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surendra pathak novels: Framed Surender Mohan Pathak, 2017-01-20 Translated from the bestselling Hindi novel, Hazaar Haath A man with many faces and numerous names, Sardar Surender Singh Sohal a.k.a Vimal was a convict fit to be recaptured and hanged. Now, after many years, he has decided to abandon his past and settle down as a family man. But his nemesis Mayaram Bawa comes back from the grave to destroy him, his sole ambition being to go down in history as someone who tamed the invincible Vimal. From the bestselling forty-novel strong 'Vimal Series' by the king of crime fiction, Surender Mohan Pathak, comes Framed, a page-turner you won't be able to resist. |
surendra pathak novels: Zameer Ka Qaidi Surender Mohan Pathak, 2017-01-10 A blockbuster novel from Surendra Mohan Pathak's bestselling 42-novel-strong Vimal Series Vimal's long-forgotten friend Jagmohan has sent him an SOS. Will Vimal reach in time to rescue Jagmohan? |
surendra pathak novels: The Newtonian Quest Deepak Vidyarthi, 2017-05-29 Ever wondered how the great laws of Physics were discovered? Well, not all of them originated inside a four-walled lab. Some of the discoveries had more to them - a fight, a war or an epic tale of adventure. Yes! Newton, a genius scientist, must travel in time to discover the most important laws of Physics, and while doing so, he must also learn how to fight an army of villains hell-bent on the destruction of the universe, befriend some other legendary scientists, encounter strange life forms, which he considered as a figment of his imagination and meet God-totally changing his take on life and spirituality. This is an untold story of how a mere human transformed into the legend that he was. Find out how Newton unravels not only the most famous laws of physics but also some thought-provoking truths of life, the mysticism of death and paradoxes of humanity. |
surendra pathak novels: Daman Chakra Surender Mohan Pathak, 2015-11-15 We bring out the best of Surender Mohan Pathak in a five-book box set for the fans of the undisputed king of crime fiction. Painsath Laakh Ki Dakaiti, 6 Crore Ka Murda, Jauhar Jwala, Hazaar Haath and Daman Chakra are the most loved novels in the popular Vimal Series written by Pathak. They have each sold over 50,000 copies on their first release. Now we reissue them after nearly two decades. So let's brace ourselves for some perfect murders! |
surendra pathak novels: Conman Surendra Mohana Pāṭhaka, 2018 |
surendra pathak novels: Palatwaar Surender Mohan Pathak, 2017-01-15 Vimal reaches Khairgarh to rescue his old friend Jagmohan, but there he comes face to face with his murky past. |
surendra pathak novels: Daylight Robbery Surendra Mohana Pāṭhaka, 2010-10-01 |
surendra pathak novels: Jauhar Jwala Surender Mohan Pathak, 2015-11-15 We bring out the best of Surender Mohan Pathak in a five-book box set for the fans of the undisputed king of crime fiction. Painsath Laakh Ki Dakaiti, 6 Crore Ka Murda, Jauhar Jwala, Hazaar Haath and Daman Chakra are the most loved novels in the popular Vimal Series written by Pathak. They have each sold over 50,000 copies on their first release. Now we reissue them after nearly two decades. So let's brace ourselves for some perfect murders! |
surendra pathak novels: Karmyoddha Surender Mohan Pathak, 2017-01-15 Vimal reaches Khairgarh to rescue his old friend Jagmohan, but soon he realizes that it's a trap and his own life is in danger. |
surendra pathak novels: Jo Lade Deen Ke Het Surender Mohan Pathak, 2014-08-20 From the king of Hindi crime fiction Two big suitcases have been lying around at Sanjeev Chawlas place in New Delhi. They belong to Sanjeevs friend Khanna, who was brutally murdered inside his own house over a year ago. The suitcases connect two criminals, Garewal and Kaul to Sardar Singh Sohal aka Vimal, albeit at daggers drawn. Meanwhile, Vimal has found another nemesis in Mumbai, druglord Michael Huan, who wants to control the drug peddling business in the city. With half of the Mumbai underworld conspiring against Vimal, he now has to put up the toughest fight ever. |
surendra pathak novels: Juicy Joke Book Surendra Mohan Pathak, 2004-01-01 |
