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Maru (Japanese: まる, born 24 May 2007) is a male Scottish Straight cat in Japan who has become popular on YouTube. Videos featuring Maru have been viewed over 535 million times, and at one point held the Guinness World Record for the most YouTube video views of an individual animal.
The myth of Hakudo Maru, a celestial being that came to earth and taught humans how to build ships. It is said that the name maru is attached to a ship to secure celestial protection for itself as it travels. For the past few centuries, only non-warships bore the -maru ending. Its use was intended as a good hope naming convention that would ...
Maru, Kathmandu, a market and ceremonial square in Kathmandu, Nepal; Maru, Nigeria, a Local Government Area in Zamfara State; Maru-Aten, a palace or sun-temple in Armarna, Egypt; Maru Sthal or the Thar Desert, a desert in India and Pakistan Maru Pradesh or Maru Sthali, a region of the Indian state of Rajasthan in the Thar Desert
Marumo no Okite (マルモのおきて, lit.Marumo's Rule, also known as Marumo's Story) is a Japanese television series which premiered on Fuji TV on April 24, 2011. [1] This television series stars Sadao Abe as Mamoru Takagi, a public relations officer with a stationery company.
On his debut EP Mirror Maru, Cashmere Cat blends a technical sensibility with pop playfulness. It consists of four tracks that feature warm, colorful EDM steeped in R&B leanings while backed by methodical drum samples. [1] Mirror Maru demonstrates Cat's skillfulness with a soft-touch approach to bass music. The EP contains sparse, forlorn ...
Maru Ragini (Dhola and Maru riding on a Camel), ca.1750. In the Chhattisgarh version, Dhola is the son of king Nal and mother Damyanti. In his past life Dhola was a handsome young man who was catching fish in the village pond through angle called 'gari' in Chhattisgarhi.
Telugu is more inflected than other literary Dravidian languages. Telugu nouns are inflected for number (singular, plural), gender (masculine and non-masculine) and grammatical case (nominative, accusative, instrumental, dative, ablative, genitive, locative and vocative). [2] There is a rich system of derivational morphology in Telugu.
Marutūāhu married two sisters, Hineurunga and Paremoehau, and had four sons: Tamatepō, ancestor of Ngāti Rongoū; Tamaterā, ancestor of Ngāti Tamaterā; Whanaunga, ancestor of Ngāti Whanaunga; Te Ngako, ancestor of Ngāti Maru; Paremoehau was mother of the older three sons, while Hineurunga was the mother of Te Ngako.