Google Groups no longer supports new Usenet posts or subscriptions. Historical content remains viewable.
Dismiss

Article 1 To 395 In Punjabi Pdf Download

176 views
Skip to first unread message

Keva Rendel

unread,
Jan 25, 2024, 7:45:19 AMJan 25
to
Adjectives, when declinable, are marked for the gender, number, and case of the nouns they qualify.[71] There is also a T-V distinction.Upon the inflectional case is built a system of particles known as postpositions, which parallel English's prepositions. It is their use with a noun or verb that is what necessitates the noun or verb taking the oblique case, and it is with them that the locus of grammatical function or "case-marking" then lies. The Punjabi verbal system is largely structured around a combination of aspect and tense/mood. Like the nominal system, the Punjabi verb takes a single inflectional suffix, and is often followed by successive layers of elements like auxiliary verbs and postpositions to the right of the lexical base.[72]


We acknowledge the great help received from the scholars whose articles cited and included in references of this manuscript. We are also grateful to authors/editors/publishers of all those articles, journals, and books from where the literature for this article has been reviewed and discussed.



article 1 to 395 in punjabi pdf download

Download https://t.co/V6WLZ5uoq2






I would have missed the LA Times articles, I think they have a paywall now? I seem to recall I ran up against it a couple of times. I have a subscription to the NYT so my access is unlimited on that one.


The LA Times has some limited free options and I think that I got 3 months for free. They have ramped up their food section and Soleil and Birdsall have contributed articles. I expect that their Punjabi truckdriver articles will be nominated for a James Beard or other award.


To save this article to your Dropbox account, please select one or more formats and confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you used this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your Dropbox account.Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.


To save this article to your Google Drive account, please select one or more formats and confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you used this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your Google Drive account.Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.


This article is published under license to BioMed Central Ltd. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.


Simran Jeet Singh does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.


In this spirit, Sikh women and men maintain five articles of faith, popularly known as the five Ks. These are: kes (long, uncut hair), kara (steel bracelet), kanga (wooden comb), kirpan (small sword) and kachera (soldier-shorts).






Although little historical evidence exists to explain why these particular articles were chosen, the 5 Ks continue provide the community with a collective identity, binding together individuals on the basis of a shared belief and practice. As I understand, Sikhs cherish these articles of faith as gifts from their gurus.


Copyright: 2019 Sanghera et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.


Data Availability: Data set containing fragment coordinates for TargetSeq Custom Enrichment Kit which was designed to target sequencing the region containing the complete genomic sequence of the GCKR gene in locus 2p23.3 (chr2: 20996301-21494945; GRCh37/ hg19 reference human genome) are within the Supporting Information files. Public sharing of other variant data presented in the article will be made available on dbGap These data are available from the Principal investigator through collaborations by contacting dharambir-sanghera ouhsc.edu and/or the head of Institutional Data Access / Ethics Committee (contact Donna Hogan via email IRB ouhsc.edu) for researchers who meet the criteria for access to confidential data.


We have migrated to a new commenting platform. If you are already a registered user of The Hindu and logged in, you may continue to engage with our articles. If you do not have an account please register and login to post comments. Users can access their older comments by logging into their accounts on Vuukle.


Topic Modeling refers to the act of discovering the theme of a document. Theme of a document provides an abstract view of the set of subjects (topics) addressed in the document. So, documents can be classified, arranged and searched according to their subjects using Topic Modeling. Topic Modeling has been the area of interest of most of the researchers from the fields of Text Mining, Natural Language Processing, and Machine Learning etc. Literature shows some techniques for generating theme out of a document. Most of the suggested Topic Models have been designed for English language. For Indian languages, particularly in Punjabi Language, such topic modeling is lacking in the literature. Although some Topic Summarization, Topic Tracking and Keyword Extraction systems has been developed for Punjabi Language, yet the technique of Topic Modeling is quite different from them. The paper presents a topic model for E-news in Punjabi Language. The idea of this topic model has been taken from the simplest and most basic probabilistic topic model; named LDA (Latent Dirichlet Allocation). This topic model finds the topics and their respective proportions present in the news text given as input to it. The theme generation process needs a Topic List Corpus at the backend of Topic Model. Such Corpus has been built containing Punjabi words commonly occurring in news articles, classified under different topic lists. The topic model has been tested on more than 1000 news articles for verification of its exactness. The values of various parameters attesting the quality of outputs given by topic model are quite satisfactory.

Keywords: Keyword Extraction, LDA, NLP, Probabilistic Topic Models, Topic List Corpus, Topic Lists, Topic Modeling, Topic Summarization, Topic Tracking


This article uses critical discourse analysis to examine how the higher COVID-19 infection rates among South Asians in general, and Punjabis more specifically, have been represented by conservative politicians and their representatives as a consequence of cultural and religious practices. Two counter-narratives are discussed. The first substitutes the negative image of the Sikh Punjabi Canadian community with a celebratory and positive view of Sikh humanitarianism and community service. The second attributes the high numbers to class attributes such as precarious jobs, poverty-level wages, employment insecurity, lack of sick days, over-crowded housing, racism and lack of access to healthcare. We argue that the conservative explanation as well as the first counter-narrative reveal continuities in culturalist understandings of South Asian immigrants, albeit in slightly different ways. The second counter-narrative represents a discursive resistance by advancing a structural analysis of health and disease in immigrant communities.


Salmaan, F. (2021, January 21). Sikhs expand their community kitchens in response to COVID-19 hardships. The Globe and Mail. -columbia/article-sikhs-expand-their-community-kitchens-in-response-to-covid-19/


Punjabi American Taxi DriversThe new white working class? Diditi Mitra (bio) Introduction Although the punjabi american taxi drivers in this study differ from the white working class on account of their assigned race in the social hierarchy, these two groups share certain commonalities due to the specific races into which they are categorized. Firstly, like the white working class, the Punjabi Americans are classified into a racial group with positive meanings associated with it, namely, Asian American. Secondly, similar to the white working class, racialization into a race imbued with positive meanings creates the possibility for Punjabi Americans to use their race to elevate their position in the stratification order. Unlike the white working class that uses race to improve their class location, however, the Punjabi Americans have used their race to negotiate their class and race position because they are subjugated by both of those factors. Nonetheless, like the white working class, Punjabi Americans were aware of their lower position in society and invoked their race to gain in social status. The question is how.


However, the extant research on race and status is one-dimensional because it has remained within the confines of a black-white racial imagination that has shaped a race narrative focused on the advantage of whites and the disadvantage of blacks.3 Because this analysis has already assumed that the "real" racial division is between blacks and whites, it has overlooked the specific racialization of the different non-white groups, their racial identity formation, and their contribution to the existing racial order. In this article, I address this gap in the literature by showing how a group of Punjabi American taxi drivers, though belonging to a racial minority group of lower socioeconomic background, used their race to improve their social status. I extend the analysis of the white working class use of whiteness to this racial minority group to show that nonwhiteness can be a source of higher position because of the specific racialization of nonwhite groups. Additionally, this study advances knowledge on Asian Americans, particularly those of lower socioeconomic status. Most research on Asian Americans has analyzed the middle-class segment of this racial group.4 This body of scholarly work has emphasized the problematic characterization of Asian Americans as the "model minority." It has also shown the ways in which middle-class Asian Americans themselves have employed the stereotype to overcome racial subordination as well as the dominant racial group's use of the stereotype as a means of maintaining the status quo. But, few studies have examined the racial identity formation of Asian Americans of lower socioeconomic background and its significance in the American racial order.

f5d0e4f075



0 new messages