surendra pathak novels: Indian Genre Fiction Bodhisattva Chattopadhyay, Aakriti Mandhwani, Anwesha Maity, 2018-07-06 This volume maps the breadth and domain of genre literature in India across seven languages (Tamil, Urdu, Bangla, Hindi, Odia, Marathi and English) and nine genres for the first time. Over the last few decades, detective/crime fiction and especially science fiction/fantasy have slowly made their way into university curricula and consideration by literary critics in India and the West. However, there has been no substantial study of genre fiction in the Indian languages, least of all from a comparative perspective. This volume, with contributions from leading national and international scholars, addresses this lacuna in critical scholarship and provides an overview of diverse genre fictions. Using methods from literary analysis, book history and Indian aesthetic theories, the volume throws light on the variety of contexts in which genre literature is read, activated and used, from political debates surrounding national and regional identities to caste and class conflicts. It shows that Indian genre fiction (including pulp fiction, comics and graphic novels) transmutes across languages, time periods, in translation and through publication processes. While the book focuses on contemporary postcolonial genre literature production, it also draws connections to individual, centuries-long literary traditions of genre literature in the Indian subcontinent. Further, it traces contested hierarchies within these languages as well as current trends in genre fiction criticism. Lucid and comprehensive, this book will be of great interest to academics, students, practitioners, literary critics and historians in the fields of postcolonialism, genre studies, global genre fiction, media and popular culture, South Asian literature, Indian literature, detective fiction, science fiction, romance, crime fiction, horror, mythology, graphic novels, comparative literature and South Asian studies. It will also appeal to the informed general reader. |
surendra pathak novels: 6 Crore Ka Murda Surender Mohan Pathak, 2015-11-15 From the immensely popular Vimal series by the master storyteller Surendra Mohan Pathak comes 6 Crore Ka Murda in a new edition We bring out the best of Surender Mohan Pathak in a five-book box set for the fans of the undisputed king of crime fiction. Painsath Laakh Ki Dakaiti, 6 Crore Ka Murda, Jauhar Jwala, Hazaar Haath and Daman Chakra are the most loved novels in the popular Vimal Series written by Pathak. They have each sold over 50,000 copies on their first release. Now we reissue them after two decades. So let's brace ourselves for some perfect murders! |
surendra pathak novels: Ideology and Status of Sanskrit Jan E. M. Houben, 1996 The present volume contains studies of crucial periods and important areas in the history of the Sanskrit language, from the earliest, Vedic and pre-Vedic periods, through the period of Greater India, up to the recent history of Sanskrit in India. |
surendra pathak novels: Crystal Lodge Surender Mohan Pathak, 2015-08-28 Criminal lawyer Kamlesh Dixit has been accused of killing ex-employee Abhay Singh Rajpuria, the owner of Crystal Lodge. Ace lawyer Mukesh Mathur decides to defend him. His investigation leads him to several other suspects the cops have conveniently chosen to ignore. According to them, Kamlesh Dixit was caught red-handed with the money stolen from Crystal Lodge, and a witness had also seen him escaping from the crime scene. Despite all evidences against Dixit, he continues to plead innocent. Will Mukesh Mathur win the Crystal Lodge Murder case? |
surendra pathak novels: Inventory of Sanskrit Scholars Radhavallabh Tripathi, 2012 |
surendra pathak novels: Diamonds Are for All Surender Mohan Pathak, 2017-06-10 Taxi driver Jeet Singh is cruising for fare when a man being tailed by a bunch of goons blocks his way. Entrusting Jeet Singh with a briefcase full of secrets, classified government documents to be delivered in lieu of a huge compensation to a girl in Jogeshwari, he jumps off the moving taxi. The next morning, his dead body is found by the railway track in a suburb, while Jeet Singh finds he has nobody to give the briefcase to for the girl died the previous night from a massive cardiac arrest. He decides to open the briefcase, and then a free-for-all begins for diamonds worth millions.Diamonds Are for All, a spectacular new novel from the Jeet Singh series is being published simultaneously with the Hindi edition, Heera Pheri. |
surendra pathak novels: Socialite Evenings Shobha Dé, 2006 Karuna, A Prominent Bombay Socialite, Is Trying To Flee The Nightmare Of The Present By Escaping Into The Past. An Unhappy Divorce And A Succession Of Sordid Affairs Have Left Her Bruised And Battered And, In An Effort To Forget, Karuna Begins Writing Her Memoirs. As The Story Of Her Life Unfolds We See How The Gauche Middle-Class Girl Metamorphoses Into A Star And We Also Meet Her Friends And Enemies: Neurotic, Man-Hungry Anjali; Gorgeous, Vivacious Ritu; Trampy, Outrageous Si; Abe, Who Prefers Young Girls; Varun, A High-Profile Editor With A Penchant For Young Boys; Krish, The Pretentious Adman, Whose Wife Actively Helps Him In His Extra-Marital Affairs; Girish, The Art-Film Maker In Search Of The Perfect 'Shakuntala'... All Of These Characters And More Play Out Their Lives Against The Backdrop Of Bombay A City Unique Unto Itself... |
