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  2. Dakshina Kannada - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dakshina_Kannada

    Dakshina Kannada district is located in the state of Karnataka in India, with its headquarters in the coastal city of Mangalore. The district covers an area nestled in between the Western Ghats to its east and the Arabian Sea to its west. Dakshina Kannada receives abundant rainfall during the Indian monsoon.

  3. List of Tulu people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Tulu_people

    Kannada: (Language . Grammar. Prosody. ... Member of Parliament of Dakshina Kannada Lok Sabha constituency and ... B. Vittalacharya movie director of Kannada, Telugu ...

  4. Tulu language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tulu_language

    A Tulu speaker. The Tulu language (Tuḷu Bāse,Tigalari script: 𑎡𑎻𑎳𑎻 𑎨𑎸𑎱𑏂, Kannada script: ತುಳು ಬಾಸೆ, Malayalam script: ത‍ുള‍ു ബാസെ; pronunciation in Tulu: [t̪uɭu baːsɛ]) [b] is a Dravidian language [6] [7] whose speakers are concentrated in Dakshina Kannada and in the southern part of Udupi of Karnataka in south-western India [8 ...

  5. Buta Kola - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buta_Kola

    The 1975 Kannada movie Chomana Dudi was the first movie to have a reference to the demi-god Panjurli. [30] Koti Chennaya, a 2007 movie made in Tulu which went to win the Best Tulu Film at the 54th National Film Awards. Deyi Baidethi, a 2019 Tulu-language historical film on the life of Deyi Baideti, mother of Koti and Chennayya.

  6. Byari dialect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Byari_dialect

    Byari or Beary (ಬ್ಯಾರಿ IPA:) is a geographically isolated dialect of Malayalam spoken by the Byaris who are part of the Muslim community in Tulu Nadu region of Coastal Karnataka and Northern Kerala (Dakshina Kannada, Udupi, and Kasargod districts).

  7. Category : Cities and towns in Dakshina Kannada district

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Cities_and_towns...

    This page was last edited on 26 January 2017, at 20:20 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.

  8. Marali Mannige - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marali_Mannige

    Marali Mannige (meaning: Back to soil) is a Kannada novel by novelist K. Shivaram Karanth. [1]The novel has the story of three generations spanning from 1850 to 1940. This books is written in Dakshina Kannada dialect, capturing the changing face of a traditional, agrarian, caste-ridden society in the wake of its brush with ‘modernity’ and participation in the Indian freedom movement.

  9. B. V. Karanth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/B._V._Karanth

    Born into a Kannada speaking family of Manchi, a village near Babukodi in Bantwal taluk of Dakshina Kannada district in 1929, Karanth's passion for theatre started at an early age. [5] His first tryst with theatre was when he was in standard III – he acted in Nanna Gopala, a play directed by P.K. Narayana.