Manjhiaon Garhwa

Manjhiaon is one of the administrative blocks of Garhwa district, Jharkhand state, India.


Manjhiaon
Block
Manjhiaon
Location in Jharkhand, India
Manjhiaon
Manjhiaon (India)
Coordinates: 24.32°N 83.82°E / 24.32; 83.82
Country India
StateJharkhand
DistrictGarhwa
BlockManjhiaon
Languages
  OfficialBhojpuri, Hindi
Time zoneUTC+5:30 (IST)
PIN
822114
Vehicle registrationJH 14

About Manjhiaon Garhwa Jharkhand

Manjhiaon a Taluka/Block, close to Garhwa, is located 20  km from Garhwa. Manjhiaon is located near koel river. It's well covered by Vodafone, Airtel, Uninor, Reliance, BSNL, Aircel, Idea, and like cellular networks.

Languages

Languages spoken here include Asuri, an Austroasiatic language spoken by approximately 17 000 in India, largely in the southern part of Palamu;[1] and Bhojpuri, a tongue in the Bihari language group with almost 40 000 000 speakers, written in both the Devanagari and Kaithi scripts.[2]

Facilities

  • Market: A small market called as Manjhiaon bazar is situated in middle of the block.
gollark: It says "EdDSA-like digital signatures", which implies that it may not actually be something available outside of CC.
gollark: It would be neat if they were cryptographically signed too, but it turns out I have no idea what actual algorithm the potatOS ECC library is implementing, oops.
gollark: So, progress on the potatoupdates™ system, I now have a script generating manifest files which are deterministically generated from the exact contents of a PotatOS version™.
gollark: > multiprocessing.pool objects have internal resources that need to be properly managed (like any other resource) by using the pool as a context manager or by calling close() and terminate() manually. Failure to do this can lead to the process hanging on finalization.> Note that is not correct to rely on the garbage colletor to destroy the pool as CPython does not assure that the finalizer of the pool will be called (see object.__del__() for more information).Great abstraction there, Python. Really great.
gollark: No, I mean I was reading from underneath the line it highlighted, which was the POST documentation.

See also

References

  1. M. Paul Lewis, ed. (2009). "Asuri: A language of India". Ethnologue: Languages of the World (16th ed.). Dallas, Texas: SIL Internat biional. Retrieved 28 September 2011.
  2. M. Paul Lewis, ed. (2009). "Bhojpuri: A language of India . Some people speak also magahi .". Ethnologue: Languages of the World (16th ed.). Dallas, Texas: SIL International. Retrieved 30 September 2011.


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