surendra pathak novels: The Girl of My Dreams Durjoy Dutta, 2016-10-15 We are in the car. She’s looking at me. I can see the love in her eyes for me. Then a huge crash. She’s flung out of the window. I’m thrown out too. A pool of blood. Her eyes are still on me . . . but now it’s a death stare. I am Daman and I wake up to this nightmare. Every. Single. Day. Waking up from a long coma, Daman learns that he was in a massive car crash with a girl who vanished soon after the accident, leaving him for dead. Strangely, all he remembers is a hazy face, her hypnotic eyes, and her name—Shreyasi. To come to terms with his memory lapse he starts piecing together stories about himself and Shreyasi from his dreams, which he then turns into a hugely popular blog. When he’s offered a lucrative publishing deal to convert his blog pieces into a novel, he signs up immediately. However, he gives in to editorial pressure and agrees to corrupt the original edgy character of Shreyasi. Big mistake. From then on Daman is stalked and threatened by a terrifying beauty who claims to be Shreyasi and who will stop at nothing to make him pay for being a sell-out. Before Daman fights back, he needs to know: Is she really who she claims to be? What does she want from him now? What if he doesn’t do what she wants him to? The Girl of My Dreams is definitely not your usual love story. |
surendra pathak novels: Mistakes Like Love and Sex Madhuri Banerjee, 2012-10-01 Cheated by her young and handsome Spanish boyfriend, Kaveri is back in India to follow a career as an artist and to find her dream man. However, getting involved with an older man, making out with the hottest star in Bollywood, teaching a hot, upcoming actress Hindi . . . her goals seem nowhere in sight. Starting afresh seems to have thrown her off completely and she begins to see the superficial life that she’s been leading. It’s time to take some hard decisions. With fresh hope and a new philosophy, Kaveri begins to focus on her goals. Things begin to look up when there is a kindling of romance across Twitter and she’s starts to understand her true calling. She might finally be moving in the right direction! |
surendra pathak novels: The Ghosts of Meenambakkam Ashokamitran, 2016-03-01 One dark and stormy night, Dalpathado unexpectedly crosses paths with the narrator at Meenambakkam airport. The faceless, middle-aged man from Dalpathado’s past is there mourning the unexpected death of his daughter in a plane crash. After they spend a dangerous night in each other’s company, lashed by rain and reminiscence, neither man remains the same. Ghosts of Meenamkbakkam is a meditation on the violence that detonates human lives and the idea of love that endures all mayhem, even in death. |
surendra pathak novels: Dilli Durbar , 2018 |
surendra pathak novels: Bookless in Baghdad Shashi Tharoor, 2012-04 This amalgam of essay, literary criticism, and memoir blends into a tribute to the world of books. Chicago... |
surendra pathak novels: The Secret Wish List Preeti Shenoy, 2022-07-01 Does true love really exist or is it just a cliche? Can a single kiss really change your life? At sixteen, Diksha like any girl her age, finds her life revolving around school, boys and endless hours of fun with her best friend. But one day, all that changes. What starts as an innocent crush explodes into something far beyond her control. Eighteen years later, she finds herself at the crossroads of life. Urged by a twist of events, a wish list is born. But can a wish list help her piece back her life together? Will she succumb to the tangled mess of an extramarital relationship? Once again, Preeti Shenoy brings an extraordinary story that tugs at the heartstrings, with insight and wisdom, as she explores the delicate matters of the heart. |
surendra pathak novels: Case No. 56 Chandrashekar Nagawaram, 2019-07-08 |
surendra pathak novels: Dollar Bahu Sudhā Mūrti, 2007 Vinuta marries Girish, and starts living with his family in Bangalore. She adjusts to her new family well, looking after her husband, father in law and mother in law Gourramma. Then Gouramma decides to visit her US based son and daughter in law, and she sees how liberating life is away from the strict norms that governs Indian middle class life. |
surendra pathak novels: Can Love Happen Twice? Ravinder Singh, 2016 Failing to show up after being invited with his friends to talk about his famous love story on a romance-themed radio chat show, Ravin becomes the topic of an emotionally turbulent discussion drawn on his incomplete second book, which reveals astonishing new developments. |
