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Irida Lankadeepa won the SLIM-Nielsen People's Awards in 2006, 2007, 2008, and 2010 as Sri Lanka's most popular weekend newspaper. [citation needed] Its sister newspapers are The Sunday Times, The Daily Mirror and Tamil Mirror. [3] Daily Lankadeepa has an average circulation of 285,000 while its Sunday edition 580,000. [4] [5]
The List of newspapers in Sri Lanka lists every daily and non-daily news publication currently operating in Sri Lanka. The list includes information on whether it is distributed daily or non-daily, and who publishes it. For those newspapers that are also published online, the website is given.
Lankadeepa was a Sinhala language daily newspaper in Ceylon published by Times of Ceylon Limited (TOCL). [ 1 ] [ 2 ] It was founded on 29 October 1947 and was published from Colombo . [ 1 ] [ 2 ] [ 3 ] Initially an evening paper, it became a morning daily on 1 May 1949. [ 3 ]
Sri Lankadeepa was a Sinhala language weekly newspaper in Ceylon published by Times of Ceylon Limited (TOCL). [ 1 ] [ 2 ] It was founded in 1951 and was published from Colombo . [ 1 ] [ 2 ] In 1966 it had an average net sales of 118,561. [ 2 ]
Lankadeepa was unique at the time because it was original journalism in Sinhala. At that time the Dinamina, which was the only other Sinhala daily, was a translation of the Ceylon Daily News. Lankadeepa had its own reporters, was the first to give its reporters bylines in the stories they reported. It devised a special Sinhala font, and created ...
Ceylon Today is an English language Sri Lankan daily newspaper published by Ceylon Newspapers (Private) Limited. It was founded in 2011 and is published from Colombo. Its sister newspaper is the Mawbima. Ceylon Newspapers (Private) Limited is owned by politician Tiran Alles. [1] The first edition of the newspaper was published on 18 November ...
After university she joined the Sinhala-language newspaper Lankadeepa, despite the fact she was just beginning to learn the language. [2] Her first assignments were to translate articles from English to Sinhala. [2] After four years at the newspaper, she resigned and began work at the University of Colombo as a translator. [2]
He joined the Lankadeepa newspaper agency as an editor and was promoted to deputy editor of the newspaper in 1961. [2] He also started writing novels after dropping out of the newspaper industry. He became popular with his first novel Golu Hadawatha which is about a romantic love story between two school-going students in a mixed school.