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・ Nasir Iqbal Bosal
・ Nasir Ismail
・ Nasir Jalil
・ Nasir Jalil (cricketer)
・ Nasir Jamal
・ Nasir Jamshed
・ Nasir Jang Mir Ahmad
・ Nasir Javed
・ Nasir Jung
・ Nasir Kandi
・ Nasir Kandi, Arshaq
・ Nasir Kandi, Charuymaq
・ Nasir Kandi, Maragheh
・ Nasir Kandi, Moradlu
・ Nasir Kandi, West Azerbaijan
Nasir Kazmi
・ Nasir Khamees
・ Nasir Khan
・ Nasir Khan (actor)
・ Nasir Khan (cricketer)
・ Nasir Khan (FATA politician)
・ Nasir Khan (politician, born 1966)
・ Nasir Khan Shahsevan
・ Nasir Khusraw
・ Nasir Kilij-Arslan
・ Nasir Lamine
・ Nasir Mahalleh
・ Nasir Mazhar
・ Nasir Maziyad Abdallah Al Qurayshi Al Subii
・ Nasir Memon


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Nasir Kazmi : ウィキペディア英語版
Nasir Kazmi

Syed Nasir Raza Kazmi (, born 8 December 1925 - died 2 March 1972) was an Urdu poet from Pakistan and one of the renowned poets of this era, especially in the use of "ista'aaray" and "chhotee beher." Kazmi was born on 8 December 1925 at Ambala, Punjab, (British India).
Nasir Kazmi used the simple words in his poetry like "Chand", "Raat", "Baarish", "Mosam", "Yaad", "Tanhai", "Darya" and gave them life by his style of poetry.
==Education and career==
Kazmi was educated at Ambala, Simla and afterwards at Islamia College, Lahore. He returned to Ambala in 1945 and started looking after his ancestral land. After the creation of Pakistan in 1947, he came to Lahore. He did some journalistic work with ''Auraq-e-Nau'' as an editor and became editor-in-chief of the magazine ''Humayun'' in 1952. Later he was associated with Radio Pakistan, Lahore and other literary publications and organisations.
Kazmi started his poetic life in 1940 by following the style of Akhtar Sherani and wrote romantic poems and sonnets. Later he began writing ghazals under the guidance of Hafeez Hoshyarpuri. He was a great admirer of Mir Taqi Mir, and probably the melancholy and "Ehsaas-e-Mehroomi" in his poetry was a direct result of that admiration. His tutor in poetry was Hafeez Hoshyarpuri, who also used symbols from nature in his poems. Nasir used to hum his poetic verses, and it was appealing to many of his readers and listeners.
He emigrated from Ambala, India to Lahore, Pakistan in August 1947. He also worked as a staff editor for Radio Pakistan. He used to sit at Tea House and Wander at Mall Road, Lahore with his friends. He was fond of eating, wandering, and enjoying life. He was frequently thought of as a melancholic poet, though most of his poetry is based on romantic happiness and hope.
His last four books were published after his death as a result of stomach cancer in Lahore on 2 March 1972. A few days before his death, Kazmi said in a television interview;


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