surendra pathak novels: Ghalib Danger Neeraj Pandey, 2013-12-15 Kamran Khan is a cocky young taxi driver trying to make it big in Mumbai. But his life transforms when he saves a don called Mirza from being killed. What seems like a good deed however has a cruel payback and in a single moment, Kamran loses everything dear to him. This is when Mirza, in gratitude, takes Kamran under his wing and the young man gets drawn into the mafia boss’s dangerous world of cops and rival gangsters, eventually taking over from him. Kamran also inherits Mirza’s philosophy that all of life’s problems can be solved through Ghalib1s poetry. Soon, the innocent taxi driver has cops, criminals and even cabinet ministers at his beck and call. And he has a new name—Ghalib Danger. |
surendra pathak novels: Jasmine Days Benyamin (Shanaz Habib), 2018 Sameera Parvin moves to an unnamed Middle Eastern city to live with her father and her relatives. She thrives in her job as a radio jockey and at home she is the darling of the family. But her happy world starts to fall apart when revolution blooms in the country. As the people's agitation gathers strength, Sameera finds herself and her family embroiled in the politics of their adopted land. She is forced to choose between family and friends, loyalty and love, life and death. |
surendra pathak novels: Jaipur Journals Namita Gokhale, 2021-04-29 Jaipur Journals is about the writing life and how writers search pattern and design amidst the unstructured chaos of the lived life. |
surendra pathak novels: Scene Rahi Masoom Raza, 2017-12-20 A no-holds-barred expose of the Hindi film industry's sordid underbelly. Ali Amjad comes from Benares to make it as a scriptwriter in Bombay, only to experience the absurd and tragic reality behind the film world's glamour as he navigates through it with his fellow strugglers. A short, fascinating novel set in the Bombay of the 1970s, Rahi Masoom Raza's Scene: 75 is a crazy kaleidoscope of stories within stories populated by a cast of extraordinary and memorable - but also cynical and manipulative - characters, from struggling directors and wealthy lesbians to film-obsessed social climbers and sleazy producers. In this irreverent, surreal, deeply satirical and darkly humorous work, the author's biting prose takes an unflinching look at both Hindu-Muslim and class relations, as well as at how human ties corrode and wither because of ambition and self-interest. Superbly translated by Poonam Saxena, this lost classic from Rahi Masoom Raza rips off the tinsel curtain that hides the film industry's hypocrisy, insecurity and desperation for success. It is a novel that will delight and disturb in equal measure. |
surendra pathak novels: Of Course I Love You! Durjoy Datta, Maanvi Ahuja, 2013 Let love be your guide... All Debashish cares about is getting laid. His relationships are mostly shortlived and his break-ups messy until he falls in love with the beautiful and mysterious Avantika. When she returns his feelings, he is thrilled. However, his joy is short-lived as Avantika walks out of the relationship. A brokenhearted Debashish plunges into depression and his life takes a dizzying downward spiral. He finds himself without a job, friends, or a lover. Loneliness strikes him hard. That is when his friend Amit comes to his rescue and they start putting the pieces of his life back together. Things begin to look up, but Debashish is still pining for Avantika. Will she come back and make his life whole again, or will he continue to pay for his mistakes? |
surendra pathak novels: The Forest of Enchantments Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni, 2019-01-07 'One of the most strikingly lyrical voices writing about the lives of Indian women' -- Amitav Ghosh 'Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni turns the Ramayana around by telling it in the voice of Sita ... this inversion is a gift - it presents us a with a way to know an already well-known story better and to love an already beloved story more' -- Arshia Sattar 'This inspired evocation of the goddess Sita is an epic song of strength and solidarity told with joy and intensity. It brings to life the personalities and predicaments of the Ramayana' -- Namita Gokhale 'Among the many, many Ramayanas there are now even - thankfully - some Sitayanas, but I know of none with the special magic that Chitra Divakaruni ... brings to the telling' -- Philip Lutgendorf 'Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni's Sita ... is an epitome of courage and self-respect, showing a path for all women. While weaving a familiar story, Chitra provides deep and surprising insights' -- Volga 'An incomparable storyteller' -- Denver Post 'Divakaruni's stories are irresistible' -- The New York Times Book Review 'Divakaruni's storytelling talents put her right up there with the best' -- Miami Herald 'In recasting the Ramayan as a love story Divakaruni accords Sita parity with Ram, revealing her innate strength. By giving primacy to her thoughts and feelings this also becomes the private tale of Shri and Shrimati Ramchandra Raghuvanshi, two wonderful people who loved each other but