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सारे जहां से अच्छा हिंदुस्तान हमारा, हिंदी जिंदाबाद
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Friday, 28 July 2023
Monday, 24 July 2017
Download CRPF Pay Slip in PDF in your mobile
दोस्तों अब आप अपनी सी.आर.पी.एफ पे स्लिप अपने मोबाईल पर देख सकते हैं इस एप्लीकेशन को डाउनलोड करने केबाद आप अपना फोर्स नम्बर डालिये तथा जन्मतिथि डालिये तो आप एक क्लिक में अपनी पे स्लिप अपने मोबाईल पर देख सकते हैं। और साथ ही साथ उसे आप पी.डी.एफ फार्मेट में डाउनलोड भी कर सकते हैं। दोस्तो ंनीचे दिये गये लिंक पर क्लिक करके आप उस एप्लीकेशन को डाउनलोड कर लीजिये व अपने मोबाईल में इंस्टाल कर लीजिये।
धन्यवाद।
साथ ही अगर आप मेरा वीडिये देखना चाहते हैं कि इसे कैसे यूज किया जाये तो आप नीचे दिये गये वीडियो को भी देख सकते हैं जिसमें आपको पूरा बताया गया है कि कैसे इस एप्लीकेशन को इंस्टाल करना है। और कैसे आप अपनी पे स्लिप देख सकते हैं तथा उसे कैसे पी.डी.एफ फार्मेट में सेव कर सकते हैं।
Wednesday, 19 July 2017
View BSF salary slip in Mobile and downlaod
दोस्तों अगर आप बी.एस.एफ में हैं और आप अपनी सैलरी स्लिप अपने मोबाईल पर देखना चाहते हैं तो आज मैं एक ऐसी एप्लीकेशन लेकर आया हूं जिसकी मदद से आप केवल एक क्लिक में ही अपनी पे अपने मोबाईल की स्क्रीन पर देख सकते हैं। तो दोस्तों इस एप का नाम है BSF PAY IN ONE CLICK यह एप आपको प्ले स्टोर पर नहीं मिलेगी। इसको डाउनलोड करने के लिये मैंने नीचे एक लिंक दिया है आप उस लिंक पर क्लिक करके आसानी से उस एप्लीकेशन को डाउनलोड कर सकते हैं डाउनलोड होने के उपरान्त आपको अपने मोबाईल में इंस्टाल करना है उसके बाद बहुत ही सिंपल है आप नीचे दिये गये फोटो की सहायता से देख सकते हैं कि कैसे यह एप काम करती है।
इस एप्लीकेशन में आपको कुछ नहीं करना है केवल अपना फोर्स नम्बर डालना है और GET Pay पर क्लिक करना है एक ही क्लिक में आपकी सैलरी स्लिप आपके मोबाईल में होगी।
तो दोस्तो अगर ये एप आपको पसंद आयी हो तो कृपया कमेंट कर हमें बतायें कि आपको ये एप कैसी लगी।Saturday, 15 July 2017
BSF ASI/STENO TYPING MATTER NEW 2017
Finally he proposes and is accepted. We are told it is a happy marriage. They have a happy and uncomplicated marriage, though sometimes complicated by other people. They live in Netherfield at first but after a year they want to get away from Mrs Bennet and other relations. So Bingley buys an estate in Derbyshire near Pemberley. Just as Jane and Bingley, Elizabeth and Darcy also first meet at the Meryton Assembly. They dont feel attracted to each other initially and their relationship doesnt start as smoothly as theirs. Darcy offends Elizabeth. Bingley suggests that Darcy dances with Elizabeth, but Darcy thinks she is tolerable; but not handsome enough to tempt him. Furthermore, he says he is not going to dance with women that have been slighted by other men. Elizabeth overhears this and is not left with many cordial feelings towards him. This makes Elizabeth prejudiced against Darcy. Later on Darcy starts to feel attracted to her. He admires the beautiful expression of her eyes, her figure and above all the playfulness of her character. The stay in Netherfield, when Jane gets sick, shows that Darcy is attracted to Elizabeth despite himself. He seems to enjoy talking to Elizabeth and is beginning to feel the danger of paying too much attention to her. Elizabeth still is prejudiced, but she seems to enjoy the challenge of talking to him. Wickhams story that Darcy refused to keep his fathers promise after his death affects her opinion on Darcy. At the Netherfield Ball Darcy asks Elizabeth to go dance. They meet again in Kent when Elizabeth goes to visit Charlotte and are sometimes invited to dinner to Rosings. Mr Darcy is there, along with Colonel FitzWilliam, to visit their aunt. Here their relationship develops and Darcy starts to feel attracted to Elizabeth. He enjoys Elizabeths company and does not get annoyed when she teases him. He thinks they share a similarity. We neither of us perform to strangers. Darcy visits the parsonage when Elizabeth is alone and he makes to meet her in the Rosings Park when she goes for walks. Colonel FitzWilliam tells Elizabeth the Darcy had stopped Bingley from a most imprudent marriage. Elizabeth is very angry indeed with Darcy and blames him for causing her sister great unhappiness. That same day Darcy proposes to her. He says that he has tried to suppress his feelings but cannot. In vain have I struggled. What made him try to stamp out his love was the inferiority of her family and it would be a degradation for him to marry her. Elizabeth is first astonished then flattered but most of all angry at his proposal. She refuses the proposal. Darcy is taken aback by her refusal. His countenance expressed real security. He wasnt expecting that. He thought Elizabeth would accept because of his rank and money. She explains that she refuses because he has insulted her by saying her family is inferior, because he is responsible for the unhappiness of her sister, because he had behaved very badly towards Wickham, and because Darcys conduct had been ungentleman-like. The next morning Darcy waits for Elizabeth in the park and gives her a letter. The letter explains why he interfered in the relationship between Bingley and Jane, and the real story about Wickham. He also reveals that Wickham had tried to elope with Darcys sister, Georgina. When she re-reads the letter it is Wickhams story which starts to make Elizabeth doubt. She then comes to the realisation that Darcy is saying the truth and that she has been mistaken. She had been blind, partial, prejudice, absurd. From now on Elizabeths attitude to Darcy starts to change. She now feels gratitude and respect for Darcy but does not love him or like him. When Elizabeth goes with the Gardiners to Derbyshire they visit Pemberley, Darcys house. The house impresses her. To Elizabeths acute embarrassment Darcy arrives whilst they are leaving. He is