jain, at ITV2, 3 and 4 , and a handful of middle-level commissioning executives at the BBC and [drama chief] Anne Mensah at Sky , it's a pretty white commissioning and channel elite."
(18) Children of various ages and both sexes (numbering 1,004) attending the out-patient department of Conwest Jain Clinic Group of Hospitals were studied for medication compliance (MC).
(19) Jain told the TV festival that the new commissions were part of ITV2's strategy to show more scripted comedy.
(20) Jain and coworkers isolated 2 new saponins in Pittosporum nilghrense with spermicidal effects.
Purana
Definition:
(n.) One of a class of sacred Hindoo poetical works in the Sanskrit language which treat of the creation, destruction, and renovation of worlds, the genealogy and achievements of gods and heroes, the reigns of the Manus, and the transactions of their descendants. The principal Puranas are eighteen in number, and there are the same number of supplementary books called Upa Puranas.
Example Sentences:
(1) Off the standard tourist trail is Purana Qila, Delhi’s oldest Mughal monument, where 100 rupees will buy you half-an-hour’s pedalo ride on a beautiful boating lake in the shadow of the citadel’s walls.
(2) Delhi's 16th-century Purana Qila fort: a history of cities in 50 buildings, day 4 Read more Lorry owner Babayé Tandina says the residents of Timbuktu are furious: “We used to collect banco next to airport.
(3) The Archaeological Survey of India embarked on several digs in the Purana Qila , but they have not been successful.
(4) The sixth Delhi is the Purana Qila, or Old Fort, a 16th-century stone fort near the eastern edge of the city, and a particularly good place from which to tell the story of Delhi’s urban development.
(5) The plans for the administrative capital of New Delhi were made by Edwin Lutyens, who saw to it that the eastern end of the ceremonial avenue (Kingsway then, Rajpath now) aligned with the Purana Qila.
(6) A few kilometres to the south, thousands more poured into Mughal ruins at Purana Qila and Humayun’s Tomb .
(7) Myth or reality, the idea of Indraprastha is now embodied in the Purana Qila, and together they have borne witness to some of the most significant moments in the history of India’s capital.
(8) Using key informants and available records, the way in which inhabitants of purana villages in Nuwarakalaviya, Sri Lanka coped with malaria during the pre-DDT era is examined.
(9) Facebook Twitter Pinterest The mihrab inside the mosque in Purana Qila.