who broke up. To readers well-acquainted with that tragedy of modern times, the failed marriage, it will appeal. The ending, however, surpasses all expectations.' -- The Sunday Standard 'The success of both The Palace Of Illusions and The Forest Of Enchantments hinges acutely on the skill with which Divakaruni deploys the narratorial voice.' -- Mint 'The Forest of Enchantments is one of the simplest and most beautiful retellings of Sage Valmiki's epic.' -- Jetwings 'Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni does justice to the women of Ramayana ... The Forest of Enchantments is not just a retelling of a much-told epic, rather it is a book that tells it like it is - balanced and non-judgmental.' -- Huffpost 'A work ... of pluralities and possibilities ... This is the Sitayan we will give to our daughters, that they may imbibe Sita's strength, and even more proudly to our sons, who will learn how a woman is to be treated' -- The Wire 'Banerjee is markedly feminist ... Her spin on the most pivotal moment of Sita's life, the agnipariksha episode, is a moment of feminist brilliance. Her Sita answers all the questions we would have had when listening to the Ramayana while leaving us with plenty of food for thought.' -- The New Indian Express 'Divakaruni's retelling reminds her readers that the Ramayana, besides being a morality tale, is a love story at its heart' -- Huffpost 'Divakaruni and her women characters are a formidable pair' -- The Wire The Ramayana, one of the world's greatest epics, is also a tragic love story. In this brilliant retelling, Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni places Sita at the centre of the novel: this is Sita's version. The Forest of Enchantments is also a very human story of some of the other women in the epic, often misunderstood and relegated to the margins: Kaikeyi, Surpanakha, Mandodari. A powerful comment on duty, betrayal, infidelity and honour, it is also about women's struggle to retain autonomy in a world that privileges men, as Chitra transforms an ancient story into a gripping, contemporary battle of wills. While the Ramayana resonates even today, she makes it more relevant than ever, in the underlying questions in the novel: How should women be treated by their loved ones? What are their rights in a relationship? When does a woman need to stand up and say, 'Enough!' |
surendra pathak novels: When dreams travels Githa Hariharan, 2008-08-25 ‘The powerless must have a dream or two, dreams that break walls, dreams that go through walls as if they are powerless.’ A magical tour de force by a writer at the height of her powers, When Dreams Travel weaves round Scheherazade—or Shahrzad of the thousand and one nights—a vibrant, inventive story about that old game that’s never played out: the quest for love and power. The curtain opens on four figures, two men and two women. There is the sultan who wants a virgin every night; there is his brother, who makes an enemy of darkness and tries to banish it; and there are their ambitious brides, the sisters Shahrzad and Dunyazad, aspiring to be heroines—or martyrs. Travelling in and out of these lives to spellbinding effect is a range of stories, dark, poetic and witty by turns, spanning medieval to contemporary times. With its sharp and lively blend of past and present, its skillful reworking of the historical tradition, and its controlled use of evocative language, Githa Hariharan’s multi-voiced narrative assumes the significance of modern myth. |
surendra pathak novels: Budhini Sarah Joseph, 2021-08 On 6 December 1959, Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru went to Dhanbad district in Jharkhand to inaugurate the Panchet Dam across the Damodar river. A fifteen-year-old girl, Budhini, chosen by the Damodar Valley Corporation welcomed him with a garland and placed a tikka on his forehead. When these ceremonial gestures were interpreted as an act of matrimony, the fifteen-year-old was ostracized by her village and let go from her job as a construction worker, citing violation of Santal traditions. Budhini was outlawed for 'marrying outside her community'. Budhini Mejhan's is the tale of an uprooted life, told here through the contemporary lens of Rupi Murmu, a young journalist distantly related to her and determined to excavate her story. In this reimagined history, Sarah Joseph evokes Budhini with vigour, authority and panache, conjuring up a robust and endearing feminine character and reminding us of the lives and stories that should never be forgotten. Translated by her daughter, Sangeetha Sreenivasan, a fiercely individualistic novelist herself, Sarah Joseph's Budhini powerfully invokes the wider bio-politics of our relentless modernization and the dangers of being indifferent to ecological realities. |