polite towards her. Elizabeth does not know what to think, her feeling towards him are changing rapidly. Elizabeth admits to herself that she no longer hates him, that she is grateful to him and respects him. When Elizabeth receives the news about Lydias elopement, she is very upset. Coincidentally Darcy arrives immediately after, he is concerned for her and is protective. After Lydia and Wickham had finally got married, and they return to Longbourn before going to Newcastle, Lydia reveals that Darcy had been present at her wedding. It was supposed to have been a secret. Elizabeth writes to her aunt, Mrs Gardiner to find out about Darcys involvement. Mrs Gardiners letter confirms Darcys involvement in getting Lydia and Wickham married. He found them, bribed Wickham into marrying Lydia, and convinced Mr Gardiner to allow him to take care of all financial arrangements.
Thursday, 13 July 2017
सी.आर.पी.एफ की टाइपिंग प्रेक्टिस के लिये पैराग्राफ
But if you suppose, reader, that I am going to carry my forbearance so far as to let you, too, off the remainder of that geological disquisition, you are certainly very much mistaken. A discourse which would be quite unpardonable in social intercourse may be freely admitted in the privacy of print; because, you see, while you cant easily tell a man that his conversation bores you (though some people just avoid doing so by an infinitesimal fraction), you can shut up a book whenever you like, without the very faintest or remotest risk of hurting the authors delicate susceptibilities. The subject of my discourse naturally divides itself, like the conventional sermon, into two heads, the precise date of geological times, and the exact bigness of the animals that lived in them. And I may as well begin by announcing my general conclusion at the very outset; first, that those days never existed at all; and, secondly, that the animals which now inhabit this particular planet are, on the whole, about as big, taken in the lump, as any previous contemporary fauna that ever lived at any one time together upon its changeful surface. I know that to announce this sad conclusion is to break down one more universal and cherished belief; everybody considers that geological animals were ever so much bigger than their modern representatives; but the interests of truth should always be paramount, and, if the trade of an iconoclast is a somewhat cruel one, it is at least a necessary function in a world so ludicrously overstocked with popular delusions as this erring planet. What, then, is the ordinary idea of geological time in the minds of people like my good friend who refused to discuss with me the exact antiquity of the Atlantosaurian. They think of it all as immediate and contemporaneous, a vast panorama of innumerable ages being all crammed for them on to a single mental sheet, in which the dodo and the moa hob-an-nob amicably with the pterodactyl and the ammonite; in which the tertiary megatherium goes cheek by jowl with the secondary dinosaurs and the primary trilobites; in which the huge herbivores of the Paris Basin are supposed to have browsed beneath the gigantic club-mosses of the Carboniferous period, and to have been successfully hunted by the great marine lizards and flying dragons of the Jurassic Epoch. Such a picture is really just as absurd, or, to speak more correctly, a thousand times absurder, than if one were to speak of those grand old times when Homer and Virgil smoked their pipes together in the Mermaid Tavern, while Shakespeare and Moliere, crowned with summer roses, sipped their Falernian at their ease beneath the whispering palmwoods of the Nevsky Prospect, and discussed the details of the play they were to produce to-morrow in the crowded Colosseum, on the occasion of Napoleons reception at Memphis by his victorious brother emperors, Ramses and Sardanapalus. This is not, as the inexperienced reader may at first sight imagine, a literal transcript from one of the glowing descriptions that crowd the beautiful pages of Ouida; it is a faint attempt to parallel in the brief moment of historical time the glaring anachronisms perpetually committed as regards the vast lapse of geological chronology even by well-informed and intelligent people. We must remember, then, that in dealing with geological time we are also dealing with a positively awe inspiring and unimaginable series of aeons, each of which has occupied its own enormous and incalculable epoch, and each of which saw the dawn, the rise, the culmination, and the downfall of innumerable types of plant and animal forms. On the cosmic clock, by whose pendulum alone we can faintly measure the dim ages behind us, the brief lapse of historical time, from the earliest of Egyptian dynasties to the events narrated in this evenings _Pall Mall_, is less than a second, less than a unit, less than the smallest item by which we can possibly guide our blind calculations. To a geologist the temples of Karnak and the New Law Courts would be absolutely contemporaneous; he has no means by which he could discriminate in the dates between a scarabaeus of Thothmes, a denarius of Antonine, and a bronze farthing of her Most Gracious Majesty Queen Victoria. Competent authorities have shown very good grounds for believing that the Glacial Epoch ended about eighty thousand years ago; and everything that has happened since the Glacial Epoch is, from the geological point of view, described as recent. A shell embedded in a clay cliff sixty or seventy thousand years ago, while short and swarthy Mongoloids still dwelt undisturbed in Britain, ages before the irruption of the Ancient Britons of our inadequate school-books, is, in the eyes of geologists generally, still regarded purely modern.
