Base of India?... as in?
anyways if i interpreted your question right, then here it goes:
~*~ Our centuries old culture
~*~ Our secular outlook
~*~ Our unity
~*~ Our Diversity
~*~ Our respect for mutual understanding and living
~*~ Our cooperating nature
~*~ Our "live and let live" funda
~*~ Our repect parents and elders funda
~*~ Just anything about India is amazing
~*~ Our Indian-ness is India's base
~*~ Our people rock full on !!!
2006-09-08 01:12:34
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answer #1
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answered by the_rip_roaring 3
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The Inidan ocean for the country and the two feet for the humans occupying the counrty. the capacity to speak and write in amanner to convey the meaning correctly without giving room evn to a trace of doubt.
Doyou want to know themilitary bases in Inida ? Writ e tothe defemnce minitry anbd specify the base the location of which you wnat to know , Air force , naval, Army etc .If you do this you will also find yourself in some base.
2006-09-08 02:28:58
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answer #2
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answered by Infinity 7
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The base of india is its centuries old and first ever culture in the history
ans also the unity of people
the harmanoy among them
and never se die attitute as u might have see in the recent mumbai local trains blast case
the ethics
say humari sanskriti and humari sabhyata hi humari buniyad hai jise na kbhi koi hila paya na na hi koi hila pa raha hai aur na hi aage bhi kabhi koi hila payega
2006-09-08 01:06:58
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answer #3
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answered by Vijay Agarwal 3
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The first Article of the Constitution of India, which deals with the official name, states that "India, that is Bharat, shall be a union of states." Thus, not only in usage but officially India and Bharat are both accorded primary status. The name India is derived from the river Indus.
The original name of the river came from the fact that in the north-west of the subcontinent, there are seven main tributaries of the one river. The local inhabitants therefore called it Sapta-Sindhu, meaning the seven rivers. As the seven tributaries are part of the one river, the entire river system came to be known in time as Sindhu. In general, Sindhu also means any river or water body in Sanskrit.
Persian explorers visited the area even in ancient times, and the Iranian 'h' is cognate with Sanskrit 's'. Thus Sindhu became Hindu. Similarly, Sanskrit Asura (a spirit, later an evil spirit) is cognate with Ahura, the Supreme God of the early Iranian people.
The name of the river entered Greek from Persian, with the loss of the initial 'h', to become ÎνδÏÏ Indos, from which the Greeks derived their name for the region, Îνδια India. The Latin form of Indos is Indus, the name by which the river system is still known in the West. Its name was given to the entire subcontinent by the Romans, who adapted it to the current India.
The word India is the form used by Europeans over the ages.
Sindhu is also the Sanskrit term for Ocean and for any large water body. It would specifically mean the modern river Indus, if ancient Indic originated there. It could just mean "water dwellers" as well.
Interestingly, the Vedas did not assign any particular name for India, although some scholars assert that references to Indu in the Rig Veda relate to India's present name. Many traditional literary/cultural works from around the globe lack definite terminology for their home culture as a political unit; China, Greece, and many other civilizations lacked fixed names for themelves in traditional literature of their early periods.
Listed by, among others, Colonel James Todd in his Annals of Rajputana, he describes the ancient India under control of tribes claiming descent from the Moon, or "Indu", and their influence in Trans-Indian regions where they referred to the land as Industhan. This explanation might serve better to explain the term Hindu. Having said that, ancient Greeks do mention the Indic tribes or related tribes (could be of Iranian origin or joint Indo-Iranian origin) inhabiting what is now Ukraine as Sindoi or Sindkoi.
The name India was known in Anglo-Saxon, and was used in King Alfred's translation of Orosius. In Middle English, the name was, under French influence, replaced by Ynde or Inde, which entered early modern English as Indie. The use of the name India dates from the 17th century onwards, and may be due to the influence of Latin, or Spanish or Portuguese.
2006-09-08 03:14:00
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answer #4
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answered by manik v 2
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Look on a map of India. Do not have one? Do a search right here in Yahoo. Google is good too, or Wikipedia.
2006-09-08 01:01:59
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answer #5
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answered by clophad 2
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Base is nothing except I and You with the society related to us.
2006-09-08 01:09:49
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answer #6
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answered by prasadrao y 1
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Democracy.
2006-09-08 01:16:16
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answer #7
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answered by Sandy 2
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wow, what does this question mean? I just don't get it. India is a country. Do countries have bases?!?!
2006-09-08 19:33:48
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answer #8
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answered by Zak D 2
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Corruption with the occational poor sad sod thrown in who's honest
2006-09-08 01:57:15
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answer #9
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answered by edocsil_aiedail 2
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The question is not clear.
2006-09-08 03:08:16
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answer #10
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answered by Mr Fact 3
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