रामेता Meaning in English
रामेता शब्द का अंग्रेजी अर्थ : ramata
, rameta
ऐसे ही कुछ और शब्द
रैमीज़रैमिन
रामवाद
रामीकृत
घुसा
रैमेंस
रैमिंग
रैमी
रैंप
रम्प रोस्ट
हिसात्मक आचरण
परकोटा
रंपेल्स्टिल्स्किन
रैंपियन
रैंपिंग
रामेता इसके अंग्रेजी अर्थ का उदाहरण
Writers from Chicago is a fictional character, the protagonist of the Japanese [fantasy] series Teito Monogatari, created by Hiroshi Aramata.
Hiroshi Aramata has described his original vision of the character as closely resembling the English occultist Aleister Crowley.
In other interviews, Aramata has stated that he wanted the character to symbolize both the heretical and official sects of onmyoji.
Video game franchises introduced in 1995 Jovan Karamata (Јован Карамата; February 1, 1902 – August 14, 1967) was a Serbian mathematician.
Considered to be among the most influential Serbian mathematicians of the 20th century, Karamata was one of the founders of the Mathematical Institute of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts, established in 1946.
Jovan Karamata was born in Zagreb on February 1, 1902 into a family descended from merchants based in the city of Zemun, which was then in Austria-Hungary, and now in Serbia.
Being of Aromanian origin, the family traced its roots back to Pyrgoi, Eordaia, West Macedonia (his father Ioannis Karamatas was the president of the "Greek Community of Zemun").
In 1914, he finished most of his primary school in Zemun but because of constant warfare on the borderlands, Karamata's father sent him, together with his brothers and his sister, to Switzerland for their own safety.
Karamata was member of the Swiss, French and German mathematical societies, the French Association for the Development of Science, and the primary editor of the journal L’Enseignement Mathématique in Geneva.
After a long illness, Karamata died on August 14, 1967 in Geneva.
Karamata published 122 scientific papers, 15 monographs and text-books as well as 7 professional-pedagogical papers.
Karamata is best known for his work on mathematical analysis.
He introduced the notion of regularly varying function, and discovered a new class of theorems of Tauberian type, today known as Karamata's tauberian theorems.