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INS Nirdeshak (Hindi: निर्देशक lit. director) is the second ship of her class of survey ships. It is a hydrographic survey ship built by GRSE for the Indian Navy . [ 4 ] [ 5 ] The ship inherits the same name as that of a previous survey vessel which served the Navy until December 2014.
INS Nirdeshak (J19) (Hindi: निर्देशक lit. director) was the sixth ship of the Sandhayak class of the Indian Navy. The ship operated as a hydrographic survey ship in the Indian Navy, under the Eastern Naval Command. Nirdeshak was equipped to prepare a variety of marine charts and maps for ECDIS system.
The second vessel of the class, Nirdeshak, was laid on 1 December 2020 and was subsequently launched on 26 May 2022. The ship was delivered to the Indian Navy on 8 October 2024. [10] The ship was commissioned on 18 December 2024. [11]
Nirdeshak was decommissioned on 19 December 2014. [6] [7] The lead ship of the class Sandhayak was decommissioned on 4 June 2021 after 40 years in service. [8] The third ship in the class Nirupak was decommissioned after 38 years of service on 29 January 2024 in Visakhapatnam. [9]
INS Nirupak (J20) (Hindi: निरूपक lit. Indicator) was a Sandhayak-class hydrographic survey ship in the Indian Navy.The ship was built by Garden Reach Shipbuilders & Engineers and commissioned into the Indian navy at Visakhapatnam naval base in 1985 under Eastern Naval Command.
At the time of its release, it ranked third amongst the list of the most expensive Hindi films. Singham Again was released on 1 November 2024, coinciding with Diwali, in standard and IMAX formats, [8] to mixed reviews from critics. The film grossed over ₹ 389.64 crore (US$45 million) worldwide against the budget of ₹ 375 crore (US$43 ...
Realism in Indian cinema dates back to the 1920s and 1930s. One of the earliest examples was Baburao Painter's 1925 silent film classic Savkari Pash (Indian Shylock), about a poor peasant (portrayed by V. Shantaram) who "loses his land to a greedy moneylender and is forced to migrate to the city to become a mill worker. [2]
[35] [36] Among these, /f, z/, also found in English and Portuguese loanwords, are now considered well-established in Hindi; indeed, /f/ appears to be encroaching upon and replacing /pʰ/ even in native (non-Persian, non-English, non-Portuguese) Hindi words as well as many other Indian languages such as Bengali, Gujarati and Marathi, as ...