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Anamika (2008 film)

Anamika ( Hindi: अनामिका, Urdu: انامِکا, translation: the one without a name) is a Bollywood film starring Dino Morea, Minissha Lamba and Koena Mitra in the lead roles. It is written and directed by Anant Mahadevan and produced by Bhanwar Lal Sharma. It is a remake of Alfred Hitchcock's film Rebecca (1940). The film itself is based on Daphne Du Maurier's literary classic, "Rebecca". http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/17899948-rebecca

Anamika (1973 film)

Anamika is a 1973 Hindi film made in India and directed by Raghunath Jalani. It is a romantic, suspense film with memorable songs by composer R.D. Burman and lyricist Majrooh Sultanpuri, such as "Meri Bheegi Bheegi Si" sung by Kishore Kumar and "Bahon Mein Chale Aao" sung by Lata Mangeshkar.

This film is unrelated to the 2008 film Anamika starring Dino Morea.

Anamika

Anamika may refer to:

  • Anamika (poet) (born 1961), Indian poet and novelist
  • Anamika (1973 film), a 1973 Hindi film
  • Anamika (2008 film), a Bollywood film
  • Anamika (2009 film), a 2009 Indian Malayalam film
  • Anamika (2014 film), a Telugu & Tamil film
  • Anamika (TV series), a television series on Sony Entertainment Television India and Sony Entertainment Television Asia
  • Anamika (newsletter), a newsletter for South Asian lesbians and queer women
  • Anamika (fungus), a genus of fungus in the Cortinariaceae family
  • Anamika Khanna (born 1977), fashion designer based in Kolkata, India
Anamika (fungus)

Anamika is a genus of fungi in the family Hymenogastraceae. Anamika was formerly placed in the family Cortinariaceae, but a molecular phylogenetics study found it to be closely related to Hebeloma, which is in the family Hymenogastraceae. Species of Anamika have small basidiocarps with non- hygrophanous caps that are smooth, glabrous and slightly sticky when moist; a pileus margin that is incurved and entire when young and becomes decurved and fissile with age; and a pale brown context. Their lamellae are adnate; their stipes are central, terete, equal or enlarged towards both ends, slightly furfuraceous with a cortina when young, which often leaves inconspicuous annular remnants. Their spore prints are brown. Their spores are amygdaliform to sublimoniform, thick-walled, epitunica strongly developed with cavernous type of ornamentation, with a conspicuous callus and without germ-pore. The edges of their lamellae are sterile with cheilocystidia; pleurocystidia present similar to cheilocystidia. Their hymenophoral trama is regular. Their pileipellis an epicutis, repent thin-walled hyphae with pale bownish incrustation. Their caulocystidia occur in small clusters or scattered. Clamp connections are present in all tissues.

Anamika (TV series)

Anamika was an Indian soap opera that aired on Sony Entertainment Television India and Sony Entertainment Television Asia. It premiered on 26 November 2012 and went off-air on 13 September 2013. It is Vikas Seth's debut show as a producer on Sony Television and is based on a love story with a supernatural touch. It was also aired in Pakistan on Express Entertainment. It was dubbed in tamil and telecasted in Puthuyugam Channel with the same title.

Anamika (poet)

Anamika (born 17 August 1961, in Muzaffarpur, Bihar) is a prominent contemporary Indian poet, social worker and novelist writing in Hindi, and a critic writing in English.
She is the author of eight collections of poetry, five novels and four works of criticism. She has won numerous awards, including the Bharat Bhushan Award for Poetry (1996), the Girija Mathur Samman (1998), the Sahityakar Samman (1998), the Parampara Samman (2001), the Sahityasetu Samman (2004) and Kedar Samman (2007). Anamika is Reader at the Department of English, Satyawati College, University of Delhi.

Anamika (2009 film)

Anamika is a 2009 Indian Malayalam film directed by Abraham Lincoln, KP Venu.

Anamika (newsletter)

Anamika was an early newsletter for South Asian lesbians and bisexual women. The newsletter was published in Brooklyn, New York. Its first issue was published in May 1985 by a lesbian collective. Three issues were published before it shut down in 1987. Subsequently, a newsletter called Shamakami was started by a new South Asian lesbian collective in 1990.

According to Nayan Shah, the collective used “the Sanskrit word anamika meaning ‘nameless,’ to address the dearth of names in South Asian languages for relationships between two women.”

The newsletter contained creative writing, narratives of South Asian lesbians, and articles about topics like gay and lesbian individuals in Sri Lanka. In addition, the newsletter provided information about laws regarding homosexuality in South Asian. According to Anu, Anamika hoped to “provide a forum for debating and discussing the practical, political and theoretical issues that face South Asian lesbians.”

Anamika was mailed free to women in South Asia. Residents in the United States could purchase a subscription by mailing $5.00 USD for all three issues of the newsletter.