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Engineering college in Radaur, Haryana, India
Mukand Lal Institute of Engineering and Technology (informally JMIT Radaur or simply JMIT) is a private college of Engineering in Radaur, Haryana, India
JMIT
Engineering college in Bihar, India
Bihar. It was previously known as Jagannath Mishra Institute of Technology (JMIT). In 2008 it reopened with a new name, Darbhanga College of Engineering,
Darbhanga College of Engineering
Darbhanga_College_of_Engineering
Indian politician
he was interested in Mechanical sciences and completed his Bachelor’s in JMIT, Chitradurga. Through the work of Jawaharlal Nehru and Periyar, he found
Saba_Rajendran
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Teutonic American Latin
Famous in war.
Boy/Male
Tamil
Akhileshwar | அகீலேஷà¯à®µà®°Â
Supreme being
Boy/Male
British, English, German
Of High Quality; Pure; Variant of a Name Given Pre-medieval Refiners of Silver; Easterner; A
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English
English : unexplained. Perhaps a variant of Channon.The earliest American Channing was John, who came from Dorset, England, in 1711 with his wife. Their son John became a prosperous merchant of Newport, RI, and their grandson William Ellery was born there in 1780. William Ellery Channing (1780–1842) was a Unitarian clergyman who founded the Massachusetts Peace Society, a precursor of the modern anti-war movement.
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Arabic, Muslim, Sindhi
Pug-nosed
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Tamil
Born, Manifested
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Scottish
Second son.
Boy/Male
Tamil
Rajeevalochana | ராஜீவலோசநா
Lotus eyed, Lord Rama
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English (Dorset)
English (Dorset) : habitational name from an unidentified place, possibly Ansford in Somerset, which is recorded in Domesday Book as Almundesford, from the genitive case of the Old English personal name Ealhmund (composed of the elements ealh ‘temple’ + mund ‘protection’) + Old English ford ‘ford’.
Surname or Lastname
English and Scottish
English and Scottish : habitational name from any of the numerous and widespread places so called. The majority of these are named with Old English middel ‘middle’ + tūn ‘enclosure’, ‘settlement’; a smaller group, with examples in Cumbria, Kent, Northamptonshire, Northumbria, Nottinghamshire, and Staffordshire, have as their first element Old English mylen ‘mill’.
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