Wednesday, 12 July 2017
A BEST PLATEFORM FOR EXAM PREAPARATION
दोस्तों यहां पर आप अपने टाइपिंग की तैयरी के लिये अच्छे से अच्छे टाइपिंग मैटर ले सकते हैं जिससे कि आपकी टाइपिगं स्पीड काफी अच्छी होगी। इसी तरह के औऱ पैसेज के लिए आप हमारे ब्लाग के साथ बने रहिये
LAST YEAR ASKED MATTER FOR PRACTICE
Collectivism, a political or economic theory advocating collective control over production and distribution Conquest 146, in Stalins mind, was the key to curing the agricultural ailment in Russia and in turn making Russia a more successful and powerful nation. Stalins plan to collectivize did not help but rather hurt Russias chances of becoming an affluent nation, free of agricultural plights. His methods were so inhumane that any morally correct person would never condone his outrageous behavior. In May of 1928 Stalin decided that he wanted to take on a new form of agriculture, that which was collectivized. It required the peasants to move lock, stock, and barrel to new farms which would be owned equally by every member, run cooperatively, and forced to hand over a certain amount of grain to the state each year. The government felt that with the modern machinery they would be capable of producing more food with fewer workers. Individuality no longer remained in the world of agriculture in Russia, no independent selling, and no more New Economic Policy N.E.P., which was issued by Lenin in reaction to the post-revolution setbacks in agriculture and was considered capitalistic. It was a successful program which Stalin decided to do away with to help support his plans. Stalin said The pause has finished, and we are returning to socialism and communism in reaction to the N.E.P Lewis 5961. There was only one thing that stood in the way of Stalin pursuing his dream and that was the Kulaks, who were the wealthier class peasants. The Kulaks, unwilling to give up the grain, which they had produced, to the Bolsheviks, started to assiduously hide it Radzinsky 141. They did not support the plan of collectivism since they would end up having to give up their hardly acquired land and let the Soviet government become their landlords which they found to be unjust. The Kulaks were also ordered to sell the grain to the government at a low price, but they refused and Stalin felt that something had to be done about these troublesome people Conquest 147. Stalins decision on how to deal with the disagreeing Kulaks was extremely immoral. He made a plan of Dekulakization, which was the dispersing of all Kulaks from the collective farms along with anything that had to do with the plan of collectivization. In reaction the Kulaks destroyed all their crops and livestock in protest. Many of the Kulaks were forced into labor camps while others had to face their fate in the horrible death camps. The anti-kulak campaign death toll came to a rough three million people McNeal 129131. Just as the Germans proclaimed that Jews are not human beings. Thus did Lenin and Stalin proclaim, Kulaks are not human beings Conquest 160. Now that the Kulaks were no longer a problem Stalin thought that everything would begin to run smoothly, but he was wrong. Along with the Kulaks went the extreme farming skills they had acquired which the lower class peasants did not possess. In result the lack of efficient farmers lead to the lack of grain, and finally a devastating famine broke out among the collective farms which in no way helped the agricultural dilemma but rather deepened the predicament Lewis 65. There was total chaos among the peasants. Many people died every day. A schoolgirl stated In 1933 it really was frightening. Every day somebody did not show up for school. The children were very scared and all swollen up. Ill never forget this. There were a lot of them who died in our class Lewis 66. Around the mid-1930s peasants started to realize that all of their hard work did not pay off because all of their produce was taken by the government and in reaction they ceased in the amount of effort they put into the collective farming De Jong 236. The government did not care about the people during the famine. A lot of the grain that they had, they exported, and all the leftovers were left in granaries to spoil or given to feed city workers. They made it illegal to eat any crops in the field and if one happened to violate this law they would be deported to a prison camp in Siberia. The people consumed anything that seemed edible that they could possibly get their feeble hands upon. One man even resorted to killing his own child for its meat. How did Stalin feel about all of this confusion, truthfully, in his mind
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