Search results
Filter
178 results
Sort by:
Taṭaikaṭanta Tamiḻ
On the usage of Tamil language in different scenarios in Tamil Nadu
Tiyāki Caṅkaraliṅkaṉār varalāṟu
On the role of Caṅkaraliṅkaṉār, 1895-1956, Indian nationalist, in the movement to rename Madras Presidency as Tamil Nadu; includes his brief biography
Peṇṇiyap pārvaiyil Tirukkuṟaḷ
Feminism in literature; with special reference to Tirukkuṟaḷ, didactic poetry, by Tiruvaḷḷuvar, Tamil poet
தற்கால இலக்கியங்களில் மனித வள மேம்பாடு / Human Resource Development in Contemporary Literature
The theory of human resource development is a theory defined by the Western scholars. Society improves only when a person improves. The country improves only when society improves. Only when nations develop can all the nations of the world become superpowers. Human resources are therefore an essential factor that can be praised for the part of such development. Even if water, land and mineral resources are properly located in a country, there will be no use if there are no proper human resources to use them in a purposeful manner. Therefore, human resources should be cherished and protected as the main wealth of the country. Tamil contemporary literature is seen as a tool to capture today's society. Contemporary literature is a widespread study in all societies. Therefore, the novel 'Sanjaram' and the short stories 'Aram', 'Sootrukkanaku' are take to estimate the sources that correlate to human resource development. The purpose of this study is to explore and explain the theories of human development in these contexts in relation to Tamil literature and to see how scholarly definitions fit into contemporary literature.
BASE
The Emille Corpus (Beta Release Version)
In: http://ota.ox.ac.uk/headers/2460.xml
The collection consists of: Thirty million words of monolingual written data (Gujarati, Tamil, Hindi, Punjabi-news website articles); 600,000 words of monolingual spoken data (Hindi, Urdu, Punjabi, Bengali, Gujarati-radio broadcasts); 120,000 words of parallel data in each of English, Hindi, Urdu, Punjabi, Bengali and Gujarati (U.K. government leaflets).
BASE