翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Lokmanya Nagar
・ Lokmanya Nagar railway station
・ Lokmanya Tilak (disambiguation)
・ Lokmanya Tilak College of Engineering
・ Lokmanya Tilak High School
・ Lokmanya Tilak Municipal General Hospital
・ Lokmanya Tilak Terminus
・ Lokmanya Tilak Terminus (Mumbai) - Coimbatore Express
・ Lokmanya Tilak Terminus Amritsar Express
・ Lokmanya Tilak Terminus Darbhanga Pawan Express
・ Lokmanya Tilak Terminus Ernakulam Duronto Express
・ Lokmanya Tilak Terminus Haridwar AC Superfast Express
・ Lokmanya Tilak Terminus Hazrat Nizamuddin AC Express
・ Lokmanya Tilak Terminus Muzaffarpur Pawan Express
・ Lokmanya Tilak Terminus Nizamabad Express
Lokmat
・ Loknath
・ Loknath Siva Temple
・ Loknayak (film)
・ Loknayak Ganga Path
・ Loknya
・ Loknya River
・ Loknya, Pskov Oblast
・ Loknyansky District
・ Loko
・ Loko Abaya
・ Loko language
・ Loko le
・ Loko people
・ Loko Vltavín


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Lokmat : ウィキペディア英語版
Lokmat

Lokmat ( Marathi (मराठी:लोकमत, literally 'People's Opinion') is a Marathi language newspaper published from Mumbai, and several other cities in Maharashtra state. Founded in 1971 by Jawaharlal Darda, in 2014, as per Indian Readership Survey (IRS 2014) it was the tenth largest Indian daily with 5.887 million readers, and in Marathi, it is the largest selling daily 〔(MAGINDIA - How media planners can exploit the Marathi dailies )〕 with 1.4 million copies a day.〔 As per IRS 2010 Q3, Lokmat has a total readership of 23.67 million, Lokmat has a total readership of 23.67 million.〔(National Readership Survey (NRS) 2006 )〕 Its registered and corporate offices are located in Mumbai, Maharashtra (India) and its main administrative center is located at Lokmat Building, Lokmat Square, Nagpur (India).
== Editions ==
Lokmat has 11 Marathi editions in Maharashtra.
# Nagpur (including Chandrapur, Yavatmal, Wardha, Gondia, Amravati and Gadchiroli supplements)
# Aurangabad (including Separate Hello Lokmat Supplement For 8 Distticts in Marathwada)
# Mumbai (including Ratnagiri & Sindhudurg)
# Pune
# Ahmednagar (including Shirdi and Beed)
# Solapur
# Kolhapur (including Sangli & Satara)
# Nashik
# Jalgaon (inclusive of Dhule and Nandurbar)
# Akola (including Buldhana, Washim and supplements)
# Goa
Lokmat also caters to the Marathi speaking population outside Maharashtra. It has editions in Indore (Madhya Pradesh) and Belgaum (Karnataka). On 21 April 2009, Lokmat launched its Goa edition (Marathi) primarily for the Marathi-speaking population of north and north-east Goa.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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