When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Diplazium esculentum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diplazium_esculentum

    The young fronds are stir-fried and used in salads. [6] [7]They may have mild amounts of fern toxins but no major toxic effects are recorded. [8]It is known as pakô ("wing") in the Philippines, [6] pucuk paku and paku tanjung in Malaysia, sayur paku or pakis in Indonesia, phak koot (Thai: ผักกูด) in Thailand, rau dớn in Vietnam, dhekia (Assamese: ঢেকীয়া) in Assam ...

  3. Malaysia–Pakistan relations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MalaysiaPakistan_relations

    The Malaysian government rejected any Pakistani suggestion that Malaysia had sided with India in the dispute, and sent a note to the Pakistani high commission in Kuala Lumpur that Malaysia had not behaved wrongly to a fellow Muslim nation, challenged a Pakistani claim that Pakistan had tried to mediate the Malaysia-Indonesia dispute". [2]

  4. Helminthostachys zeylanica - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helminthostachys_zeylanica

    The roots of this plant are a popular medicine in China, where they are known as "Di wu gong". The roots are harvested during the wet season in July–August. Only wild plants are harvested. In Malaysia, the leaves are dried and smoked to treat bleeding nose. The plant is eaten as a vegetable and used medicinally for impotence in India. [1]

  5. Malaysian cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malaysian_cuisine

    Other vegetables popularly cooked this way include bean pods and fiddlehead ferns like paku pakis and midin. Vegetables like carrots, cucumbers, onions and yardlong beans are used to make a localised variety of pickle called acar. Vegetables and herbs are also popularly served undressed and often raw in some rural indigenous communities as ulam.

  6. Indonesia–Pakistan relations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IndonesiaPakistan_relations

    Pakistan's relationship with Indonesia greatly developed under Pakistani President Ayub Khan.During the Second Indo−Pakistani War, Indonesia supported Pakistan and offered to militarily intervene in the conflict by attacking and seizing the Andaman and Nicobar Islands of India to open up a second front and relieve pressure on Pakistan in Kashmir and Pakistani Punjab, which India tried to ...

  7. Pakistani diaspora - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pakistani_diaspora

    Many people from modern Pakistan migrated and settled in Malaysia, which was also part of the British Empire. The Malays and Pakistanis share a strong Muslim identity. At the time of Malaysia's independence under the Federation of Malaya Independence Act 1957, there were more than two hundred thousand Pakistanis residing in Malaysia. Rather ...

  8. Indo-Pakistani wars and conflicts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indo-Pakistani_wars_and...

    2016–2018 IndiaPakistan border skirmishes: On 29 September 2016, border skirmishes between India and Pakistan began following reported "surgical strikes" by India against militant launch pads across the Line of Control in Pakistani-administered Kashmir "killing a large number of terrorists". [65]

  9. Pakistanis in Malaysia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pakistanis_in_Malaysia

    According to official figures released by Malaysia's Home Ministry the number of legal foreign workers from Pakistan stood at 59,281 as of June 2017. [5] Under a 2005 agreement between Pakistan and Malaysia, as many as 100,000 Pakistanis may eventually work in Malaysia, especially in the manufacturing, construction, and plantation sectors; the Pakistani workers are intended to replace nearly ...

  1. Related searches pokok paku pakis malaysia di india dan indonesia dalam dunia

    pokok paku pakis malaysia di india dan indonesia dalam dunia internasional