surendra pathak novels: The 65 Lakh Heist Surender Mohan Pathak, 2009 Vimal never wanted to get involved in the heist. Now that he's been roped in, he just hopes he can finish the job without getting caught. His partners have other plans, however, and soon Vimal finds himself playing a deadly game with the kingpin of the Punjab underworld... First published in 1977 and reprinted over fifteen times, Painsath Lakh ki Dakaiti is the fourth book in Surender Mohan Pathak's hugely popular 'Vimal' series, the book that launched a whole genre of anti-hero Hindi crime fiction. This is the first time SMP's work has been translated into English. |
surendra pathak novels: Vichhoda Harinder Sikka, 2019-09-20 The year is 1950; the Liaquat-Nehru Pact has been signed between India and Pakistan; she doesn't know it will change her life forever; it will also make her stronger Bibi Amrit Kaur's life is literally torn apart in the 1947 riots. She's now in a different country with a different identity. She accepts this new life gracefully and begins a new chapter. She gets married and has two children. Life, however, has something else in store for her. It breaks her apart. Again. This time the pain is unbearable. But the hope that she will reunite with her children and be whole again keeps her alive. And she doesn't let the bitterness cloud her days, becoming a beacon of hope and courage for all. From the bestselling author of Calling Sehmat comes another hitherto untold story of strength, sacrifice and resilience. A must read. |
surendra pathak novels: Mastaan , 2019 |
Surendra (actor) - Wikipedia
Surendra (11 November 1910 – 11 September 1987; Surendra Nath) was an Indian singer-actor of Hindi films. [1] Known by his mononym, Surendra was born and educated in Punjab to be a …
Explore Surendra: Meaning, Origin & Popularity - MomJunction
Jun 14, 2024 · Surendra is a masculine name commonly found in India and Nepal. It originates from the combination of two Sanskrit terms: sura, meaning ‘god’ and indra, the name of the …
Surendra - Meaning of Surendra, What does Surendra mean? - BabyNamesPedia
Surendra is of the meaning chief of the gods. See also the related categories, chief (king), gods , and sanskrit . Surendra is not widely used as a baby name for boys.
What Does The Name Surendra Mean? - The Meaning of Names
A submission from Virginia, U.S. says the name Surendra means "The name Surendra means Lord Indra, Chief of Gods" and is of Hindu origin. According to a user from India, the name …
Surendra Name Meaning - Babynology
Surendra name meaning, baby Boy name Surendra meaning,etymology, history, presonality details. Surendra Rhyming, similar names and popularity.
Surendra Name: Meaning, Origin, Significance, Popularity, Zodiac ...
Surendra is an Indian name with Sanskrit origins, predominantly used by Hindus. It is a masculine name. The meaning of Surendra is 'lord of gods' or 'king of gods.'
Surendra - Hindu Boy Name Meaning and Pronunciation - Ask …
Surendra is a Hindu Boy Name pronounced as SHOO-ren-dra and means Lord of Heroes, King of Kings. The name Surendra has Indian origins, stemming from the Sanskrit language.
The meaning and history of the name Surendra - Venere
The name “Surendra” originates from ancient Sanskrit, a classical language of India that has a significant legacy in Hindu culture and literature. In Sanskrit, “Surendra” is a compound of two …
Meaning of Surendra - Find Meaning of different names - India …
Name Surendra generally means Lord Indra is a Masculine (or Boy) name. Name Surendra has Indian origin and is shared across persons, who are either Jain or Hindu by religion.
Surendra - Meaning of Surendra Name, Boy Surendra Origin and …
Surendra is a Boy name, meaning lord Indra in hindu origin. Find the complete details of Surendra name on BabyNamesCube, the most trusted source for baby name meaning, numerology, …
Surendra (actor) - Wikipedia
Surendra (11 November 1910 – 11 September 1987; Surendra Nath) was an Indian singer-actor of Hindi films. [1] Known by his mononym, Surendra was born and educated …
Explore Surendra: Meaning, Origin & Popularity - MomJunction
Jun 14, 2024 · Surendra is a masculine name commonly found in India and Nepal. It originates from the combination of two Sanskrit terms: sura, meaning ‘god’ and …
Surendra - Meaning of Surendra, What does Surendra mean? - Baby…
Surendra is of the meaning chief of the gods. See also the related categories, chief (king), gods , and sanskrit . Surendra is not widely used as a baby name for boys.
What Does The Name Surendra Mean? - The Meaning of Names
A submission from Virginia, U.S. says the name Surendra means "The name Surendra means Lord Indra, Chief of Gods" and is of Hindu origin. According to a user from India, …
Surendra Name Meaning - Babynology
Surendra name meaning, baby Boy name Surendra meaning,etymology, history, presonality details. Surendra Rhyming, similar names and popularity.